‘You don’t cook a Thanksgiving turkey in the microwave’: Pentagon confirms Department of Defense will use Google Gemini for ‘classified projects’ – US military to expand AI vendors as ‘overreliance on one vendor is never a good thing’

11 hours ago 2
ChatGPT and Gemini on mobile phones. (Image credit: Shutterstock/Mamun_Sheikh)

  • The Pentagon confirms it is expanding the use of Google Gemini
  • Gemini will be used for classified projects as part of the deal
  • Over 700 Google employees have signed an open letter opposing the deal

Pentagon AI chief Cameron Stanley has confirmed the Department of Defense (DoD) has secured the use of Google’s Gemini AI model.

Gemini will be used for classified projects, CNBC reports, citing a source familiar with the matter. Google employees recently called on CEO Sundar Pichai to reject any use of Gemini for ‘classified purposes’.

The DoD has also recently expanded its AI capabilities to include offerings from OpenAI, with Stanley commenting, “Overreliance on one vendor is never a good thing. We’re seeing that, especially in software.”

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Pentagon to use Gemini for classified projects

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth designated Anthropic as a “supply chain risk” after the company refused to allow its Claude model to be used for “mass domestic surveillance” and “fully autonomous weapons” in its contract with the Pentagon.

The Pentagon then cancelled its $200 million contract with Anthropic, and the company's technology was banned from use by government contractors working on behalf of the US military. Anthropic is now engaged in a legal battle with the Pentagon over the designation.

In order to fill the gap left by Anthropic, the DoD has been working to secure the use of new AI tools from OpenAI and Google, alongside numerous other technology suppliers.

A Google spokesperson told CNBC, “We support government agencies across both classified and non-classified projects, applying our expertise to areas like logistics, cybersecurity, diplomatic translation, fleet maintenance, and the defense of critical infrastructure.”

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The Pentagon is looking to leverage AI tools to maintain US hegemony on the global stage. “I have a personal quote that I usually say in these moments, you don’t cook a Thanksgiving turkey in the microwave,” Stanley said. “You need to have the right technology for the right use case to achieve the right outcome.”


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Benedict is a Senior Security Writer at TechRadar Pro, where he has specialized in covering the intersection of geopolitics, cyber-warfare, and business security.

Benedict provides detailed analysis on state-sponsored threat actors, APT groups, and the protection of critical national infrastructure, with his reporting bridging the gap between technical threat intelligence and B2B security strategy.

Benedict holds an MA (Distinction) in Security, Intelligence, and Diplomacy from the University of Buckingham Centre for Security and Intelligence Studies (BUCSIS), with his specialization providing him with a robust academic framework for deconstructing complex international conflicts and intelligence operations, and the ability to translate intricate security data into actionable insights.

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