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CSMastermind 3 days ago

The raid on Venezula and the strikes on Iran were some of the first military operations that didn't leak to the media that I can remember (with the exception of the Bin Laden raid I can't think of another big one during my lifetime?).

Both happened after they kicked journalists out of the Pentagon and I have to think that it played at least some role in the secrecy.

The earlier strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities before the change were leaked, though not the details of the mission, just that they were happening.

_djo_ 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

That's inaccurate. Several journalists had both advance and real-time knowledge of the raid on Venezuela, but chose to hold off on reporting out of journalistic ethics. [0]

Given the detail and depth of reporting into the initial strikes on Iran that emerged very shortly after, I would expect the same was true in that case too.

Banning journalists from the Pentagon doesn't prevent them from getting scoops and being leaked to. That was always a false justification for this move.

[0]: https://www.npr.org/2026/01/05/nx-s1-5667060/media-shows-res...

bathtub365 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

It also helps that they’ve figured out how to not invite journalists directly to classified operational signal group chats