
-
England's flawless qualification sets up quest for World Cup glory
-
China consumer spending falls as pressure on economy builds
-
In China, climate litigation starts with the state
-
Yamamoto pitches Dodgers to MLB playoff win over Brewers
-
Wright's two goals lift USA over Australia 2-1
-
Japan's first win over Brazil decades in the making, says coach
-
One dead, several injured in explosion at busy Ecuador shopping center
-
Asian markets rally as Fed cut hopes trump trade war fears
-
Mac Allister and Martinez braces power Argentina over Puerto Rico
-
Son tells South Korea to ignore reputations at World Cup
-
Jamaicans grab group lead with World Cup qualifying win
-
Australia must deploy 'unconventional' means to deter China, Russia: think tank
-
US Republicans seek to shield oil giants as climate lawsuits advance
-
Major media outlets reject Pentagon reporting rules
-
Gattuso not underestimating anyone ahead of World Cup qualifying play-offs
-
England clinch 2026 World Cup qualification, Portugal forced to wait
-
Brash Trump approach brings Gaza deal but broader peace in question
-
South Africa, Ivory Coast, Senegal qualify for 2026 World Cup
-
USA Basketball names Heat's Spoelstra as coach through 2028
-
Mixed day for global stocks amid trade angst, Powell comments
-
Brazil, other nations agree to quadruple sustainable fuels
-
Hungary deny Portugal, Ronaldo early World Cup berth
-
Qatar and Saudi Arabia qualify for 2026 World Cup
-
England qualify for World Cup with rout of Latvia
-
Merino double helps Spain thrash Bulgaria
-
Trump threatens to end cooking oil purchases from China
-
Strong dealmaking boosts profits at US banking giants
-
French telecoms join forces to break up embattled SFR
-
Trump says FIFA chief would back moving World Cup games
-
Italian Pro-Palestinian activists clash with police, demand Israel boycott before World Cup qualifier
-
Hamas launches Gaza crackdown as Trump vows to disarm group
-
Murdered Kenyan's niece calls for UK ex-soldier's extradition
-
Trump says 'we will disarm' Hamas, urges return of Gaza bodies
-
Qatar hold on to beat UAE and qualify for 2026 World Cup
-
South Africa beat Rwanda to qualify for 2026 World Cup
-
Trump to attend signing of Thailand-Cambodia 'peace deal'
-
Vacherot relishing start of 'second career' after surprise Shanghai win
-
Hamas launches Gaza crackdown as truce holds
-
US indicts Cambodian tycoon over $15bn crypto scam empire
-
Myanmar scam centres booming despite crackdown, using Musk's Starlink: AFP investigation
-
China, EU stand firm on shipping emission deal despite US threats
-
Theatrics trumped all at Trump's Gaza summit
-
Celebrated soul musician D'Angelo dead at 51: US media
-
Shanghai star Vacherot requests Paris Masters invite after Basel wild card
-
Reunited hostage describes stark differences in couple's Gaza captivity
-
Survivors in flood-hit Mexico need food, fear more landslides
-
US Fed chair flags concern about sharp slowdown in job creation
-
Chipmaker Nexperia says banned from exporting from China
-
French PM backs suspending pensions reform to save government
-
Animal welfare transport law deadlocked in EU

Major media outlets reject Pentagon reporting rules
US and international news outlets including The New York Times, AP, AFP and Fox News on Tuesday declined to sign new restrictive Pentagon media rules, meaning they will be stripped of their press access credentials.
The new rules come after the Defense Department restricted media access inside the Pentagon, forced some outlets to vacate offices in the building and drastically reduced the number of briefings for journalists.
The media policy "gags Pentagon employees" by threatening retaliation against reporters who seek out information that has not been pre-approved for release, the Pentagon Press Association (PPA) said.
AFP said in a statement Tuesday that it "cannot sign up to the terms of the Pentagon document that would require media to acknowledge insufficiently clear new policies that appear to fly in the face of US constitutional principles and of the basic tenets of journalism."
"We shall continue to cover the Pentagon and the US military freely and fairly, as we have done for decades," the agency added.
TV networks ABC, CBS, CNN, Fox and NBC issued a joint statement saying they will not sign the new rules, which would "restrict journalists' ability to keep the nation and the world informed of important national security issues."
Alongside Fox, other conservative outlets the Washington Times and Newsmax are also reportedly refusing to agree to the new policy, which could see a total of some 100 press passes revoked.
The new rules are the latest in a series of moves that restrict journalists' access to information from the Pentagon, the nation's single largest employer with a budget in the hundreds of billions of dollars per year.
The Defense Department announced earlier this year that eight media organizations including the Times, the Washington Post, CNN, NBC and NPR had to vacate their dedicated office spaces in the Pentagon, alleging that there was a need to create room for other -- predominantly conservative -- outlets.
It has also required journalists to be accompanied by official escorts if they go outside a limited number of areas in the Pentagon -- another new restriction on the press.
And it has drastically reduced the number of briefings for journalists -- holding some half a dozen this year, compared to an average of two or more per week under president Joe Biden's administration, which left office in January.
Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth -- a former Fox News host and Army National Guard veteran -- has campaigned against leaks from the Defense Department.
But he was inadvertently involved in the release of sensitive information earlier this year, sharing details about upcoming strikes against Yemen's Huthi rebels in a chat on messaging app Signal to which a journalist had been mistakenly added.
Hegseth has also reportedly used Signal to discuss US strikes on Yemen with his wife and other people not usually involved in such discussions.
His use of Signal has prompted an investigation by the Pentagon inspector general's office.
C.AbuSway--SF-PST