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Palantir still uses Anthropic’s Claude despite Pentagon blacklist

Palantir Technologies Inc (PLTR) is in focus today after CEO Alex Karp confirmed the company still uses Anthropic’s Claude AI, despite the Pentagon’s recent branding of the startup as “supply chain risk.”

While the Department of Defense (DOD) plans on moving away from Anthropic, the integration remains active for now, he revealed at the “AIPcon 9” this morning.

At the time of writing, Palantir stock is down more than 15% versus its year-to-date high.

Why was Anthropic blacklisted?

The decision to designate Anthropic as a supply-chain risk – a label typically reserved for foreign adversaries like Huawei – stems from a fundamental disagreement over “operational veto power.”

According to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, the administration took action after Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei refused to lift restrictions that prevent Claude from being used for mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous lethal weapons.

The Pentagon argued that a private corporation cannot dictate the “lawful use” of tech in theater.

As DOD CTO Emil Michael put it, “You can’t have an AI company sell AI to the Department of War and then not let it do Department of War things.”

This ideological stalemate led to a formal blacklist effective March 2026, aimed at purging the “radical left” firm from the military ecosystem.

What this means for PLTR stock

For PLTR investors, this creates a complex landscape of execution risk and competitive opportunity.

Palantir’s “Maven Smart Systems” – the backbone of modern digital warfare – is deeply integrated with Claude’s code for intelligence analysis and targeting.

Ripping out these models “overnight” is technically impossible, as CTO Emil Michael admitted, giving Palantir a temporary buffer.

However, the mandate to re-architect mission-critical workflows for “approved” alternatives like OpenAI or xAI’s Grok introduces near-term costs and potential delivery delays.

Conversely, Wall Street sees an upside: as a “trusted” prime contractor that remains compliant with Pentagon directives, PLTR stock is well-positioned to capture billions in defense spending being diverted away from blacklisted vendors.

If Palantir successfully manages this “model swap” without degrading system performance in Iran, it could solidify its role as the indispensable bridge between frontier AI and the battlefield.

Navigating the AI cold war

The fallout has now moved to the courts, with Anthropic suing the Trump administration to reverse the designation, calling it an “unlawful campaign of retaliation.”

As the legal battle plays out, Palantir finds itself in a delicate balancing act – maintaining current capabilities while preparing for an inevitable transition.

“Our products are integrated with Anthropic, and in the future, it will probably be integrated with other large language models,” Karp noted, emphasizing a future defined by “model agnosticism.”

This strategy may be PLTR’s greatest asset; by refusing to be tethered to a single AI provider, the company can weather the political volatility of the “AI Cold War.”

As the six-month phase-out period begins, the industry will be watching to see if other contractors follow Lockheed Martin in a total ban, or if they follow Karp’s lead in holding the line until the last possible moment.

The post Palantir still uses Anthropic’s Claude despite Pentagon blacklist appeared first on Invezz

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