A US federal judge has temporarily blocked the Trump administration’s ban on government use of Anthropic’s AI technology, pausing measures that the company said could cost it billions in lost revenue.
Judge Rita Lin of the US District Court for the Northern District of California issued the preliminary injunction on Thursday. She put the order on hold for seven days to give the government a chance to appeal.
The case centers on a deal struck in July 2025 between Anthropic and the Pentagon. The contract would have made Claude the first frontier AI model approved for use on classified networks.
Negotiations broke down in February 2026. The Pentagon wanted to renegotiate, demanding Anthropic allow military use of Claude “for all lawful purposes” and without restrictions.
Anthropic refused. The company said its technology should not be used for lethal autonomous weapons or mass domestic surveillance of Americans.
The Defense Department then designated Anthropic as a national security supply chain risk. Anthropic sued in federal court in Washington, DC, on March 9, arguing that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had overstepped his authority.
A 90-minute court hearing took place in San Francisco on March 24. Judge Lin questioned government lawyers on whether Anthropic was being punished for publicly criticizing the Pentagon.
During the hearing, an Anthropic attorney noted that the Pentagon can review any AI model before deploying it. Anthropic also has no way to stop a model from working, change how it operates, or see how the military is using it.
A government lawyer argued that Anthropic destroyed trust during contract negotiations by trying to dictate Pentagon policies. The lawyer said the government was concerned about the risk of “future sabotage” from Anthropic.
Judge Lin rejected that reasoning. She said the Justice Department had no “legitimate basis” to conclude that Anthropic’s stance on restrictions could lead it to become a saboteur.
Anthropic held 32% of the enterprise AI market as of 2025, ahead of OpenAI at 25%, according to Menlo Ventures. A government-wide ban would have put that position at risk.
The case is Anthropic v. US Department of War, 26-cv-01996, US District Court, Northern District of California.
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