Exclusive news, data and analytics for financial market professionalsLearn more aboutRefinitiv

Anthropic logo in this illustration taken June 5, 2026. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab
June 19 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said he might have viewed artificial intelligence company Anthropic as a national security threat last week, but he no longer does, according to an interview with "The Axios Show" published on Friday.
Senior Anthropic technical staff were scheduled to meet with Trump administration officials earlier this week to discuss a dispute over foreign access to its most advanced AI models, Fable 5 and Mythos 5. The company last week disabled access for all users to those models after Trump ordered Anthropic to block foreign nationals from accessing them.
Get weekly news and analysis on U.S. politics and how it matters to the world with the Reuters Politics U.S. newsletter. Sign up here.
Here are some of the details from the Axios interview:
-
When asked if he viewed Anthropic, or its CEO Dario Amodei, as a threat to national security, Trump said: "Well, not now, but a week ago, maybe."
-
Trump told Axios that Amodei responded to the administration's export control directive "very quickly" and "responsibly."
-
Trump and other G7 leaders met with tech bosses, including Amodei, at a summit in France this week.
-
Trump did not rule out using emergency powers under the Defense Production Act against Anthropic, according to Axios.
-
"I have the power to use a lot of things," Trump said of the DPA. "But I'm not sure I have to do that."
-
Asked to comment on Trump's interview, an Anthropic spokesperson said: "We are grateful to the administration for their ongoing partnership in working to get this matter resolved as quickly as possible. We remain committed to working alongside them towards our shared goals of protecting critical infrastructure and making sure the U.S. leads in AI.”
Reporting by Ryan Patrick Jones in Toronto; Editing by Nia Williams
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab
-
X
-
Facebook
-
Linkedin
-
Email
-
Link
Read Next
- 5 hours agoTechnologycategory
US scientist John Jumper to leave Google DeepMind for Anthropic
- 16 hours agoLegalcategory
AI-generated ads should be exempt from EU transparency rules, retail association says
- 20 hours ago
India's RMZ to ramp up data center capacity with $35 billion push, exec says
- 12 hours agoBusinesscategory
Early users of Anthropic's Mythos still have access after US order, Bloomberg News reports
- 17 hours ago
ASML denies selling EUV chipmaking tool to China after report of US concern
World
Middle Eastcategory · June 19, 2026 · 11:08 PM EDT · 9 mins ago
Emerging outlines of a deal between Washington and Tehran to end their war contain a stinging paradox: sweeteners to coax Iran into compliance may strengthen an adversarial force that the U.S. and its Western allies consider a terrorist organisation.
10:52 PM EDT
- Asia Pacificcategory Japan to target $2.3 trillion public-private investment by 2040, Nikkei reports
10:51 PM EDT
10:32 PM EDT
9:27 PM EDT
Read Original at Reuters →
