2026年3月20日 / 美国东部时间下午7:31 / CBS新闻
一名联邦法官推翻了五角大楼对进入其设施的记者报道方式的部分严格限制,终止了一项导致多家新闻机构撤离五角大楼的政策。
美国地区法官保罗·L·弗里德曼支持《纽约时报》及其记者朱利安·E·巴恩斯的诉讼请求。巴恩斯于去年12月提起诉讼,指控新的五角大楼政策违反了美国宪法第一修正案、第五修正案以及正当法律程序条款。
五角大楼去年秋季推出了新的新闻准入政策,要求持证记者签署一系列限制条款,才能继续每日进入五角大楼。
包括哥伦比亚广播公司新闻、美国广播公司新闻、全国广播公司新闻、美国有线电视新闻网和福克斯新闻在内的多家媒体组织拒绝签署新规定,并停止了日常在五角大楼的工作。目前,五角大楼内部记者团主要由同意签署新政策的保守派媒体组成。
弗里德曼的裁决叫停了新闻机构最强烈反对的部分限制条款,其中包括一项规定:” soliciting “(征集)军事人员的机密或敏感信息的记者可能被视为安全风险并被禁止进入大楼。他还推翻了将五角大楼准入权描述为”特权”而非”权利”的条款。
部分条款仍被保留,例如限制记者在没有陪同的情况下进入五角大楼的特定区域。
五角大楼发言人肖恩·帕内尔在社交媒体帖子中表示:”我们不同意这一裁决,并将立即提起上诉。”美国司法部尚未立即回应置评请求。
五角大楼记者协会在周五晚间向哥伦比亚广播公司新闻提供的声明中表示,该协会”对联邦法官今天裁定五角大楼的新闻认证政策违反美国宪法表示欢迎”,并呼吁”立即恢复所有记者协会成员的认证”。
五角大楼辩称,其政策并非强制记者向军方审核稿件,而是试图通过防止高度敏感信息泄露来保护国家安全。军方还表示,他们曾尝试与新闻机构进行谈判。但许多报道军方事务的记者以及五角大楼记者协会认为,该政策可能实际上限制了记者在未经政府许可的情况下与消息源互动。
弗里德曼命令五角大楼恢复巴恩斯和其他几名《纽约时报》记者的新闻通行证,并撤销政策中的关键条款。目前尚不清楚这对其他新闻机构会产生什么影响。
法官表示,他”认识到必须保护国家安全、军队安全以及战争计划”。
“但考虑到美国近期对委内瑞拉的入侵以及持续与伊朗的战争,公众比以往任何时候都更需要从不同角度了解政府的行动——以便公众可以支持政府政策(如果愿意的话)、进行抗议(如果愿意的话),并基于全面、完整和公开的信息决定在下一次选举中支持谁。”
弗里德曼指出,关于”征集”信息的限制过于模糊,无法明确哪些行为违反规定,因此”很容易预见记者会选择不问任何问题,以免冒失去认证的风险”。
他还认为,该政策通过实施观点歧视违反了第一修正案,称其试图压制批评性言论并”淘汰不受欢迎的记者”。
五角大楼则辩称,其新政策并非旨在惩罚特定媒体或歧视其不同意的观点,并重申军方已尝试与新闻机构进行谈判。
弗里德曼指出,国防部长彼得·赫格斯泰特和其他五角大楼高级官员曾用严厉措辞批评新闻机构。他表示,证据”讲述了一个部门的故事:其领导层过去和现在都公开敌视它认为报道不利的’主流媒体’,而对更支持其立场的媒体更为友好”。
他还指出,右翼影响者劳拉·卢默尽管设立了”举报热线”,却被允许进入五角大楼,而《华盛顿邮报》提出的类似信息征集请求却被视为不当。
这一问题在本月早些时候的法庭听证会上被提出,当时弗里德曼向政府律师追问为何允许卢默的举报热线而不允许《华盛顿邮报》的。
“《华盛顿邮报》的举报热线是否构成刑事征集?”弗里德曼问道。
“我认为不是,法官大人,”司法部律师迈克尔·布伦斯回应道。
“你不确定《华盛顿邮报》的举报热线是否构成刑事征集?”弗里德曼再次追问。
“不,法官大人,”布伦斯说。
“如果你们不确定,他们怎么能确定?”弗里德曼反问。
布伦斯随后向弗里德曼解释,《华盛顿邮报》的举报热线存在问题,因为它要求军事人员提供信息,而卢默的热线性质更为笼统。
在听证会上的另一场紧张对话中,弗里德曼表示,他经历过从越南战争到”9·11″袭击的多次军事和国家安全冲突,并指出在这些事件中,媒体在帮助美国公众了解政府行动方面发挥了关键作用。
谈及越南战争,他说:”可以公平地说,公众被很多事情误导了。”他补充道,”很多事情需要严格保密,但公开和透明能让公众了解政府的所作所为。”
Judge strikes down restrictive Pentagon press policy, finding it violates First Amendment
March 20, 2026 / 7:31 PM EDT / CBS News
A federal judge has struck down some of the Defense Department’s strict controls on how journalists with access to the Pentagon are allowed to report — ending a policy that caused many news outlets to leave the Pentagon.
U.S. District Judge Paul L. Friedman sided with the New York Times and a reporter at the newspaper, Julian E. Barnes, who sued in December, arguing the new Pentagon policy violated the First Amendment, Fifth Amendment and due process provision of the Constitution.
The Pentagon rolled out its new press access policy last fall, requiring credentialed reporters to sign onto a host of restrictions in order to maintain daily access to the building.
Many media organizations — including CBS News, ABC News, NBC News, CNN and Fox News — declined to sign the new rules and stopped working out of the Pentagon on a day-to-day basis. The Pentagon’s in-house press corps is now mostly made up of conservative media outlets that agreed to sign.
Friedman’s ruling halts some of the restrictions that news outlets objected the most strenuously to, including one section that suggested reporters who “solicit” classified or sensitive information from military personnel could be deemed a security risk and barred from the building. He also struck down a section that referred to Pentagon access as a “privilege” rather than a “right.”
Some sections were left in place, including restrictions on where reporters are allowed to go in the Pentagon without an escort.
In a social media post, Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell said, “We disagree with the decision and are pursuing an immediate appeal.” The Justice Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
In a statement provided to CBS News Friday evening, the Pentagon Press Association said that it “celebrates the decision by a federal judge today that the Pentagon’s press credentialling policy violated the U.S. Constitution,” and called for the “immediate reinstatement of the credentials of all PPA members.”
The Pentagon has argued that it isn’t forcing reporters to clear their stories with the military, and is instead trying to protect national security by preventing leaks of highly sensitive information. The military also says it has tried to negotiate with news outlets. But many reporters who cover the military, and the Pentagon Press Association, argued the policy could effectively restrict journalists from interacting with sources without the government’s permission.
Friedman ordered the Pentagon to reinstate Barnes and several other Times reporters’ press passes, and vacated key parts of the policy. It’s not clear what the impact will be on other news outlets.
The judge said he “recognizes that national security must be protected, the security of our troops must be protected, and war plans must be protected.”
“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,” he said.
Friedman found that the restrictions on “soliciting” information were so vague that it wasn’t clear what kinds of conduct did and didn’t violate the rules, so “one could easily predict that journalists would opt not to ask any questions rather than risk losing their [credential].”
He also argued that the policy violates the First Amendment by engaging in viewpoint discrimination, writing that it seeks to chill critical speech and “weed out disfavored journalists.”
The Pentagon has argued that its new policy isn’t aimed at punishing certain outlets or discriminating against views that it disagrees with, pointing to the military’s efforts to negotiate with news outlets.
Friedman pointed to instances of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and other top Pentagon officials criticizing news outlets in harsh terms. He said the evidence “tells the story of a Department whose leadership has been and continues to be openly hostile to the ‘mainstream media’ whose reporting it views as unfavorable,” and warmer to more supportive outlets.
And he pointed to the fact that right-wing influencer Laura Loomer was allowed access to the Pentagon despite setting up a “tip line,” even though a similar request for tips by The Washington Post was deemed inappropriate.
That issue was raised during a court hearing earlier this month, when Friedman grilled government lawyers on why Loomer’s tip line was permitted and the Post’s wasn’t
“Is the Washington Post tip line criminal solicitation?” Friedman asked.
“I don’t think so, your honor,” Justice Department attorney Michael Bruns responded.
“You’re not clear whether the Washington Post tip line constitutes criminal solicitation?” Friedman asked again.
“No, your honor,” Bruns said.
“So, if you’re not clear, how can they be clear?” Friedman retorted.
Bruns then told Friedman that The Washington Post tip line was problematic because it asked for information from military members, while Loomer’s is more general in nature.
In another tense exchange during that hearing, Friedman said he has lived through many military and national security conflicts, from the Vietnam War to the Sept. 11 attacks, and noted that through those events, the press played a vital role in helping the American public understand what its government was doing.
Regarding the Vietnam War, he said that “the public, I think it’s fair to say, was lied to about a lot of things,” and added, “A lot of things need to be held tightly and securely, but openness and transparency allow members of the public to know what their government is doing.”
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