Britain woos Anthropic expansion after US defence clash, FT says


FILE PHOTO: "U.S. Department of War" and Anthropic logos are seen in this illustration taken March 1, 2026. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

April 5 (Reuters) - Britain ⁠is trying to tempt Anthropic to ⁠expand its presence in the country, as ‌it seeks to capitalise on a fight between the maker of artificial intelligence app Claude and the U.S. ​Defense Department, the Financial Times ⁠said on Sunday.

British ⁠government proposals for Anthropic range from an office ⁠expansion in ‌London to a dual stock listing, the newspaper reported, citing people ⁠with knowledge of the plans.

Anthropic and Britain's ​Department of ‌Science, Innovation and Technology did not immediately ⁠respond to ​Reuters requests for comment.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer's office has supported the department's work, which will ⁠be put to Anthropic CEO ​Dario Amodei when he visits in late May, the FT said.

The U.S. government blacklisted Anthropic, designating ⁠the company a national-security supply-chain risk after it refused to allow the military to use AI chatbot Claude for U.S. surveillance or ​autonomous weapons.

A U.S. judge ⁠temporarily blocked the blacklisting, and the AI startup ​has a second lawsuit pending ‌over the supply-chain risk ​designation.

(Reporting by Chandni Shah in Bengaluru; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and William Mallard)

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