Trump Threatens Media with Jail Over Iran
Strike Leak
The president indicated
he would ask an unnamed media outlet to reveal the sources behind its coverage of
Iran’s successful strike on a U.S. fighter jet, and of its crew.
·
Donald Trump vowed to identify and punish the source behind leaked details
of Iran shooting down a U.S. F-15E fighter jet.
·
He suggested the government may force a media outlet to reveal its confidential
sources or face jail time.
·
The leak involved sensitive information about the crash and rescue mission
of two U.S. crew members.
·
Multiple outlets (including major U.S. and international media) reported
on the incident.
·
Trump argued the reporting endangered national security and the missing
airman.
·
Critics say this escalates tensions with the press and threatens journalistic
source protection norms.
·
Past administrations have pursued leakers, but direct threats to jail
journalists for protecting sources are highly unusual.
·
Press freedom advocates stress that independent reporting is crucial during
wartime to hold governments accountable.
[ABS News Service/07.04.2026]
President
Trump vowed on Monday to pursue a “leaker” involved in disclosing details about
the downing of a U.S. fighter jet in Iran late last week and indicated that the
government would take action against an unnamed media outlet that disseminated the
information.
Mr.
Trump was speaking at a news conference on the rescue of two crew members who ejected
from the cockpit of an F-15E Strike Eagle that Iran shot down on Friday. Though
the pilot was rescued quickly, the weapons systems officer could not be located
right away, prompting a two-day scramble to find him before enemy forces did.
Mr.
Trump said the reporting had put the at-large airman and others in danger. The administration,
he added, was “looking very hard to find that leaker.” Efforts to unmask the source
of the information, he continued, would include approaching the news outlet that
had published it.
“We’re
going to go to the media company that released it,” Mr. Trump said, “and we’re going
to say, ‘National security — give it up or go to jail.’ And we know who, and you
know who, we’re talking about.”
The
White House did not respond to a question asking which news outlet Mr. Trump was
referring to, saying only that an investigation was underway. Several news outlets
reported on Friday on the downing of the fighter jet and the rescue efforts, including
the Israeli outlet N12, Axios, The Washington Post, The New York Times and Reuters.
The
threat to jail a reporter over the common journalistic practice of protecting a
source is yet another escalation in Mr. Trump’s long-running campaign against U.S.
news outlets. In recent years, he has sued major news companies and supported a
threat by Brendan Carr, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, to pull
broadcasting licenses from outlets over their coverage of the war in Iran. Mr. Trump’s
defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, has repeatedly curtailed
media access at the Pentagon.
Presidents
have historically invoked national security concerns to restrict information. President
Richard M. Nixon famously sued news outlets to try to prevent the publication of
the Pentagon Papers, and the Department of Justice under Presidents George W. Bush
and Barack Obama subpoenaed a Times reporter, James Risen, to testify about his
confidential sources for his 2006 book about the Central Intelligence Agency. In
2017, Mr. Trump urged James B. Comey, the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
at the time, to jail journalists who published classified information.
Gabe
Rottman, vice president of policy at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the
Press, said he was unaware of another example when a president issued a threat like
the one leveled by Mr. Trump on Monday.
“During
times of armed conflict in a democracy,” Mr. Rottman said in a statement, “it is
essential that the press be able to gather and report information in the public
interest and thus provide an independent check on the official government narrative.”