The United States Department of Defense is deepening its partnership with Google by deploying advanced artificial intelligence tools to automate its workforce. Over three million civilian and military personnel will soon gain access to custom Google Gemini AI agents. This major rollout aims to streamline administrative tasks across the defense sector.
The deployment of Google Gemini AI agents comes at a critical time for the Pentagon, which is aggressively expanding its artificial intelligence capabilities. This move also follows a high-profile public dispute and contract termination between the Defense Department and AI developer Anthropic.
Automating the Defense Workforce
Google’s AI tools will be accessible through GenAI.mil, the enterprise AI portal used by the Pentagon. Defense personnel will be able to build their own custom AI agents without needing any prior coding experience. Through a feature called Agent Designer, users can simply type natural language prompts to create digital assistants tailored to their specific daily needs.
These custom agents are designed to handle repetitive, multi-step administrative duties. According to Google, employees can use the technology to summarize meeting notes, draft documents, plan projects, and build budgets. The system can even cross-reference proposed actions against national defense strategies to ensure alignment with broader military goals.
Currently, the rollout is strictly limited to unclassified networks. However, defense officials are already looking toward future expansions. US Defense Undersecretary Emil Michael noted that the initial focus is on unclassified networks because that is where the majority of users operate. Michael added that the department plans to eventually introduce these tools to classified and top-secret systems.
Rapid Adoption and Training Challenges
The Defense Department has seen a massive surge in artificial intelligence usage since it first provided access to Gemini on the GenAI.mil portal in December 2025. Around 1.2 million defense employees have already used the unclassified chatbot. During this short period, users have run 40 million unique prompts and uploaded more than four million documents to the system.
Despite this rapid rate of adoption, internal education has struggled to keep pace with the soaring demand. Reports indicate that only 26,000 personnel have completed formal artificial intelligence training since December, highlighting a significant gap between software availability and workforce readiness.
The Anthropic Fallout and Industry Shifts
Google’s expanding role in defense technology arrives amidst a dramatic rift between the Pentagon and Anthropic. The Defense Department recently terminated its contract with Anthropic over fundamental disagreements regarding how artificial intelligence should be used.
Anthropic, led by Dario Amodei, insisted on specific safeguards to prevent its technology from being used for mass domestic surveillance or the development of autonomous weapons. Conversely, the US Defense Department maintained that it required access to artificial intelligence for all lawful purposes.
Following the contract termination, the Pentagon designated Anthropic as a supply chain risk. In response, Anthropic filed a lawsuit against the Defense Department. While some industry rumors suggested the two parties might negotiate a new agreement, defense officials have firmly shut down that possibility. Undersecretary Michael stated clearly that the talks are over and the department is moving on.
Market Impact and Internal Pressures
As Anthropic exits the defense space, other major technology firms are stepping in to fill the void. The Pentagon has successfully signed new agreements with OpenAI and xAI to provide tools for restricted networks. However, this transition has not been entirely smooth. OpenAI’s decision to partner with the military for classified networks sparked immediate public backlash, resulting in a user-led online movement dubbed “QuitGPT.”
Meanwhile, Google has largely remained on the sidelines of the public dispute, allowing it to quietly advance its position in the government sector. Undersecretary Michael expressed strong confidence in Google, calling the company a reliable partner for future operations across all defense networks.
Yet, Google is not entirely immune to the ethical debates surrounding military technology. Over 30 employees from both Google and OpenAI, including DeepMind chief scientist Jeff Dean, recently signed an amicus brief supporting Anthropic’s stance. Several employees have also urged their leadership to stronger back safety initiatives similar to those proposed by Anthropic.
The Broader AI Race
The fallout has caused notable shifts in the consumer market as well. Following the termination of its defense contract, Anthropic’s Claude chatbot experienced a massive spike in downloads, with paid subscriptions growing over 200 percent year over year. Google is also seeing remarkable consumer growth, with Gemini subscriptions surging by 258 percent in the same period.
While defense contracts represent a fraction of Alphabet’s annual revenue—which exceeds $400 billion—industry analysts note that government partnerships offer Google a way to diversify its income away from consumer advertising. As the landscape evolves, the deployment of Google Gemini AI agents positions the company as a central player in the future of military automation.
