Pentagon Shuts Down Press Offices Following Court Order to Reinstate NYT Credentials

KO YONG-CHUL Reporter

korocamia@naver.com | 2026-03-24 11:52:05


WASHINGTON D.C. — In a dramatic escalation of the standoff between the U.S. Department of Defense and the media, the Pentagon announced on Monday the immediate closure of its long-standing internal press facilities. This move comes just days after a federal court ruled against the government's restrictive media policies.

Retaliation or Relocation?
Defense Department spokesperson Sean Parnell stated that the "Press Corridor" within the Pentagon—a workspace used by military correspondents for decades—will be shuttered effective immediately. Parnell noted that journalists would be redirected to an "annex" located outside the main building, though he provided no timeline for when this new facility would be ready for use.

The Legal Blow
The announcement follows a significant legal defeat for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia recently ruled that a media policy introduced last October was unconstitutional.

The contested policy required journalists to sign a pledge agreeing to the revocation of their credentials if they accessed classified or "controlled unclassified" information without prior approval. The New York Times (NYT), which had been hit hardest by these restrictions, filed a lawsuit alleging a violation of First Amendment rights.

Judge Paul Friedman, presiding over the case, sided with the NYT, ordering the Pentagon to reinstate the credentials of seven reporters.

"This policy was designed to purge 'unfavorable' journalists and replace them with those 'sympathetic and willing to serve the government,'" Judge Friedman wrote in his opinion. "It is a clear case of unlawful discrimination."

Heightened Surveillance
While the Pentagon is complying with the court's order to allow the reporters back into the building for now, it is doing so under extreme scrutiny. Any journalist entering the premises must now be accompanied by an authorized staff member at all times.

The Department of Defense has indicated it intends to appeal the court's decision, maintaining that its policies are necessary for national security.

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