五角大楼限制独立媒体采访政策被法官裁定为非法


2026-03-20T21:17:54.163Z / CNN

五角大楼限制独立媒体采访政策被法官裁定为非法

By

[Devan Cole]

Updated 1小时53分钟前

更新于2026年3月20日,美国东部时间下午6:07

发布于2026年3月20日,美国东部时间下午5:17

媒体 联邦机构 美国军方 人权

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国防部长彼得·赫格塞斯于2026年3月19日在弗吉尼亚州阿灵顿的五角大楼就伊朗战争举行新闻发布会,提供有关持续军事行动的最新情况。

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周五,一名联邦法官宣布国防部长彼得·赫格塞斯去年推出的一项限制性新闻政策的多个部分无效,裁定这些政策践踏了记者在五角大楼庞大总部内报道美国军方的宪法权利。

美国地方法院高级法官保罗·弗里德曼的裁决对赫格塞斯加强对新闻报道控制的努力是一个重大打击。这一裁决是在伊朗战争和今年早些时候美国在委内瑞拉的行动期间,对国防部的报道大幅增加之际作出的。

该裁决废除了新政策中几项允许五角大楼基于报道内容暂停或吊销记者证的条款,但保留了该政策中在早期版本中生效且未受到法律挑战的其他部分。

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“第一修正案的主要目的是使新闻界能够自由发布其想发布的内容,公众能够自由阅读其选择的内容,不受任何官方禁止,”弗里德曼在一份措辞严厉的意见中写道。他是前总统比尔·克林顿任命的法官。

“起草第一修正案的人认为,国家安全需要一个自由的媒体和一个知情的民众,而政府压制政治言论会危及这种安全,”法官补充道。“这一原则近250年来一直维护着国家的安全,现在绝不能被抛弃。”

《纽约时报》去年年底对该政策提出质疑,认为它违反了其第一修正案权利和正当程序权利。

弗里德曼废除的政策部分要求记者签署一份承诺,不获取或使用未经授权的材料。包括《纽约时报》和美国有线电视新闻网(CNN)在内的数十家新闻机构拒绝签署,导致记者被拒绝授予进入五角大楼的记者证。

[相关文章 美国总统唐纳德·特朗普周日晚上在返回华盛顿特区的空军一号上向记者发表讲话。Kevin Lamarque/路透社 特朗普及其官员在伊朗战争审查加剧的情况下与新闻媒体同步施压 6分钟阅读]

弗里德曼命令官员恢复《纽约时报》七名国家安全记者的记者证,这些记者去年失去了进入五角大楼的权限。

“法院认识到必须保护国家安全、保护军队安全以及保护战争计划,”弗里德曼写道。“但特别是考虑到该国最近对委内瑞拉的入侵以及正在进行的与伊朗的战争,公众比以往任何时候都更需要从不同角度了解其政府正在做什么的信息——这样公众才能在支持政府政策(如果愿意的话)、抗议(如果愿意的话)以及基于充分、完整和公开的信息决定下一次选举投票给谁。”

美国有线电视新闻网(CNN)已联系美国国防部和《纽约时报》寻求置评。

“地方法院的裁决有力地驳斥了五角大楼在战争时期阻碍新闻自由和向美国民众报道重要信息的企图,”代表《纽约时报》参与诉讼的第一修正案律师西奥多·布特罗斯告诉CNN。

又一法官裁定赫格塞斯违反第一修正案

弗里德曼成为最近几周第二位认定赫格塞斯无视第一修正案保护的法官。

上个月,同一法院的另一名法官表示,赫格塞斯在试图报复一名民主党参议员(该参议员敦促美国军人拒绝非法命令)时,违反了该参议员的言论自由权利。

周五,弗里德曼指出赫格塞斯及其助手的各种声明表明,该部门对其认为“不利”的主流新闻机构的报道“公然怀有敌意”,但对“过去表达过支持特朗普政府”的媒体则“态度接受”。

“无可争议的证据反映了该政策的真实目的和实际效果:淘汰不受欢迎的记者——在国防部看来,这些记者‘不支持并愿意服务’——并用符合其要求的新闻机构取而代之,”他写道。“这就是观点歧视,没有任何借口。”

弗里德曼还同意《纽约时报》的观点,即该政策违反了其正当程序权利,因为它过于模糊,记者在试图遵守时可能会无意中违反。

“记者获取信息的主要方式之一是提问,”他写道。“根据该政策的条款,原告和其他人每天从事的基本新闻工作——例如向部门员工提问——可能会触发该部门对记者构成安全或安全风险的认定。”

新闻自由基金会倡导主任塞思·斯特恩表示:“很遗憾,五角大楼的荒谬政策花了这么长时间才被废除。”

“特别是现在我们正在为又一场基于不断变化的借口的战争投入资金和鲜血,记者应该加倍努力,查明五角大楼不希望公众知道的信息,而不是重复‘官方’叙事,”斯特恩在一份声明中说。

本文已更新,补充了更多细节。

美国有线电视新闻网的布赖恩·斯特尔特对本报道有贡献。

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By

[Devan Cole]

Updated 1 hr 53 min ago

Updated Mar 20, 2026, 6:07 PM ET

PUBLISHED Mar 20, 2026, 5:17 PM ET

Media Federal agencies US military Human rights

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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth provides updates on the continued military operations on Iran 2during a press briefing on the Iran war at the Pentagon on March 19, 2026 in Arlington, Virginia.

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A federal judge on Friday voided various parts of a restrictive press policy rolled out by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth last year, ruling that they trampled on the constitutional rights of reporters who seek to cover the US military from within its sprawling headquarters.

The ruling from senior US District Judge Paul Friedman is a major blow to Hegseth’s effort to exert greater control over press coverage and comes as reporting on the Defense Department has ramped up amid the war in Iran and the US operation earlier this year in Venezuela.

It voids several provisions of the new policy that enabled the Pentagon to suspend or revoke credentials based on reporting, but leaves in place other parts of the policy that had been in effect in earlier iterations and were not subject to the legal challenge.

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“A primary purpose of the First Amendment is to enable the press to publish what it will and the public to read what it chooses, free of any official proscription,” Friedman, an appointee of former President Bill Clinton, wrote in a scathing opinion.

“Those who drafted the First Amendment believed that the nation’s security requires a free press and an informed people and that such security is endangered by governmental suppression of political speech,” the judge added. “That principle has preserved the nation’s security for almost 250 years. It must not be abandoned now.”

The New York Times challenged the policy late last year, arguing it violates its First Amendment and due process rights.

The parts of the policy Friedman struck down required beat reporters to sign a pledge not to obtain or use unauthorized material. Scores of news organizations, including the Times and CNN, declined to agree, resulting in reporters being denied press badges that give them access to the Pentagon.

[Related article US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters aboard Air Force One on a flight back to Washington D.C., on Sunday night. Kevin Lamarque/Reuters Trump and his officials pressure the news media in unison as Iran war scrutiny intensifies 6 min read]

Friedman ordered officials to reinstate the press badges of seven national security reporters at the Times who lost access to the Pentagon last year.

“The Court recognizes that national security must be protected, the security of our troops must be protected, and war plans must be protected,” Friedman wrote. “But especially in light of the country’s recent incursion into Venezuela and its ongoing war with Iran, it is more important than ever that the public have access to information from a variety of perspectives about what its government is doing – so that the public can support government policies, if it wants to support them; protest, if it wants to protest; and decide based on full, complete, and open information who they are going to vote for in the next election.”

CNN has reached out to the Defense Department and New York Times for comment.

“The district court’s decision is a powerful rejection of the Pentagon’s effort to impede freedom of the press and the reporting of vital information to the American people during a time of war,” First Amendment attorney Theodore Boutrous, who is representing The Times in the suit, told CNN.

Another ruling against Hegseth on First Amendment

Friedman became the second judge in recent weeks to conclude that Hegseth was playing fast and loose with First Amendment protections.

Last month, another judge who sits in the same courthouse said the secretary had run afoul of the free speech rights of a Democratic senator when he attempted to retaliate against the lawmaker over his urging of US service members to refuse illegal orders.

Friedman on Friday pointed to various statements by Hegseth and his aides that he said shows the department has been “openly hostile” to reporting from mainstream news organizations whose stories “it views as unfavorable, but receptive to outlets that have expressed ‘support for the Trump administration in the past.’”

“The undisputed evidence reflects the policy’s true purpose and practical effect: to weed out disfavored journalists – those who were not, in the department’s view, ‘on board and willing to serve,’ and replace them with news entities that are,” he wrote. “That is viewpoint discrimination, full stop.”

Friedman also agreed with the Times that the policy ran afoul of its due process rights because it was vague and therefore could be unintentionally violated by reporters seeking to comply with it.

“A primary way in which journalists obtain information is by asking questions,” he wrote. “Under the policy’s terms, then, essential journalistic practices that the plaintiffs and others engage in every day – such as asking questions of department employees – could trigger a determination by the department that a journalist poses a security or safety risk.”

Seth Stern, chief of advocacy at Freedom of the Press Foundation, said, “It’s unfortunate that it took this long for the Pentagon’s ridiculous policy to be thrown in the trash.”

“Especially now that we are spending money and blood on yet another war based on constantly shifting pretexts, journalists should double down on their commitment to finding out what the Pentagon does not want the public to know rather than parroting ‘authorized’ narratives,” Stern said in a statement.

This story has been updated with additional details.

CNN’s Brian Stelter contributed to this report.

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