Listen to the article
Key Takeaways
🌐 Translate Article
📖 Read Along
💬 AI Assistant
By Staff Writer
Anthropic, the leading American frontier AI company, has appointed Teresa Carlson to lead its global government business, a move that signals the company’s intent to make trusted AI foundational to the national security enterprise of the United States and its allies.
Few executives in the technology industry can match Carlson’s record at the intersection of digital transformation and national security. Her appointment comes at a pivotal moment, as Washington races to define its AI regulatory posture, competition with China for AI leadership intensifies, and Anthropic prepares for a public listing in which government adoption is likely to weigh heavily on its trajectory.
The executive who brought the cloud to the intelligence community
Carlson’s national security credentials were forged over more than a decade at Amazon Web Services, where she founded and led the Worldwide Public Sector business, building it from a standing start into a multi-billion-dollar enterprise that fundamentally reshaped how governments compute.
The watershed came in 2013, when AWS won the Central Intelligence Agency’s landmark Commercial Cloud Services (C2S) contract. It was the first time a commercial cloud provider had been entrusted to build and operate infrastructure for the US intelligence community at the highest levels of classification. The contract, won against entrenched incumbents, did more than modernise the CIA’s computing. It broke a psychological barrier across the national security establishment, proving that commercial innovation could be delivered securely at Top Secret level. It also paved the way for the intelligence community’s multi-vendor Commercial Cloud Enterprise (C2E) programme and the Department of Defense’s enterprise cloud adoption that followed.
Under Carlson’s leadership, AWS built air-gapped Secret and Top Secret cloud regions for the US government, achieved the accreditations that enabled defence and intelligence workloads to migrate at scale, and extended that model to allied governments. The United Kingdom’s intelligence agencies, Australia’s national security community and NATO governments across Europe all moved towards secure commercial cloud architectures in the years that followed, a transformation in which Carlson’s team played a pioneering role. Her public sector remit spanned government, defence, education, healthcare and non-profit customers in more than 150 countries.
A career spanning the arc of government digital transformation
Before AWS, Carlson led Microsoft’s US federal business, giving her an early grounding in the requirements, procurement culture and mission tempo of American government customers. She later returned to Microsoft as a Corporate Vice President and Executive in Residence, and went on to hold global leadership roles at Splunk, a company at the heart of security operations and data analytics for defence and intelligence customers, and at Flexport in global logistics.
Most recently, Carlson served as Chief Executive of the General Catalyst Institute, the public policy arm of the venture firm General Catalyst, where she shaped policy engagement on emerging technologies across defence, national security, energy, health, manufacturing and finance. That role placed her at the centre of the transatlantic conversation on how democracies should govern and deploy transformative technologies, experience directly relevant to the AI policy debates now under way in Washington, London and Brussels.
Why this matters for Anthropic and its allies
Anthropic has been quietly assembling one of the most credible national security AI offerings in the market. Its Claude for Government platform holds FedRAMP High authorisation, its Claude Gov models serve US national security customers in classified environments, and its OneGov agreement with the General Services Administration, struck in 2025, opened Claude to federal civilian agencies, Congress and the judiciary. Beyond the United States, Anthropic has partnered with the British government to bring AI assistance to GOV.UK services.
What Anthropic has lacked is an executive with the standing to bring these strands together into a global public sector business, someone trusted in the Situation Room and the boardroom alike. Carlson is that executive. Her career has been defined by persuading risk-averse national security institutions to adopt commercial technology on the strength of security, compliance and mission outcomes. That is precisely the challenge frontier AI now faces.
The stakes extend well beyond one company’s order book. The contest between democratic and authoritarian models of AI will be decided in large part by whether the United States and its allies can deploy trusted AI across their defence, intelligence and government enterprises faster than their adversaries. The intelligence community’s adoption of commercial cloud a decade ago, a transformation Carlson helped lead, proved decisive in enabling today’s data-driven intelligence enterprise. The adoption of frontier AI represents the next inflection point, and its consequences are likely to be even greater.
For allies from London to Canberra, and from Riyadh to Tokyo, Carlson’s appointment signals that Anthropic intends to build at coalition scale, not simply for Washington. Democracies that move early to embed trusted AI across their national security enterprises will set the standards, shape the safeguards and secure the strategic advantage.
Anthropic has recruited the one executive who has done this before. The AI revolution in government now has its proven field commander.
