Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon Expand Classified Military AI Use

The Pentagon has struck agreements with four more technology companies for expanded use of advanced artificial intelligence tools on classified military networks, according to a Defense Department statement and two defense officials briefed on the matter.

Nvidia Corp., Microsoft Corp., Reflection AI Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. have all newly struck agreements with the US Defense Department “for lawful operational use,” according to the statement. The officials asked not to be named to discuss internal discussions.

Many of the technology companies already provide AI tools to the US military, but defense officials have been seeking to expand the terms of use since the fall of 2025. Other technology companies that have recently agreed to similar deals include SpaceX, OpenAI and Google.

“These agreements accelerate the transformation toward establishing the United States military as an AI-first fighting force,” said the statement, which refers to all seven companies and which also marks the first official Pentagon confirmation of a new deal with Google reported earlier this week.

The effort to deliver new deals with technology companies for maximalist military use of advanced AI comes as the Pentagon is racing to develop viable alternatives to Anthropic PBC’s Claude tool. An acrimonious fracture between Anthropic and senior defense officials exposed a recurring fault line between the Pentagon and Silicon Valley over the looming risks of AI at war.

The Pentagon negotiated its deal with Amazon Web Services late into Thursday, according to two Pentagon officials briefed on the talks.

AWS has been committed to supporting the US military for more than a decade, said Tim Barrett, an AWS spokesperson, when asked to comment on the new deal. “We look forward to continuing to support the Department of War’s modernization efforts, building AI solutions that help them accomplish their critical missions.”