Trump’s New Restrictions on Pentagon Reporters ‘Should Alarm Every American’
Journalists and defenders of press freedom are expressing alarm and condemnation after the Pentagon, under the command of Donald Trump and Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, announced new restrictions on reporters that include pre-approval of stories that include even unclassified material and a new pledge to not publish any material without permissions from government officials.
The New York Times, among the first to report on a 17-page memo detailing the new rules, noted how the “move could drastically restrict the
flow of information about the U.S. military to the public.” The National Press
Club (NPC) was quick to rebuke the restrictions as an assault on the public’s
right to know and fundamental journalistic freedoms.
“The Pentagon is now demanding that journalists sign a
pledge not to obtain or report any information—even if unclassified—unless it
has been expressly authorized by the government,” said Mike Balsamo, president
of the NPC, in a statement. “This is a direct assault on independent journalism
at the very place where independent scrutiny matters most: the U.S. military.”
Balsamo continued:
For generations, Pentagon reporters have provided the public
with vital information about how wars are fought, how defense dollars are
spent, and how decisions are made that put American lives at risk. That work
has only been possible because reporters could seek out facts without needing
government permission.
If the news about our military must first be approved by the government, then
the public is no longer getting independent reporting. It is getting only what
officials want them to see. That should alarm every American.
Seth Stern, director of advocacy at Freedom of the Press
Foundation, explained to the Times that the government is
prohibited by law from demanding journalists surrender their right to
investigate the government in exchange for access or credentials.
“This policy operates as a prior restraint on publication
which is considered the most serious of First Amendment violations,” Stern
said. “The government cannot prohibit journalists from public information
merely by claiming it’s a secret or even a national security threat.”
In comments to the Washington Post, Katie
Fallow, deputy litigation director at the Knight First Amendment Institute at
Columbia University, called the new policy part of “the Trump administration’s
broader assault on free speech and press freedom.”
Any journalist, she added, “who publishes only what the
government ‘authorizes’ is doing something other than reporting.”
Kenneth Roth, former executive director of Human Rights
Watch and now a visiting professor at Princeton University, put it this way:
“In Trump’s Pentagon, journalists who venture beyond reporting official
propaganda now risk having their credentials revoked.”
Individual journalists, including veteran reporters who have
covered the Pentagon for years or decades, also chimed in.
Konstantin Toropin, the Pentagon correspondent for the
Associated Press, expressed alarm and dismay at the new restrictions.
“The Pentagon, which has claimed to [have] aspirations of
being the most transparent in history, is once again cracking down on basic
press access,” Toropin said in a social media post. “Denying access to the
Pentagon makes covering our military, our troops, and our actions abroad
harder. Full stop.”
Toropin said the rule forbidding the unapproved release of
unclassified material, sometimes marked with the acronym “CUI,” is “an
incredibly broad and ill-defined rule that could be easily abused.”
As his colleague Brian Everstine, the Pentagon editor at
Aviation Week, noted:
At a time when Trump is being accused of severe abuses of
power, including a series of attacks on alleged illegal drug runners in the
Caribbean Sea, which international law experts have condemned as ”extrajudicial executions,” further restrictions on the
ability of journalists to report on the internal workings of the president’s
military operations are seen as particularly dangerous.
Barbara Starr, who worked as CNN’s chief Pentagon
correspondent for many years who is now a senior fellow at the University of
Southern California Annenberg Center for Communication, Leadership and Policy,
told ABC News that the entire effort “is extremely troubling
because it’s being done in an era of unprecedented public hostility from the
secretary of defense to the news media.”