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 Pentagon Papers

The Pentagon Papers, officially titled United StatesVietnam Relations, 1945–1967: A Study Prepared by the Department of Defense, is a United States Department of Defense history of the United States' political-military involvement in Vietnam from 1945 to 1967. The papers were discovered and released by Daniel Ellsberg, and first brought to the attention of the public on the front page of The New York Times in 1971. A 1996 article in The New York Times said that the Pentagon Papers had demonstrated, among other things, that the Johnson Administration "systematically lied, not only to the public but also to Congress."


More specifically, the papers revealed that the U.S. had secretly enlarged the scale of the Vietnam War with the bombings of nearby Cambodia and Laos, coastal raids on North Vietnam, and Marine Corps attacks, none of which were reported in the mainstream media.


For his disclosure of the Pentagon Papers, Ellsberg was initially charged with conspiracy, espionage and theft of government property, but the charges were later dropped after prosecutors investigating the Watergate Scandal soon discovered that the staff members in the Nixon White House had ordered the so-called White House Plumbers to engage in unlawful efforts to discredit Ellsberg.


In June 2011, the entirety of the Pentagon Papers was declassified and publicly released.

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updated Mon. February 5, 2024

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On April 24, Betsy Reed, the editor-in-chief of The Intercept, moderated a discussion between Noam Chomsky and Daniel Ellsberg on the topic of nuclear policy and war. Chomsky, a laureate professor of linguistics at the University of Arizona, and Ellsberg, the Pentagon Papers whistleblower and author of “The Doomsday ...

Chozick insists that her stories on the emails made her a de facto instrument of Russian intelligence, and “their existence tainted my entire body of work.” But is that the case? Did New York Times reporters become de facto instruments of Daniel Ellsberg when it published the Pentagon Papers? What about ...
Offering anecdotes from his time in the Kennedy White House and working for the Rand Corp., Ellsberg told the audience that while he copied the Pentagon Papers he was doing the same thing to documents related to the country's plans in case of nuclear war. He kept that a secret from his wife and his ...
It is about the Pentagon Papers, which were leaked by a reporter to The New York Times and The Washington Post. The papers were a multi-volume report commissioned by then-Secretary of State Robert McNamara. The report detailed how the U.S. government covered up the fact that the United States ...
The rights deal was put together by Anonymous Content, which was also behind another newspaper movie, “The Post,” focusing on the Pentagon Papers and the Washington Post's part in the story. That movie was recently nominated for a best picture Oscar. Deadline Hollywood first reported the news.
But perhaps nothing was as controversial or lasting as the publishing of the “Pentagon Papers.” On Sunday, June 13, the New York Times began publishing a government study on the war in Vietnam. The papers showed how the United States escalated the conflict in ways that they had not told the people ...
A former U.S. military analyst who infamously leaked the Pentagon Papers to the press in 1971 called for greater public resistance to the threat of nuclear war at an event at the Elliott School of International Affairs Monday. Daniel Ellsberg, a former nuclear war planner at the RAND Corporation, a global ...


 

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