Judge issues block on Pentagon’s label of Anthropic
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More than 850 Tomahawks have been fired in just four weeks, people familiar with the matter said, alarming some Pentagon officials because the weapon’s supply is limited.
As U.S. troops deploy to the Middle East, experts outline what a potential ground operation in Iran could look like, including limited missions, risks and likely targets.
Pete Hegseth is being mercilessly mocked behind his back in the Pentagon, according to insiders. Staffers have reportedly furnished the self-proclaimed “secretary of war” with a brutal new moniker that leans on his insatiable appetite for war: “Dumb McNamara.
A federal judge ordered the New York Times and the Defense Department to return to a Washington D.C. courtroom on Monday for a hearing on the paper's motion to compel the Pentagon to comply with last week's ruling that its press policy is unconstitutional.
The New York Times said the Pentagon "continues to impose unconstitutional restrictions on the press" and that it would be raising the issue in court.
The Times sued the Pentagon and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in December, claiming the agency's new credentialing policy violated journalists' constitutional rights to free speech and due process.
The Defense Department will no longer allow media organizations to keep offices in the Pentagon building after a federal judge ruled that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had improperly revoked credentials for dozens of them.
A federal judge has sided with AI company Anthropic after President Donald Trump and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth banned federal agencies from using its services, calling it a supply chain risk.