Economy April 17, 2026 04:27 PM

Anthropic CEO Meets White House Officials Amid Pentagon Dispute Over New AI Model

Dario Amodei visits Washington as administration evaluates Mythos capabilities for defensive cybersecurity use

By Hana Yamamoto
Anthropic CEO Meets White House Officials Amid Pentagon Dispute Over New AI Model

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei arrived at the White House on April 17 for talks amid the startup's contract dispute with the Pentagon. The meeting follows government attention to Anthropic's recently announced AI model, Mythos, which is being tested in a controlled program for cybersecurity defense. Discussions between the company and the administration continue as officials assess security implications and potential government use.

Key Points

  • Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei visited the White House on April 17 amid a dispute with the Pentagon, observed by a witness.
  • The administration has recognized advanced defensive cybersecurity capabilities in Anthropic's recently announced Mythos model, which is being tested under Project Glasswing.
  • Discussions are ongoing between Anthropic and the White House; any government adoption of new AI technology would require an evaluation period for security.

Dario Amodei, chief executive of Anthropic, arrived at the White House on Friday, April 17, to hold discussions as the artificial intelligence company navigates a recent contract dispute with the Pentagon, according to a witness who observed his visit.

The timing of Amodei's visit coincides with growing recognition inside the administration of the advanced capabilities of Anthropic's newly announced model, Mythos. Officials have acknowledged the model's capacities for sophisticated defensive cybersecurity tasks, prompting further conversations between the company and government representatives about how the technology might be used to secure software vulnerabilities.

Anthropic has not immediately replied to a request for comment about the White House visit.

Amodei is scheduled to meet with White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, according to earlier reports. The meeting follows Anthropic's April 7 unveiling of Mythos and the company's decision to deploy the model under a controlled program called Project Glasswing. Under that initiative, select organizations are allowed to use the unreleased Claude Mythos Preview model specifically for defensive cybersecurity purposes.

A White House official said on Friday that the administration continues to engage with both government and industry stakeholders, including AI research labs, to ensure emerging models can help identify and remediate software vulnerabilities. The official added that any new technology that the government might adopt would undergo a period of evaluation for security before wider use.

Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark has said that the company was in discussions with the administration about Mythos, even after the Pentagon severed business ties amid a contract dispute.


Context from related commentary

Separately, promotional commentary included in the original coverage highlighted questions about investment opportunities for 2026 and referenced tools marketed to provide institutional-grade data and AI-driven insights to help investors identify opportunities. That commentary underlined a broader interest among market participants in data and model-driven decision tools, while noting such products do not guarantee investment winners.

Risks

  • Uncertainty over future government-business ties given the Pentagon's decision to cut off business relations following a contract dispute - impacts defense contractors and AI providers in the defense and cybersecurity sectors.
  • Security evaluation periods could delay potential deployment of AI models for government use, affecting procurement timelines in public-sector cybersecurity programs.
  • Ongoing discussions without immediate company comment create information gaps that may sustain market uncertainty for stakeholders tracking AI lab-government relationships, with potential implications for firms in AI, cybersecurity, and defense supply chains.

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