Luckey, who founded and runs the weapons and defense software startup Anduril, pointed to a previous White House decision to compel private companies to work with the US government.
Posting on X several hours before Amodei’s statement, he referenced a 1948 statement by then-President Harry S. Truman that ordered railway companies to allow the US military to run their operations amid a workers’ strike.
Later that evening, Luckey said that Silicon Valley executives should not influence military policy.
“This idea, that military policy must be in the hands of elected leaders vs corporate executive, is a foundational principle for Anduril,” he wrote.
Since Luckey founded Anduril in 2017, the company has clinched a rapidly growing list of Defense Department contracts, providing drone, counter-drone, and AI software systems to the military.
Anduril is also in the running to build the US Air Force’s Collaborative Combat Aircraft, which are drone wingmen for crewed fighter jets.
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