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U.S. Department of Defense

Sep 2006Estimated number of Americans who get degrees each year from nonaccredited “diploma mills”: 100,000



Number of Pentagon employees who had such degrees on their résumés, in a recent congressional study: 257
Source 1:

U.S. Government Accountability Office

Source 2:

Allen Ezell (Apollo Beach, Fla.)/George Gollin, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Aug 2006

Estimated amount the U.S. military has spent since 1994 to replace service members discharged for being gay: $364,000,000

Source:

Center for the Study of Sexual Minorities in the Military (Santa Barbara, Calif.)

Aug 2006

Number of AK-47s that have gone missing after being sent by the Pentagon to Iraq last summer: 26,000

Source:

Amnesty International (London)

Oct 2005Age that the Pentagon in July proposed to set as the maximum for all new military recruits: 42
Source:

U.S. Department of Defense

Jan 2005Phone number of The G.I. Rights Hotline, a nongovernmental service for U.S. military personnel : 800-394-9544
Source:

The G.I. Rights Hotline (Oakland, Calif.)

Jan 2005Percentage of Pentagon contracts since 1998 that have been awarded on a no-bid basis : 44
Source:

Center for Public Integrity (Washington)

Nov 2004Estimated chance that a classified document is “over-classified,” according to a Pentagon official this year : 1 in 2
Source:

Carol A. Haave (Washington)

Jun 2004Amount that next year's Defense Department budget proposal requests for researching low-yield nuclear weapons : $9,000,000
Source:

Arms Control Association (Washington)

May 2004Years in prison to which two ex-Pentagon officials were sentenced last year for taking bribes of money and prostitutes : 24
Source:

U.S. Department of Justice (Alexandria, Va.)

Mar 2004Number of U.S. soldiers whose retirement or leave has been postponed by the Army to maintain troop strength : 3,500
Source:

U.S. Army (Washington)

Jan 2004Reward offered by the U.S. military to any Iraqi who turns in a hand-held launcher and missile : $500
Source:

Coalition Press Information Center (Baghdad)

Aug 2003Ratio of Iran's military budget to the amount spent by the Pentagon since last fall for "increased worldwide posture": 1:1
Source:

International Institute for Strategic Studies (London)/U.S. Office of Management and Budget

Jun 2003Minimum number of times that the demonstrators at this year's largest U.S. peace rally could encircle the Pentagon: 130
Source:

The Pentagon (Arlington, Va.)/Harper's research

Apr 2003Minimum number of open-source software applications now in use at the Pentagon: 115
Source:

Defense Information Systems Agency (Washington)

Dec 2002Percentage by which the Pentagon's September order for sunblock exceeded its last largest such order: 70
Source:

Native Tan (Daytona Beach, Fla.)

Apr 2002Chances that a country recently cited by the Pentagon as a potential U.S. nuclear target has no nuclear arms: 5 in 7
Source:

Natural Resources Defense Council (N.Y.C.)/Harper's research

Mar 2002Year in which a Pentagon report warned that banning chlorine sales to Iraq would cause epidemics of waterborne diseases: 1991
Source:

Defense Intelligence Agency (Washington)

Feb 2002Amount the Pentagon has paid a Washington P.R. firm since then to help sway public opinion abroad: $7,100,000
Source:

U.S. Department of Defense (Arlington, Va.)

Jan 2002Amount the Pentagon paid a private company last fall for exclusive access to satellite pictures of Afghanistan: $3,800,000
Source:

National Imagery and Mapping Agency (Bethesda, Md.)

Apr 2001Number of accidents involving U.S. nuclear arms between 1950 and 1980, according to the Pentagon: 32
Source:

U.S. Department of Defense

Dec 2000Number of times that visiting foreign defense ministers have been injured by the Pentagon's security system since 1998: 2
Source:

U.S. Department of Defense

May 2000Percentage increase in NATO troops required to seal Kosovo's border, according to a Pentagon official last March: 150
Source:

U.S. Department of Defense

Dec 1999Year in which the Pentagon's military training program for Indonesian troops ended: 1998
Source:

Office of Representative Lane Evans (Washington)

Oct 1999Value of Pentagon-brokered U.S. arms sales last year to Taiwan, expressed as a percentage of such sales to Israel: 92
Source:

U.S. Department of Defense

Sep 1999Portion of all U.S. arms sales abroad between 1993 and 1997 that were brokered by the Pentagon: 1/2
Source:

Federation of American Scientists (Washington)

Apr 1999Amount the Pentagon will spend this year on its Ballistic Missile Defense or “star wars” program: $4,166,000,000
Source:

U.S. Department of Defense

Apr 1999Number of the Pentagon's 9 Stealth bombers that have ever been deployed in combat: 0
Source:

Whiteman Air Force Base (Mo.)

Apr 1999 Expenditures for which the Pentagon could not account last year: $22,000,000,000
Source:

General Accounting Office (Washington)

Jan 1999Estimated amount the Pentagon will spend this year on Viagra: $50,000,000
Source:

The Pentagon (Arlington, Va.)

Dec 1998Funding that Congress allocated in this year's budget for military programs not requested by the Pentagon: $1,229,000,000
Source:

Center for Defense Information (Washington)

May 17, 2008The Pentagon announced that it will build a permanent 40-acre detention complex in Afghanistan to replace crumbling Bagram prison. “This place,“ explained a military official regarding Bagram, ”was not made to keep people there indefinitely.”
Source:

The New York Times

March 31, 2008 Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki ordered an offensive against the Mahdi Army, a large Shia militia allied with cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, in the oil-rich southern port city of Basra. Senator John McCain called the offensive “a sign of the strength of [Maliki's] government,” President George W. Bush said it was “a positive moment in the development of a sovereign nation,” and a Pentagon spokesman called it “a by-product of the success of the surge.” The offensive, dubbed the Charge of the Knights, erupted into six days of heavy fighting that spread across southern Iraq and to Sadr City, a Baghdad slum where three million Shia live. After a stern ultimatum failed to bring peace, Maliki offered cash rewards to militiamen who turned in their weapons. Forty Iraqi policemen were reported to have given their weapons for free to Mahdi Army officers.
Source 1:

New York Daily News

Source 2:

Times UK

Source 3:

NYT

Source 4:

CSM

Source 5:

NYT

Source 6:

LAT

Source 7:

LAT

Source 8:

WP

Source 9:

NYT

Source 10:

NYT

March 25, 2008The Pentagon announced that it had accidentally shipped four fuses for nuclear warheads to Taiwan.
Source:

WP

March 4, 2008The U.S. Navy fired missiles into southern Somalia, targeting what the Pentagon called a “known Al Qaeda terrorist.”
Source:

New York Times

February 4, 2008The Pentagon said that nine Iraqi civilians had been killed in a strike intended for militants of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia.
Source:

U.S. Says It Accidentally Killed 9 Iraqi Civilians

November 24, 2007 Pentagon officials announced that 5,000 U.S. troops would withdraw from Iraq next month.
Source:

U.S. to reduce Iraq troop levels by 5,000

August 22, 2007The Pentagon announced it would close Talon, the database created after September 11 to monitor and store information about security threats and peace activists.
Source:

Washington Post

August 16, 2007It was reported that a South Carolina small-parts supplier run by twin sisters had cheated the Pentagon out of $20.5 million in shipping costs; two 19-cent washers sent to an Army base in Texas, for instance, incurred a $998,798 charge.
Source:

Bloomberg

July 20, 2007The Pentagon accused Senator Hillary Clinton of reinforcing “enemy propaganda” when she asked whether the Bush Administration had an exit plan for the Iraq war.
Source:

The Financial Times via MSNBC.com

July 2, 2007A military judge rejected the Pentagon's request to reinstate previously dismissed charges against a Guantánamo prisoner who was arrested when he was 15 years old.
Source:

CNN.com

June 14, 2007Two reports--one by U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the other by the Pentagon--concluded that despite the increased U.S. military presence in Iraq, and despite a drop in violence in Baghdad and Anbar province, the overall level of violence has not decreased but instead has become more evenly distributed throughout the country.
Source 1:

Washington Post

Source 2:

Washington Post

May 24, 2007The Defense Department released a how-to guide recovered from an “Al Qaeda torture chamber” near Baghdad. The manual illustrates interrogation techniques such as “eye removal,” “drilling hands,” and “blowtorch to the skin,” and was found along with whips, wire cutters, pliers, handcuffs, hammers, electric drills, screwdrivers, meat cleavers, and a person suspended from the safe-house ceiling.
Source 1:

FOX News

Source 2:

The Smoking Gun

May 18, 2007The Defense Department said that it was cutting off soldiers' access to YouTube and MySpace because the military wanted to “get ahead of the problem before it became a problem.”
Source:

Wired.com

April 28, 2007Former CIA Director George Tenet published a book accusing the Bush Administration of taking his phrase “slam dunk”—referring to intelligence that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction—out of context in order to justify a war that the president, the vice president, and the secretary of defense had resolved to wage before September 11, 2001. Tenet complained that the White House and the Pentagon made him their scapegoat when the Iraqi arsenal turned out to be imaginary. A group of former intelligence officers sent Tenet a letter calling him “the Alberto Gonzales of the intelligence community,” reminding him that he had often lied to the public at the administration's behest, and encouraging him to return his Medal of Freedom and donate half his royalties to wounded veterans and the families of dead soldiers.
Source 1:

Washington Post

Source 2:

TPM

April 13, 2007Former Deputy Secretary of Defense and current World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz apologized to colleagues for arranging a salary increase and promotion for a Bank associate who was also his ex-girlfriend and faced booing, catcalls, and demands for his resignation.
Source 1:

IHT

Source 2:

NYT

April 11, 2007The U.S. Defense Department extended troops' tours of duty from 12 to 15 months.
Source:

BBC

March 19, 2007The Pentagon announced that another Guantánamo detainee, Walid Mohammad bin Attash, confessed to planning the 1998 bomb attacks on the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and the bombing of the American warship U.S.S. Cole in 2000.
Source:

BBC

March 2, 2007The Defense Department selected a winner in its nuclear warhead design competition.
Source:

New York Times

February 23, 2007After widespread opposition from residents of Utah and Nevada, the Pentagon canceled its plan to test a large non-nuclear bomb as part of Operation Divine Strake.
Source:

Washington Post

February 16, 2007 Congress approved the Defense Department's request to spend $18 million to convert, in preparation for a post-Castro Cuba, a U.S. Navy base at Guantánamo into a shelter that could house 500,000 fleeing Cubans.
Source:

Miami Herald

February 4, 2007The U.S. military announced that insurgents had shot down four helicopters in the past two weeks in Iraq,.
Source:

Al Jazeera

January 25, 2007The U.S. military gave a public demonstration of a new non-lethal heat-ray gun known as the Active Denial System.
Source:

BBC

December 8, 2006Robert Gates was approved by the Senate to replace Donald Rumsfeld as the new secretary of defense; senators described themselves as “very pleased,” “very impressed,” “very enthusiastic,” “very grateful,” and “very happy” with the confirmation. Rumsfeld gave an emotional farewell speech to Pentagon employees, and had to wipe his nose.
Source 1:

Washington Post

Source 2:

Washington Post

Source 3:

New York Times

October 22, 2006The mid-month tally for U.S. troops killed in Iraq was 79, making October the deadliest month this year for American soldiers.
Source:

AP via WBOC

September 28, 2006The U.S. military, short of buglers who can play taps at military funerals, was waiting for an order of 700 automated $500 digital bugles.
Source:

The St. Petersburg Times

September 25, 2006 Congress was about to go into recess; bills passed in the final days included a provision to allocate $70 billion to the Pentagon for operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, and a clause that will allow the president to define enemy combatants at his discretion; the bill also legalized torture and suspended the writ of habeas corpus.
Source:

New York Times

September 23, 2006In the basement of the Pentagon, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld unleashed his deadly squash drop shot.
Source:

New York times

September 1, 2006The Pentagon announced that civilian casualties in Iraq had increased recently by more than fifty percent, and death squads were said to be torturing and killing as many as 1,800 people per month.
Source:

New York Times

September 1, 2006U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld quoted Georges Clemenceau, who said, “War is a series of catastrophes that results in a victory.”
Source:

Washington Post

August 15, 2006It was reported that U.S. military recruiting violations rose in 2005, as did the number of troops discharged for homosexuality.
Source:

Washington Post

July 11, 2006The Pentagon issued a memo acknowledging that all prisoners in U.S. military custody were entitled to protection under the Geneva Conventions.
Source:

The Financial Times

June 21, 2006The Pentagon classified homosexuality as a mental defect akin to retardation.
Source:

AP via MSNBC via Daily Rotten

June 20, 2006There were discrepancies between the lie detection tests of U.S. security agencies. “The CIA doesn't respect the NSA's polygraph and the NSA doesn't respect the CIA's polygraph,” said Tara Wilk, a computer engineer with Defense Department clearance.
Source:

Washington Post

June 20, 2006 Donald Rumsfeld called it “strange” that he was required to give sworn testimony to the Pentagon's inspector general about $30 billion in mismanaged government contracts.
Source:

Washington Post

June 17, 2006The Israeli military absolved itself of responsibility for the deaths of seven members of the picnicking Ghalia family from explosions on a beach in Gaza. An Israeli committee admitted that Israeli forces fired six shells on and around the beach, but found that a mine planted by Hamas (or possibly a buried shell) had, by coincidence, exploded and killed the family at around the same time as the shelling. A former Pentagon battlefield analyst said that the shrapnel and craters he found at the scene of the explosion were consistent with shelling by Israelis, as were the wounds suffered by survivors.
Source:

The Guardian

June 15, 2006The Pentagon announced the 2,500th American death in Iraq. “It's a number,” said White House press secretary Tony Snow.
Source:

Toronto Star

June 15, 2006At least 52 United States agencies were mining data about U.S. citizens, searching for criminals, terrorists, and potential military recruits.
Source:

The Washington Post

June 5, 2006It was reported that the Pentagon has decided to remove a reference to Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions from a new edition of the Army Field Manual on interrogation. That article bans torture and cruel treatment as well as “outrages on personal dignity, in particular, humiliating and degrading treatment.” The change, which would reverse decades of military policy, follows President Bush's declaration in 2002 that the Geneva Conventions do not apply to “unlawful combatants” such as terrorists.
Source:

Los Angeles Times

May 18, 2006American troops were using lasers to "dazzle" Iraqi drivers who do not stop at checkpoints; if used properly, said a Pentagon spokesman, the laser light will not blind its target.
Source:

Local6.com

May 16, 2006A patent was filed for a Pentagon-funded "controllable launcher for propelling a payload" that can shoot SWAT teams onto the roofs of tall buildings.
Source:

The Register

May 13, 2006 President George W. Bush proposed sending in the National Guard to patrol the Mexican border.
Source:

ChinaView.cn

May 5, 2006 CIA Director Porter Goss resigned, as did Goss appointee Kyle "Dusty" Foggo, the executive director of the CIA; Foggo is under investigation for his relationship to two defense contractors who allegedly bribed former congressman Randy "Duke" Cunningham and Pentagon officials.
Source 1:

AP via Breitbart.com

Source 2:

UPI

Source 3:

ABC News

April 10, 2006It was revealed that the U.S. military had mounted a propaganda campaign, targeting Iraq and the United States, intended to make Abu Muab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian leader (or possibly former leader) of Al Qaeda in Iraq, appear more powerful than he is. One document describing the campaign was called “Villainize Zarqawi/leverage xenophobia response.”
Source:

The Washington Post

April 9, 2006The U.S. military announced that 1,313 Iraqi civilians had been killed in the sectarian violence of March. "Civil war," said Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, "has almost started among Shiites, Sunnis, Kurds, and those who are coming from Asia."
Source 1:

BBC News

Source 2:

Chron.com

April 3, 2006In Iraq a suicide bomber killed 50 people and a car bomb killed 10 people. At least 15 U.S. troops were also killed. Hostage Jill Carroll was freed.
Source 1:

CNN.com

Source 2:

CNN.com

March 8, 2006A Pentagon-funded medical consortium, researching techniques to regenerate body parts, was hoping to create a working finger within five years.
Source:

The Charlotte Observer

March 3, 2006The Pentagon released the names of the inmates at Guantánamo Bay as part of 5,000 pages of hearing transcripts; one man, Abdur Sayed Rahman, a Pakistani chicken farmer, was apparently held because his name was similar to that of Taliban deputy minister Abdur Zahid Rahman.
Source:

ABC News

March 1, 2006 Scientists, some funded by the U.S. military, continued their research into controlling the brains of monkeys and sharks. "We believe," said a researcher at the University of Washington, Seattle, "we are the first to record neural activity from a monkey doing a somersault."
Source:

New Scientist

February 6, 2006The Bush Administration submitted a $2.77 trillion budget to Congress calling for a 7 percent increase in Pentagon spending and a $36 billion cut to the growth of Medicare spending. The Administration is expected to ask for an additional $120 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Source:

The New York Times

January 2, 2006It was revealed that Pentagon contractors had hired Iraqi Sunni clerics to help them develop propaganda campaigns.
Source:

The New York Times

December 15, 2005Leaked Pentagon documents showed that the U.S. military was routinely collecting intelligence on antiwar groups and putting it into a database. The Pentagon also launched 1-800-CALL-SPY, a hotline that allows U.S. citizens to report suspicious activity directly to the military.
Source:

Democracy Now!

December 4, 2005Two women told a reporter that Randy “Duke” Cunningham, the California Congressman who resigned after he was found to have accepted bribes from defense contractors, once changed into pajama bottoms and a turtleneck sweater and offered the women champagne by the light of a lava lamp.
Source 1:

Newsweek

Source 2:

KTLA

November 29, 2005In New York City, a defense contractor named David H. Brooks rented out two floors of the Rainbow Room for his daughter Elizabeth's bat mitzvah. Tom Petty, Kenny G, and members of Aerosmith performed, as did 50 Cent. The total cost of the party was reported as $10 million. “Go shorty,” rapped 50 Cent, “it's your bat mitzvah, we gonna party like it's your bat mitzvah.”
Source:

New York Daily News

November 24, 2005The Netherlands threatened to withdraw its support for U.S. military missions if the United States continued to refuse to acknowledge its network of secret Eastern European prisons. “The U.S. should stop hiding,” said Netherlands Foreign Minister Ben Bot. “It will all come out sooner or later.
Source:

Al Jazeera

November 18, 2005The Pentagon revealed that since September 11, 2001, it has detained more than 80,000 prisoners at facilities around the world.
Source:

Guardian Unlimited

November 16, 2005After repeated denials, the Pentagon finally admitted to using white phosphorus during the 2004 attack on Fallujah. “It is an incendiary weapon,” explained a spokesman.
Source:

Common Dreams

October 20, 2005A Pentagon study found that 28 percent of U.S. troops returning from Iraq require medical or mental health treatment; nearly 20,000 returning soldiers reported nightmares.
Source:

Democracy Now!

October 13, 2005George W. Bush held, via satellite, a public meeting with soldiers in Tikrit, Iraq. The White House denied the event was scripted, though video footage was released showing a Defense Department official coaching the soldiers before the interview, and one of the soldiers was later revealed to be a public-affairs officer.
Source 1:

The Village Voice

Source 2:

AP

Source 3:

The White House

October 6, 2005The U.S. Senate passed a $440 billion defense-spending bill; the bill includes an amendment that places limits on the torture of military prisoners. President George W. Bush promised to veto the bill if it was passed containing the amendment.
Source:

USNews.com

September 12, 2005 Chuck E. Cheese restaurants were showing Defense Department footage. "We support what our troops are doing over there," said a Chuck E. Cheese representative. "Helping kids."
Source:

New York

September 9, 2005The Pentagon held a "Freedom Walk." Walkers were forced to register online ahead of time, to march along a fenced-in route, and to listen to Clint Black perform his song "Iraq and Roll."
Source:

The Washington Post

August 28, 2005The Pentagon called for 1,500 more troops to be sent to Iraq for the referendum.
Source:

Bloomberg

August 4, 2005The Pentagon was teaching scientists how to write screenplays.
Source:

The New York Times

July 23, 2005The Pentagon was stalling to avoid the release of more photographs and videos from Abu Ghraib prison. The videos are said to show young boys shrieking as they are anally raped.
Source:

Editor & Publisher

July 22, 2005The Pentagon asked Congress to allow people up to age forty-two to enlist in the military.
Source:

Reuters

June 24, 2005It was revealed that the Defense Department, in violation of the federal Privacy Act, has been building a database of thirty million sixteen- to twenty-five-year-olds. “If you don't want conscription,” said the undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness, “you have to give the Department of Defense, the military services, an avenue to contact young people.”
Source:

The New York Times

April 11, 2005Senior American defense officials noted several positive developments in Iraq: only thirty-six American soldiers, they said, died there this March; attacks on allied forces were down to thirty or forty a day; and by early 2006, only 105,000 American soldiers may be needed in the country.
Source:

New York Times

March 24, 2005The Pentagon refused to let a soldier's mother photograph her dead son's casket as it returned from Iraq.
Source:

The Barre Montpelier Times Argus

March 16, 2005The Pentagon admitted that many of the prisoners who have died in American custody in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2002 were victims of criminal homicide.
Source:

The New York Times

March 13, 2005Twenty U.S. federal agencies, including the Defense Department and the Census Bureau, were found to have prepared hundreds of video news releases favorable to the government, many of which were inserted into local television news broadcasts without attribution.
Source:

New York Times

March 11, 2005A study showed that the Pentagon was not to blame for the torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib.
Source:

Reuters

February 20, 2005The U.S. military increased its bonuses to encourage reenlistment.
Source:

USA Today

February 17, 2005The Pentagon allocated $127 billion to build a robot army. Some of the robots will look and walk like humans, some will hover in the air, and some will make their own choices during battle. “The lawyers tell me there are no prohibitions against robots making life-or-death decisions,” said a representative from the U.S. Joint Forces Research Center.
Source:

New York Times

January 10, 2005The Pentagon was considering whether to fund special, El Salvador-style Iraqi death squads.
Source:

MSNBC

December 30, 2004The Pentagon was considering cutting back on new weapons programs,
Source:

New York Times

December 19, 2004The Pentagon announced it wanted to spend more time spying.
Source:

New York Times

December 11, 2004Two days later the Pentagon asked a contractor to speed up its production of armored Humvees.
Source:

New York Times

October 30, 2004The Pentagon extended the Iraq tours of 6,500 soldiers.
Source:

New York Times

October 28, 2004Four British citizens who were held without charges in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, filed suit against Donald Rumsfeld and other senior administration officials, and claimed that they were tortured while in custody. The Pentagon responded that the men were "enemy combatants" and thus had no right to sue.
Source:

Reuters

October 28, 2004A federal judge ordered the Defense Department to stop giving troops the anthrax vaccine and said that the Food and Drug Administration broke its own rules by approving it.
Source:

Washington Post

October 1, 2004The Army lowered its standards in an attempt to attract more recruits.
Source:

New York Times

September 24, 2004An expert panel appointed by the Pentagon concluded that the United States lacks the troops to maintain its current military commitments, and
Source:

New York Times

September 19, 2004The Pentagon announced that it will issue microwave pain guns to its forces in Iraq.
Source:

Daily Telegraph

August 29, 2004The FBI was still investigating a possible Israeli mole in the Pentagon.
Source:

Telegraph

July 8, 2004The Pentagon announced the creation of military review panels to allow prisoners at Guantánamo Bay to challenge their detentions, though they will not be permitted to have lawyers present, nor will the hearings be public; critics said that the Pentagon's plan falls short of the standard set by the Supreme Court, which ruled that the prisoners have a right to an independent hearing.
Source:

Guardian

June 25, 2004"My understanding of this issue," said General Richard Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, "is that the CPA orders cannot be repealed or modified until Iraq's permanent government is in place to enact legislation."
Source:

Agence France-Presse

June 1, 2004The Pentagon denied that a new "non-lethal" ray gun that fires millimeter-wave electromagnetic energy, which penetrates the skin and instantly heats water molecules to 130 degrees, might be used as a torture device. No one has been able to stand the pain caused by the weapon, known as the "Active Denial System," for more than 3 seconds.
Source:

Sacramento Bee

May 18, 2004The Pentagon finally decided to stop paying Ahmad Chalabi's Iraqi National Congress $335,000 per month.
Source:

New York Times

May 15, 2004It was reported that the Abu Ghraib torture fiasco was a product of a covert Pentagon operation — a so-called special-access program, authorized by Donald Rumsfeld and run by his undersecretary Stephen Cambone — that applied unconventional interrogation techniques developed for use in Afghanistan to the situation in Iraq.
Source:

New Yorker

May 6, 2004The Pentagon was thinking about setting up a new office to plan postwar operations for future wars.
Source:

New York Times

April 13, 2004The North American Aerospace Defense Command admitted that in April 2001 it rejected a training scenario in which foreign terrorists were to hijack a commercial airplane and try to crash it into the Pentagon; the scenario was considered unrealistic.
Source:

Navy Times

March 21, 2004The Pentagon dropped charges against Capt. James Yee, a former chaplain at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, who was accused of being a Muslim spy.
Source:

Straights Times

March 18, 2004The Pentagon was withholding a $300 million payment for Halliburton until auditors make sure that the government was not overcharged.
Source:

Agence France-Presse

March 11, 2004The Pentagon was still paying $340,000 a month to the Iraqi National Congress, the exile group that provided much of the discredited intelligence used to justify the invasion of Iraq.
Source:

New York Times

February 26, 2004 Pentagon officials said that Guantánamo detainees who are found innocent might still be kept in detention indefinitely if they are deemed a security risk.
Source:

BBC

February 22, 2004An internal Pentagon report warned that global climate change will soon lead to drought, famine, and widespread warfare as countries begin to fight over scarce water, food, and energy supplies. Climate change, the report argues, "should be elevated beyond a scientific debate to a U.S. national security concern."
Source:

Observer

February 18, 2004"Heads should roll," said Richard Perle, of the Defense Policy Board, "not in a punitive or vindictive way. But when you discover you have an organization that doesn't get it right time after time, you change the organization, including the people . . . . I would start with the head."
Source:

Christian Science Monitor

January 22, 2004An expert panel that was asked to review a Pentagon-funded Internet voting system declared that the system was fundamentally flawed. "Using a voting system based on the Internet," said one of the experts, "poses a serious and unacceptable risk for election fraud." The Pentagon nonetheless said that it "stands by" the program, which will be used in several primaries this year. "We feel it's right on," said a spokesman, "and we're going to use it."
Source:

New York Times

January 9, 2004General Wesley Clark was wearing argyle sweaters at campaign appearances in an attempt to appeal to women voters. The retired general told a reporter that some women have "an impression that the armed forces is a male-dominated, hierarchical, authoritarian institution."
Source:

New York Times

December 12, 2003The Pentagon accused Halliburton, which recently removed its name from outside its corporate headquarters in Houston, of overcharging for gasoline in Iraq.
Source:

Reuters

December 4, 2003 Australia resolved to join the American missile-defense program, a decision that pleased the Pentagon and President Bush but puzzled many Australians who wondered from whose missiles the expensive system was supposed to protect them.
Source:

Sydney Morning Herald

December 3, 2003The Pentagon decided to permit Yaser Hamdi, an American citizen who has been held as an enemy combatant for two years, to have access to his lawyer, though officials continued to insist that Hamdi has no constitutional right to an attorney.
Source:

Ft. Worth Star Telegram

October 23, 2003The Pentagon was planning to spend $335 million on high-tech solutions to the guerrilla war; the measures include electronic jamming devices, tethered blimps with digital cameras, and other "rapid-reaction/new solution" technologies.
Source:

New York Times

July 9, 2003The federal commission investigating the September 11 attacks complained that the Justice Department and the Pentagon were not cooperating.
Source:

New York Times

May 30, 2003The Defense Department was said to be in favor of a massive covert operation to overthrow the Iranian government.
Source:

Reuters

May 28, 2003The Pentagon discovered 200 vials of anthrax and other bacteria among 2,000 tons of hazardous waste on an Army base about 50 miles from Washington, D.C.
Source:

Times of London

May 2, 2003The Bush Administration proposed giving the Central Intelligence Agency and the Pentagon the power to issue "administrative subpoenas" for personal and financial information on American citizens without court approval. Attorney General John Ashcroft revealed that the Justice Department used secret warrants 1,228 times last year.
Source:

New York Times

December 11, 2001The Pentagon performed another rigged test of its antimissile system; this time the “kill vehicle” actually struck its target, which was emitting a homing beacon.
November 20, 2001 Pentagon officials were still trying to decide on a new color for food-aid packages; the current yellow color matches the one used for cluster bombs.
November 6, 2001The Air Force was planning to deploy more of its Predator surveillance drones in Afghanistan even though an internal Pentagon report recently concluded that the drone doesn't perform well at night or in cold or rainy weather.
November 6, 2001Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, asked about the massacre, said: “I cannot deal with that particular village.” General Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said that United States forces would change the color of the yellow food packets being dropped from the air. “It is unfortunate that the cluster bombs — the unexploded ones — are the same color as the food packets,” he said, but he couldn't say when the change would take place “because there are many in the pipeline.” Human Rights Watch called on the Pentagon to stop using cluster bombs, each of which contains 202 soda-sized yellow bomblets, because “they have proven to be a serious and long-lasting threat to civilians, soldiers, peacekeepers, and even clearance experts.”
October 30, 2001 Pentagon officials expressed surprise at the toughness of Taliban soldiers and warned that it would probably be a long war.
October 30, 2001Other Pentagon officials were telling reporters that the Afghan war will probably just make things worse, that short-term tactical gains may well lead to catastrophic strategic losses.
October 23, 2001In response to reports of heavy civilian casualties near Darunta, the Pentagon spent millions of dollars buying up exclusive rights to civilian satellite photos of the Afghan bombing zone to prevent the images from falling into the hands of the news media.
October 23, 2001 Legally, the Pentagon has “shutter control” over civilian satellites to prevent enemies from acquiring sensitive intelligence data, but in this case the images had no strategic value.
October 9, 2001 Pentagon sources said the plane was hit by a Ukrainian surface-to-air missile, apparently by accident, during training exercises with Russia.
October 2, 2001A professor at the University of New Mexico was in big trouble for joking that “anyone who can blow up the Pentagon gets my vote”; university officials were calling for his resignation.
September 11, 2001 Terrorists destroyed the World Trade Center in New York City and damaged the Pentagon using hijacked commercial airliners.
September 11, 2001One hundred eighty-eight died at the Pentagon.
September 4, 2001The Pentagon admitted that its missile defense scheme probably would be unable to hit the wobbly, primitive missiles that “rogue states” would be most likely to fire.
July 17, 2001The Pentagon conducted an antimissile test in which an interceptor rocket destroyed a Minuteman II intercontinental ballistic missile; critics said the test was flawed because it used a shiny round decoy balloon that looked nothing like a missile and thus was unlikely to confuse the interceptor.
July 17, 2001The Pentagon did away with its “two-war” doctrine.
March 6, 2001The Pentagon announced a new “active denial system” that fires electromagnetic energy at people and creates a burning sensation on the surface of their skin.
March 6, 2001The weapon is meant to “influence motivational behavior”; the Pentagon hopes to use the weapon, which Human Rights Watch described as a “high-powered microwave antipersonnel weapon,” for crowd control, instead of tear gas and rubber bullets.
February 27, 2001Most of the “smart” bombs dropped on Iraq last week missed their targets, the Pentagon admitted.
January 23, 2001 President Clinton ordered the Pentagon to review a study which found that residents of a small Puerto Rican island where the Navy conducts bombing tests have a high rate of a rare heart condition caused by loud noises.
January 23, 2001Investigators raided a Marine unit in North Carolina after they received a tip that the unit was falsifying maintenance records on the experimental Osprey airplane to help ensure its approval by the Pentagon.
January 2, 2001 President Clinton signed the 1998 Rome Treaty on the International Criminal Court over the objections of the Pentagon and many Republicans, who on this subject do perhaps protest too much.
December 12, 2000 Pentagon investigators acknowledged that American troops had massacred unarmed Korean civilians near No Gun Ri at the beginning of the Korean War, but claimed there was no evidence of direct orders from superiors to kill the Koreans, which would constitute a war crime.
December 5, 2000The Pentagon was using sweatshop labor in Nicaragua to make uniforms.
November 7, 2000Veterans of the Korean War were offered free testing for exposure to Agent Orange after the Pentagon admitted that soldiers applied the toxic herbicide along the Korean border.
September 19, 2000There were reports that former CIA director John Deutch, who was recently accused of downloading classified CIA material (including information about covert operations) to his personal, unsecured computer, also violated security rules by downloading classified material when he worked at the Pentagon.
September 12, 2000A Pentagon security gate popped up and wrecked a car carrying the German defense minister; two years ago the same thing happened to the Japanese defense minister.
August 1, 2000The Pentagon mounted an arms show in Philadelphia for the Republican National Convention that will cost at least $100,000.
August 1, 2000The Defense Department proposed a new debit-card program for low-income troops who qualify for food stamps.