
Washington, DC [US], September 22 (ANI): The Trump administration has introduced new restrictions on reporters covering the Pentagon, intensifying what critics describe as an escalating clampdown on the press during President Donald Trump’s second term.
According to The Washington Post, a Department of War document released Friday outlined rules requiring journalists to pledge that they will not gather any information—classified or unclassified—unless it has been expressly authorized for release. Reporters who refuse could see their press credentials revoked, Pentagon officials warned.
This move follows earlier changes announced on February 1, when the Pentagon launched a rotational program that swapped out traditional mainstream media outlets for a slate of pro-Trump organizations. Outlets that had not previously enjoyed workspace inside the Pentagon were granted offices, while some established newsrooms lost their longstanding desks.
The Pentagon maintains that the changes affect only workspaces, not credentials, meaning displaced reporters can still attend press briefings and interact with officials. But newsroom representatives who met with Pentagon leaders earlier this week said losing office space created a “strategic disadvantage” for their reporting.
Traditionally, major news organizations have maintained desks in government hubs such as the White House, the Capitol, and the Pentagon. Known as the “Correspondents’ Corridor,” the Pentagon’s media workspaces have long symbolized the Department of Defense’s commitment to public transparency. A memo obtained by The New York Times noted that the offices, originally loaned out by the secretary of defense, were intended as “a tribute to the importance the department has long placed on informing the public about the U.S. military.”
Journalists and press freedom advocates, however, see the latest policy shift as a way to sideline critical outlets and reward media more sympathetic to Trump. One reporter called the restrictions “a political move disguised as security protocol,” warning that it could erode both press freedom and public trust.
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