The public record does not describe Claude as a self-directed cyberweapon that opened valves or changed water treatment processes. It describes a human intruder allegedly using Claude—and, in Dragos’ account, OpenAI GPT models as well—to accelerate intrusion work against Mexican organizations, including a municipal water and drainage utility [1].
What reportedly happened
Dragos said researchers at Gambit Security recovered materials in late February 2026 tied to compromises of multiple Mexican government organizations between December 2025 and February 2026. According to Dragos, those materials showed substantial evidence that an unknown adversary used Anthropic’s Claude and OpenAI GPT models for core intrusion activity [1].
Dragos’ water-sector review focused on a municipal water and drainage utility and identified a significant compromise of the utility’s enterprise IT environment [1]. Separate reporting on the broader campaign identified Monterrey’s water utility among the affected organizations [
5].
That distinction matters: the reported compromise centered on enterprise IT, while the most serious concern was how the attacker used AI to understand and move toward operational-technology and industrial-control-system context inside a water utility environment .




