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Trump vs. Anthropic: The AI wars are heating up

computerworld • 23 Jun 2026, 11:00

Trump vs. Anthropic: The AI wars are heating up

The US government decision to force Anthropic to close down its latest and greatest AI models, Fable 5 and Mythos 5, was only the next step in a burgeoning battle between AI providers and ignorant politicians. 

Anthropic was on top of the world. Its Mythos 5 LLM had everyone excited. (If you believe the hype, it was kind of scary, too.) Even Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei admitted — or boasted? — that Mythos would bring an “enormous increase in the amount of vulnerabilities, in the amount of breaches” to us all. But with that fear came the promise of more AI power than ever. 

Then, the roof caved in.

On June 12, the US Commerce Department used its export-control powers to demand that Anthropic cut off access to its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models for all foreign nationals, citing national security concerns and fears of jailbreaks. After figuring out it had no way to do that, Anthropic pulled both of its newest frontier AI models offline worldwide.

Just what an AI company needs! All other Claude models, like the Opus and Sonnet series, remain online. But, come on, AI sales are all about the newest and most powerful models.  

Adding insult to injury — and this is true at many high-tech companies — Anthropic has many employees who aren’t US citizens. This means Anthropic’s own programmers can’t work on their latest models.

Of course, this isn’t the first time US President Donald J. Trump and company have tried to put a spoke in Anthropic’s wheels. Back in February, Anthropic refused to give Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth the power to use its models to spy on American citizens and to power autonomous weapons.

This go-around, it wasn’t because Anthropic refused to kowtow to Trump’s officials. It was, they say, out of fear that these new models could be used to attack American interests. 

Mind you, no one in Trump’s regime has the tech chops to know just how dangerous, or not, any AI model is. As I recently noted, Trump’s AI executive order has no teeth. Nor, more to the point, is there anyone in the administration with a clue about AI.

Specifically, at the Department of Commerce, neither Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick nor William Kimmitt, undersecretary of commerce for international trade, knows a thing about AI. Just what we need, more political hacks deciding tech policy. 

So, how did they discover that Fable and Mythos were theoretically a danger to the US? Good question. According to The Wall Street Journal, it was Amazon CEO Andy Jassy who told the Trump administration that Fable was untrustworthy. Guess what? AWS offers its own full cloud AI stack, starting with Amazon Bedrock for foundation models, Amazon SageMaker for training and deployment, and a growing set of agentic AI tools and services. 

In other words, Amazon is not a neutral party; it’s a competitor. Funny, that.

Sure, Amazon also has partnerships with Anthropic. But, in case you haven’t noticed, all the big AI companies are in bed with each other. That doesn’t stop them from fighting. What’s heating this up is that the AI companies are no longer offering flat-rate subscriptions and are replacing them with far more expensive, token-based pricing schemes

Armed with this information, Commerce gave Anthropic 90 minutes to fix its “problem.” Right. AI development is fast, but it’s not that fast. In addition, according to Anthropic, officials haven’t spelled out exactly what’s wrong. They only know that Commerce claims there was a “narrow, non‑universal jailbreak” in Fable.   

That’s it. That’s all. 

Anthropic has also observed, with reason, that similar jailbreaks are possible on other leading models, like OpenAI’s GPT‑5.5. Those others, however, haven’t been hammered with comparable export controls.

The AI and security experts who do have an AI clue believe Commerce is behaving stupidly. (You won’t get any argument there from me.) For example, in an open letter, “On Transparent AI Cyber Protections,” they said Commerce’s directive “has taken the best models away from defenders, created market uncertainty, and risked America’s AI leadership without any real risk to justify it,” warning that pulling capabilities “away from defenders without a good reason when our adversaries are rapidly advancing is dangerous.”

Exactly so. 

Besides, as Alex Zenla, co-founder and CTO of security company Edera, observed, Fable’s capability to identify insecure code sections is the baseline for any model you’d trust to write secure code. The same capability exists in GPT-5.5, Opus, Sonnet, and Kimi 2.7 — it’s not unique to Fable. Pulling Fable from defenders doesn’t remove the capability from the threat landscape. It just removes it from the people trying to build safer systems.”

This is not about AI safety or security. 

What this is really about is opening a new front in Trump’s war against the liberal-leaning Anthropic. Mind you, Anthropic isn’t really liberal. This has more to do with Anthropic not following in other tech firms’ groveling to Trump

However, Trump doesn’t seem to realize that by essentially shutting down Anthropic’s biggest move to date, he’s also telling the world that they can’t rely on American AI companies down the road. Sure, in the short run, this hurts Anthropic. In the long run, it’s going to be another reason for Europe and other countries — taking digital sovereignty seriously — to avoid doing business with any American tech company. 

In the meantime, Anthropic and Trump administration officials are in tense talks over whether, and under what safeguards, the models could return to the marketplace. Commerce indicates it might allow a narrower relaunch if jailbreak issues are resolved and additional controls are in place — whatever those might be. 

Since it’s really all about massaging Trump’s ego, I’m not feeling terribly optimistic. Just ask Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu how well letting Trump set the terms of engagement goes. It’s not pretty

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