Working paper, v2 (June 2026). Methodology: FACT (verifiable on primary source) / INFERENCE (logical deduction from documented facts, falsifiable). Speculation excluded. On June 12, 2026, the U.S. Department of Commerce ordered Anthropic to suspend global access to Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for any foreign national, with ninety minutes' notice. Fourteen days later, OpenAI's comparably capable GPT-5.6 family entered a staggered, partner-vetted preview under a different and far less disruptive legal instrument. This paper documents the legal architecture of the Anthropic directive, the contested and partially withdrawn technical justifications offered for it, the absence of a declared capability threshold separating the two cases, the cabinet-level rivalries that managed the dispute in place of a coherent regulatory process, and the extraterritorial consequences visible in France and Germany. It also documents two claims that circulated as evidence in this case - a Senate-relayed account of an NSA "breach" and a UK minister's resignation - that this paper's own verification process found unsupported or contradicted by primary sources, and explicitly withdraws them (Section 6). Conflict of interest: this paper was produced using Anthropic Claude as a research and drafting tool. Anthropic and its Fable 5/Mythos 5 models are the central subject of the analysis. Independent adversarial review on a non-Anthropic model was conducted prior to this v2; a residual conflict-of-interest risk on the comparative Anthropic/OpenAI framing (Sections 3-4) is disclosed and not fully resolved. Full statement in the document. v2 changelog: removes an unverified exact EAR statutory citation and an unverified Financial Times attribution; downgrades a bipartisan House letter claim to unverified aggregated reporting; explicitly labels all single-source claims; de-quotes IMF/ECB material pending transcript verification; reframes Section 4's central claim from causal to descriptive; adds a verification-status table (Section 7); strengthens the conflict-of-interest statement.
Marco Perugini (Sun,) studied this question.