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Macron urges US to grant access to Anthropic’s AI models amid fears of attacks

French President Emmanuel Macron urged the US to grant broader access to Anthropic's AI models, following a US order to block foreign nationals from accessing them. G7 leaders discussed a "trusted partners" scheme to allow non-US nations access to advanced AI, amid concerns over the potential misuse of Anthropic's Mythos tool for cyberattacks.

read3 min views3 publishedJun 18, 2026

U.S. President Donald Trump told Anthropic to block foreign nationals from accessing its advanced models last week

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French President Emmanuel Macron has expressed optimism that significant progress will be made in the coming weeks regarding broader access to leading American artificial intelligence (AI) models.

His comments follow a pledge by G7 leaders for closer coordination on both the opportunities and risks presented by frontier AI.

The leaders, who convened for the Group of Seven summit in Evian-les-Bains, France, discussed the establishment of a "trusted partners" scheme. This initiative aims to grant non-US nations access to advanced AI models from firms such as Anthropic.

However, cybersecurity experts have voiced concerns over Anthropic's Mythos. While developed to identify coding flaws and bolster cyberdefences, there is a potential risk that the tool could inadvertently be used to accelerate attacks on the very systems it is designed to protect.

Last week, U.S. President Donald Trump told Anthropic to block foreign nationals from accessing its advanced models, citing national security concerns. That move spurred G7 discussions on the creation of the "trusted partners" scheme, which could open a path around the U.S. restrictions.

The "trusted partners" could be countries or companies, Reuters reported on Tuesday, and would allow them to use the models to develop stronger cybersecurity defences against rivals like China.

Regulating AI #

Macron said it was in Washington's interest to make Mythos more broadly available, as nobody would buy U.S. AI if there were fears it could be shut off at any moment.

Europe is struggling to balance a push for greater tech sovereignty, while also keeping pace with technological advances largely led by U.S. tech firms that dominate cloud computing, semiconductor design and cutting-edge AI research.

In a joint statement on Wednesday, G7 leaders said they would task finance officials, regulators and cybersecurity experts with assessing how frontier AI models could impact financial stability, productivity and labour markets.

AI executives from Anthropic, OpenAI and Google, which are all developing highly advanced models, attended a working lunch on Wednesday at the G7 to discuss regulation and AI infrastructure.

At the lunch, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman urged the G7 to take control of AI governance. He said the debate over whether AI is useful was over and that far more powerful systems would emerge, potentially reshaping the global economy and scientific discovery. But he added that it was for democratic governments — not AI companies — to decide how it is governed.

"Do not cede your responsibilities to AI labs like mine," he said. "We develop the technology, and the citizens of the free world make the rules."

Europe strives to find right tech balance #

European policymakers have increasingly framed AI as a matter of economic and national security. The European Commission recently unveiled plans for AI "gigafactories" and large-scale computing infrastructure designed to provide the region with sovereign access to computing power.

It has proposed laws to boost domestic cloud, AI and semiconductor industries and cut reliance on U.S. Big Tech, although critics say Europe remains years behind U.S. rivals.

Speaking at the tech leaders' lunch, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said it was in the mutual interest of the U.S. and the European Union for the EU to use the best AI models, while praising U.S. moves to ensure AI firms acted responsibly when introducing powerful new models.

"We use each other's trusted technology, and our financial systems are interconnected," she said.

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