# ENISA meets Anthropic amid US export controls on AI models

> Source: <https://cryptobriefing.com/enisa-anthropic-us-ai-export-controls/>
> Published: 2026-06-18 04:44:55+00:00

# ENISA meets Anthropic amid US export controls on AI models

The EU's cybersecurity agency is sitting down with Anthropic just days after the US forced the company to suspend access to its most advanced AI models for foreign nationals

The European Union Agency for Cybersecurity, better known as ENISA, is set to meet with Anthropic on June 19, 2026, in San Francisco. The timing is, to put it mildly, loaded.

Just one week earlier, on June 12, the US Department of Commerce ordered Anthropic to cut off access to its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models for foreign nationals. The rationale: national security concerns tied to diversion risks and vulnerabilities. Anthropic complied by disabling the models globally for all users, not just the targeted foreign nationals.

## The first AI trade war salvo

The Bureau of Industry and Security is now applying trade regulations directly to commercial AI model access. Not chips. Not equipment. Software you access through an API.

The move represents one of the first instances where Washington has applied this kind of regulatory pressure to a commercial AI application rather than the underlying infrastructure.

## Why ENISA is at the table

Advanced AI models have become critical tools in cybersecurity operations. They’re used for threat detection, vulnerability analysis, incident response, and a growing list of defensive applications. When the US pulls the plug on model access, it doesn’t just inconvenience European researchers. It potentially degrades the EU’s ability to defend its own digital infrastructure.

EU officials have expressed concern about what this dependency looks like in practice. European cybersecurity teams that built workflows around Anthropic’s most capable models suddenly found themselves locked out, not because of anything they did, but because of a policy decision made in Washington.

The meeting was reportedly arranged before the June 12 suspension order, which makes the conversation even more interesting. What was likely planned as a productive dialogue about regulatory frameworks and responsible AI access is now happening in the shadow of an actual access cutoff.

## Europe’s technological sovereignty problem

The incident has intensified calls within the EU for greater technological sovereignty. Europe does not have a frontier AI model that competes with the top offerings from Anthropic, OpenAI, or Google DeepMind. That means European institutions, from governments to hospitals to cybersecurity agencies, depend on American companies for access to the most capable AI systems available.

The EU has invested in AI research and regulation, most notably through the AI Act, which focuses on safety and transparency requirements. But regulation isn’t the same as capability.

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