Key Highlights
- Google pursues negotiations with the Pentagon for Gemini AI deployment in secure military environments.
- The proposed agreement would permit military use of Google AI across all legally permissible applications.
- Google seeks contractual provisions prohibiting use in domestic mass surveillance and fully autonomous weapons systems.
- The protection language mirrors an agreement OpenAI previously secured with the Defense Department.
- Both Alphabet and the Pentagon have remained silent on the ongoing negotiations.
Google has entered discussions with the U.S. Department of Defense regarding military deployment of its Gemini AI models within classified environments, The Information reported, based on information from two sources familiar with the negotiations.
The negotiations represent a significant directional change for Google, which previously maintained distance from defense contracts. Employee protests erupted in 2018 when the company participated in Project Maven, a drone-based AI initiative for the military. Google subsequently withdrew from that collaboration.
The current discussions follow a different trajectory.
The Pentagon would gain authorization to utilize Google’s AI technology across various lawful applications under the proposed framework. Google aims to include specific contractual safeguards preventing AI deployment for domestic mass surveillance operations or weapons systems functioning without adequate human oversight.
Alignment with OpenAI Agreement Terms
Google’s requested safeguards align closely with provisions OpenAI established in its Pentagon agreement finalized earlier this year. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman allegedly urged the Defense Department to extend matching terms to competing AI firms, working toward industry-wide standardization.
The final contract may or may not incorporate Google’s requested protective measures. Discussions continue, and representatives from both Alphabet and the Pentagon declined to provide statements.
The Pentagon continues accelerating AI integration efforts. The Trump administration has directed military leadership to incorporate artificial intelligence throughout operations to reduce expenses and enhance administrative efficiency and decision-making speed.
Securing an agreement with Google would strengthen Alphabet’s position in the government contracting space, where AI companies increasingly compete for federal partnerships.
Anthropic Situation Provides Additional Framework
These negotiations unfold alongside a separate disagreement involving the Pentagon and Anthropic. Anthropic declined to modify safety protocols on its AI systems when the Pentagon requested changes in January. The Defense Department subsequently designated Anthropic as a supply chain risk, threatening its government contract portfolio.
The confrontation revealed underlying friction between AI safety frameworks and military requirements for adaptable, broadly accessible AI tools.
Google’s advance inclusion of surveillance and weapons restrictions appears designed to address this challenge proactively, establishing protections during negotiations rather than encountering obstacles similar to Anthropic’s experience.
President Trump issued an executive order directing the Defense Department to adopt the name Department of War, though implementation requires Congressional approval and remains pending.
Alphabet’s Google (GOOGL) traded lower during the session, declining 0.08% at reporting time.

