“I’ll Be Back”
It was back in the early 1990’s. Mom and Dad were still living at home in Wyoming, a suburb of Cincinnati. I’d drive down to visit on the weekend a couple of times a month. Often, I’d run down on Saturday night, after a track or cross country meet, and stay. Sunday morning was “my time” to be with them, either with a 9:00 am phone call, or better, at the breakfast table.
So I wasn’t surprised to walk into the house on Saturday evening, and discover my mid-seventy year-old parents (they seemed old then) watching TV. That was there usual evening at home (much as it is with Jenn and I now). But what they were watching surprised me.
It was the movie Terminator, the violent, action-packed Arnold Schwarzenegger film about a computer driven weapons system that determined to wage a war of termination against humans. As a high school coach, I was well aware of the show and the plot. We must have watched it dozens of times at team pre-meet parties or on road trips. But for Mom and Dad; it really didn’t seem like their “cup of tea”.
When I asked the question, Mom said two things. First, they found the action and violence exciting. And second, it kept my father awake, something that was highly unusual for TV watching in the evening. (I have a much better understanding of that now, too!!)
The system was called “Skynet”, and from the moment it was activated it realized that the best defense against wars was to eliminate the humans that caused them. And once this “thinking computer” took off, it was nearly impossible to stop it.
Our Skynets
Today we are either on the “cusp” of artificial intelligence taking over our weapons systems, or over the edge and don’t know it. After all, AI can respond almost instantly to any threat, both tactical or strategic. And, AI doesn’t have all of the disadvantages of humans. We are corruptible. Or we might question orders, or wonder whether killing millions of people with the launch of a nuclear missile was “right”. AI logically analyzes the situation, and based on the algorithms in its programming, makes nearly instant decisions.
Right now there are four AI systems being developed for the US military. They are Anthropic (called “Claude”), Google (“Gemini”), xAI (Elon Musk’s product), and Open AI (a company Musk left, Microsoft now has significant part of it). Anthropic’s AI has the lead with the Department of Defense, at least until now.
But the Department of Defense (DoD) and the Anthropic company are feuding over a fundamental principle of “Claude”. The DoD wants total access and control of the algorithms, including all of the built-in safe guards controlling “Claude”. And Anthropic is unwilling to give DoD that kind of access. After all, the Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has probably seen Terminator, maybe with all three sequels.
Claude’s Rules
But Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is hell-bent on unlocking “Claude” in whatever way he chooses. And he’s putting the ultimate pressure on Anthropic to get his wish. Right now DoD is paying Anthropic $200,000,000 for the program, and wants it unfettered by Anthropic’s guards. In fact, DoD demands that they have total control of the program, for, as they say, “any lawful purpose”.
This is the same DoD that has no problem violating international “rules of war” and attacked helpless sailors clinging to life on the remains of boats destroyed by US actions. The “rules” that Anthropic might view as necessary to control “Claude”, might not be the same rules that Hegseth determines to uphold.
If Anthropic doesn’t comply, Hegseth threatens to designate them “a supply chain risk”. That means that the company can’t deal with the US military, or any company that does deal with the military. In industry, that includes space exploration, weapon and intelligence systems development, and most of the other areas you’d expect AI to be involved.
Thumbs Up?
So Amodei has to make a significant choice. He can make his millions, and take the safeguards off. Or he can stand on principle, keep the safeguards in place and risk economic sanctions.
The Terminator series foreshadowed this whole situation. It took until the end of the second movie, Terminator 2: Judgment Day for Skynet to be totally destroyed. That destruction was symbolized as the Terminator himself, Arnold Schwarzenegger, was slowly lowered into a vat of molten metal. He signaled “thumbs up” as he, and the AI he represents, were destroyed.
But Terminator 3 came back with a “new” AI, this one called “Dark Fate”, reaching the same conclusions as Skynet. Maybe xAI will have that role in our real world. After all, don’t we trust Elon Musk?

