OPENAI DROPS THREE NEW AI MODELS AT ONCE AS GOVERNMENT WATCHES EVERY MOVE
OpenAI has launched its most powerful model family yet, GPT-5.6, but the Trump administration is controlling who gets access and when, marking an unprecedented level of government intervention in commercial AI deployment.
The new lineup comes in three tiers: Sol, the flagship model built for the hardest problems including advanced coding and security research; Terra, a balanced option for high-volume business tasks; and Luna, the fastest and cheapest for everyday use. Sol runs on Cerebras hardware at up to 750 tokens per second, a number that makes every previous speed benchmark look like a joke.
But here is the part nobody is talking about loudly enough. OpenAI agreed to stagger the entire release after the Trump White House formally requested controlled access, citing national security concerns. Only about 20 organizations got the keys first. Everybody else waits.
This is not just a product launch. It is a preview of what AI governance looks like when Washington decides it wants a seat at the table. OpenAI built the most capable AI models in history and then handed the deployment calendar to federal officials. General availability is expected in the coming weeks, but the precedent has already been set. The government now moves at the speed of AI, or AI moves at the speed of the government. Either way, the era of unilateral lab launches appears to be over.
Keywords: OpenAI GPT-5.6, Sol Terra Luna models, AI government oversight, OpenAI Cerebras deployment