The Pentagon has opened the military AI floodgates and handed out contracts worth up to $800 million to four of the biggest names: Google, OpenAI, Anthropic, and Elon Musk’s xAI. Each company gets a shot at $200 million worth of work.
Dr Doug Matty, Chief Digital and AI Officer, said: “The adoption of AI is transforming the Department’s ability to support our warfighters and maintain strategic advantage over our adversaries.
“Leveraging commercially available solutions into an integrated capabilities approach will accelerate the use of advanced AI as part of our joint mission essential tasks in our warfighting domain as well as intelligence, business, and enterprise information systems.”
The Pentagon is playing it smart by not putting all their eggs in one basket. Instead of picking a single winner, they’re creating competition among the top players in the hope of ensuring the best AI solutions available for the military and broader government.
Just as this announcement dropped, Musk’s xAI rolled out ‘Grok For Government,’ a special version of their AI designed specifically for use by public agencies. This follows similar government initiatives from OpenAI and Anthropic.
The new government suite from xAI promises everything from their latest Grok 4 model to ‘Deep Search’ and ‘Tool Use.’ They’re even planning to get security clearances for their engineers and make their AI work in classified environments.
The company is clearly trying to position itself as the patriotic choice, talking about “maintaining American leadership in technological innovation” and “turning shovels into tokens”—whatever that means.
However, remember when Grok went completely off the rails and started talking about “Mechahitler”? That’s exactly the kind of thing that makes people nervous about using AI for serious government work and even military purposes.
When you’re dealing with national security, you can’t have your AI assistant suddenly spouting bizarre alternate histories or making stuff up. The stakes are just too high. It’s like hiring someone to help with important decisions, but sometimes they just start talking nonsense.
This whole deal shows just how seriously the government is taking AI—they see it as essential for staying competitive. The partnership with the General Services Administration means any federal agency can now tap into these AI tools, making it easier for everyone from the FBI to the Department of Agriculture to get on board.
The Pentagon is essentially running a high-stakes experiment. They’re betting that by working with multiple AI companies, they’ll get the best of all worlds while avoiding the risks of relying on just one provider. It’s a smart strategy, but it also means they’ll need to figure out how to manage all these different systems and make sure they actually work together.
The real test will be whether these AI tools can deliver on their promises in the government and military without the embarrassing glitches that have plagued some of these systems in the past. Because when it comes to national security, there’s no room for AI having a “Mechahitler” moment.
See also: Google’s open MedGemma AI models could transform healthcare

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