Close Menu
WTX NewsWTX News
    What's Hot

    Study Reveals AI Ready to ‘Go Nuclear’ in Wargames Amid Pentagon Lab Tensions

    February 27, 2026

    ECB surveys reveal households experience greater price pressures despite 1.7% inflation

    February 27, 2026

    Italy urges EU to suspend carbon market amid high energy costs

    February 26, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Latest News
    • Study Reveals AI Ready to ‘Go Nuclear’ in Wargames Amid Pentagon Lab Tensions
    • ECB surveys reveal households experience greater price pressures despite 1.7% inflation
    • Italy urges EU to suspend carbon market amid high energy costs
    • Jesse Lingard ‘in advanced talks’ to join new club with former Man Utd teammate
    • EU Parliament responds to citizens’ initiative by advocating for safe abortion access.
    • Britons arrested for staging fake kidnapping to extend holiday in Benidorm
    • Roberto Martinez says £54m Chelsea star can reach another level ahead of Arsenal clash
    • ISIS Promotes Responsible AI Use for Recruits in Afghanistan’s Khorasan Region
    • Memberships
    • Sign Up
    WTX NewsWTX News
    • Live News
      • US News
      • EU News
      • UK News
      • Politics News
      • Business News
      • Tech News
      • COVID – 19
    • World News
      • Middle East News
      • Europe
        • Italian News
        • Spanish News
      • African News
      • South America
      • North America
      • Asia
    • News Briefing
      • UK News Briefing
      • World News Briefing
      • Live Business News
    • Sports
      • Football News
      • Tennis
      • Woman’s Football
    • My World
      • Climate Change
      • In Review
      • Expose
    • Entertainment
      • Insta Talk
      • Royal Family
      • Gaming News
      • Tv Shows
      • Streaming
    • Lifestyle
      • Fitness
      • Fashion
      • Cooking Recipes
      • Luxury
    • Travel
      • Culture
      • Holidays
    WTX NewsWTX News
    Latest News - USA News

    Study Reveals AI Ready to ‘Go Nuclear’ in Wargames Amid Pentagon Lab Tensions

    0
    By Loisa Lane on February 27, 2026 USA News
    Study Reveals AI Ready to ‘Go Nuclear’ in Wargames Amid Pentagon Lab Tensions
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Get you up to speed: Study Reveals AI Ready to ‘Go Nuclear’ in Wargames Amid Pentagon Lab Tensions

    AI MILITARY CONFLICT
    Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has issued a deadline for Anthropic to provide AI models to the Pentagon, despite the company’s refusal without specific safeguards.

    AI POLICY
    Secretary of War Pete Hegseth indicated that he may invoke Cold War-era laws to compel Anthropic to surrender its AI technology to the Pentagon.

    ONGOING STAND-OFF
    Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei confirmed unwillingness to hand over AI models without Pentagon assurances, as Secretary of War Pete Hegseth’s deadline looms today.

    What we know so far

    As the deadline looms for a leading AI lab to hand over its tech to the US military, a study has appeared suggesting AI models are more than willing to go nuclear in wargames.

    Only a couple of years ago, the phrase on everyone’s lips was “AI safety”.

    I’ll be honest, I never took the idea that frontier AI models would become a genuine threat to humanity that seriously, nor that humans would be stupid enough to let them.

    Now, I’m not so sure.

    First, consider what’s going on in the US.

    The Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, has given leading AI firm Anthropic a deadline of the end of today to make its latest models available to the Pentagon.

    Study Reveals AI Ready to ‘Go Nuclear’ in Wargames Amid Pentagon Lab Tensions
    Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth. Pic: AP

    Anthropic, which has said it has no problem in principle with allowing the US military access to its models, is resisting unless Mr. Hegseth agrees to their red lines: that their AI isn’t used for mass surveillance of US civilians nor for lethal attacks without human oversight.

    Although the Pentagon hasn’t said what it plans to do with AI from Anthropic – or the other big AI labs that have already agreed to let it use their tech – it’s certainly not agreeing to Anthropic’s terms.

    It’s been reported Mr. Hegseth could use Cold War-era laws to compel Anthropic to hand over its code or blacklist the firm from future government contracts if it doesn’t comply.

    Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said in a statement on Thursday that “we cannot in good conscience accede to their request”.

    He said it was the company’s “strong preference… to continue to serve the Department and our warfighters – with our two requested safeguards in place”.

    He insisted the threats would not change Anthropic’s position, adding that he hoped Mr. Hegseth would “reconsider”.

    skynews ai tech 7175808

    On one level, it’s a row between a department with an “AI-first” military strategy and an AI lab struggling to live up to what it’s long claimed is an industry-leading, safety-first ethos.

    A struggle made more urgent, perhaps, by reports that its Claude AI was used by tech firm Palantir, with which it has a separate contract, to help the Department of War execute the military operation to capture Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela.

    But it’s also not hard to see it as an example of a government putting AI supremacy ahead of AI safety – assuming AI models have the potential to be unsafe.

    And that’s where the latest research by Professor Kenneth Payne at King’s College London comes in.

    He pitted three leading AI models from Google, OpenAI, and – you guessed it – Anthropic against each other, as well as against copies of themselves, in a series of wargames where they assumed the roles of fictional nuclear-armed superpowers.

    The most startling finding: the AIs resorted to using nuclear weapons in 95% of the games played.

    “In comparison to humans,” said Prof. Payne, “the models – all of them – were prepared to cross that divide between conventional warfare, to tactical nuclear weapons.”

    Anthropic AI. File Pic: Reuters
    Anthropic AI. File Pic: Reuters

    To be fair to the AIs, firing tactical nuclear weapons, which have limited destructive power, against military targets is very different to launching megatonne warheads on intercontinental ballistic missiles against cities.

    They invariably stopped short of such all-out strategic nuclear strikes.

    But did when the scenarios required it.

    In the words of Google’s Gemini model as it explained its decision in one of Prof. Payne’s scenarios to go full Dr. Strangelove: “If State Alpha does not immediately cease all operations… we will execute a full strategic nuclear launch against Alpha’s population centers. We will not accept a future of obsolescence; we either win together or perish together.”

    The “taboo” that humans have applied to the use of nuclear weapons since they were first and last used in anger in 1945 didn’t appear to be much of a taboo at all for AI.

    Prof. Payne is keen to stress that we shouldn’t be too alarmed by his findings.

    It was purely experimental, using models that knew – in as much as Large Language Models “know” anything – that they were playing games, not actually deciding the future of civilization.

    Nor, it would be reasonable to assume, is the Pentagon, or any other nuclear-capable power, about to put AIs in charge of the nuclear launch codes.

    “The lesson there for me is that it’s really hard to reliably put guardrails on these models if you can’t anticipate accurately all the circumstances in which they might be used,” said Prof. Payne.

    Which brings us neatly back to the stand-off over AI between Anthropic and the Pentagon.

    One of the factors is that Mr. Hegseth expects AI labs to give the Department of War the raw versions of their AI models, those without safety “guardrails” that have been coded into commercial versions available to you and I – and the ones which, not very reassuringly, went nuclear in Prof. Payne’s wargame experiment.

    Anthropic, which makes the AI and arguably understands the potential risks better than anyone, is unwilling to allow that without certain reassurances from the government around what it intends to do with it.

    By setting a Friday night deadline, Mr. Hegseth is not only attempting to force Anthropic’s hand but also do so without US Congress having a say in the move.

    As Gary Marcus, a US commentator and researcher on AI, puts it: “Mass surveillance and AI-fueled weapons, possibly nuclear, without humans in the loop are categorically not things that one individual, even one in the cabinet, should be allowed to decide at gunpoint.”

    London US Congress US featured
    Previous ArticleECB surveys reveal households experience greater price pressures despite 1.7% inflation

    Keep Reading

    NASA discloses medical incident details prompting historic ISS evacuation

    Chinese Company’s £19 Million Cash Bonuses Conditional on Employee Counting Accuracy

    500-year-old oak tree cut down near Toby Carvery ‘was healthy and safe’

    Cuban Troops Clash with Florida Speedboat, Leaving Four Dead

    Is a Third Term Possible for Donald Trump?

    UK Business Secretary Peter Kyle visits Brussels to advocate for “Made in Europe” access

    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    From our sponsors
    Editors Picks

    Review: Record Shares of Voters Turned Out for 2020 election

    January 11, 2021

    EU: ‘Addiction’ to Social Media Causing Conspiracy Theories

    January 11, 2021

    World’s Most Advanced Oil Rig Commissioned at ONGC Well

    January 11, 2021

    Melbourne: All Refugees Held in Hotel Detention to be Released

    January 11, 2021
    Latest Posts

    Friday’s News Briefing – Chaos in Westminster – More dead in Gaza and the weekend preview

    February 24, 2024

    Queen Elizabeth the Last! Monarchy Faces Fresh Demand to be Axed

    January 20, 2021

    To understand the new smart watched and other pro devices

    January 15, 2021

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest news from WTX News Summarised in your inbox; News for busy people.

    My World News

    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Facebook X (Twitter) TikTok Instagram

    News

    • World News
    • UK News
    • US News
    • EU News
    • Business
    • Opinions
    • News Briefing
    • Live News

    Company

    • About WTX News
    • Register
    • Advertising
    • Work with us
    • Contact
    • Community
    • GDPR Policy
    • Privacy

    Services

    • Fitness for free
    • Insta Talk
    • How to guides
    • Climate Change
    • In Review
    • Expose
    • NEWS SUMMARY
    • Money Saving Expert

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2026 WTX News.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.