Pentagon Accepts Mystery $130 Million Donation
Digest more
The Independent on MSN
The Pentagon issues statement decrying Netflix’s House of Dynamite over ‘inaccuracies’
In an internal memorandum from the Missile Defense Agency obtained by Bloomberg and dated October 16, the agency states that while the film “highlights that deterrence can fail, which reinforces the need for an active homeland missile defense system,” its fictional depiction also downplays US capabilities.
Sign up for The Media Today, CJR’s daily newsletter.
Welcome to The Hill’s Defense & NatSec newsletter{beacon} Defense &National Security Defense &National Security The Big Story The Pentagon reporters have left the
The Federalist, the Epoch Times, and One America News signed the Defense Department’s press rules. The rest are freelancers, independent or work for media outfits based overseas.
News organizations warn the policy amounts to “intimidation” and threatens journalists’ ability to inform the public.
The new rules codify strict limitations on access and raise the prospect of punishment for requesting information on matters of public interest.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's new policy has restricted journalist access to the Pentagon. Here’s how that changes military coverage.
The year was 1992. The day was Dec. 8. The scene was the Pentagon briefing room, where a neophyte reporter with no military experience stood in front of a large wall-sized National Geographic world map and prepared to explain what was happening in Somalia to an international audience.