Pentagon's First Press Briefing in Three Months Is a Tale of Triumph and Toll
Ask why this angle was chosen.
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine held their first press briefing in three months at the Pentagon today, as they delivered a detailed and somewhat fiery press conference on Operation Epic Fury against Iran. The briefing came amid a relentless onslaught of debunked attacks from members of the old Pentagon press corps that walked out at the end of last year — from the Susie Wiles "smartwatch scandal" (just a Whoop fitness tracker) to the fake Cyber Command memo claiming compromised apps were leaking troop locations (quickly shut down by DoW as baseless misinformation). As I outlined previously, the legacy media's playbook of unverified smears aims to erode trust in Trump's national security team to score partisan points.
Ask why this angle was chosen.
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine held their first press briefing in three months at the Pentagon today, as they delivered a detailed and somewhat fiery press conference on Operation Epic Fury against Iran. The briefing came amid a relentless onslaught of debunked attacks from members of the old Pentagon press corps that walked out at the end of last year — from the Susie Wiles "smartwatch scandal" (just a Whoop fitness tracker) to the fake Cyber Command memo claiming compromised apps were leaking troop locations (quickly shut down by DoW as baseless misinformation). As I outlined previously, the legacy media's playbook of unverified smears aims to erode trust in Trump's national security team to score partisan points.
Pentagon's First Press Briefing in Three Months Is a Tale of Triumph and Toll
Ask why this angle was chosen.
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine held their first press briefing in three months at the Pentagon today, as they delivered a detailed and somewhat fiery press conference on Operation Epic Fury against Iran. The briefing came amid a relentless onslaught of debunked attacks from members of the old Pentagon press corps that walked out at the end of last year — from the Susie Wiles "smartwatch scandal" (just a Whoop fitness tracker) to the fake Cyber Command memo claiming compromised apps were leaking troop locations (quickly shut down by DoW as baseless misinformation). As I outlined previously, the legacy media's playbook of unverified smears aims to erode trust in Trump's national security team to score partisan points.
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