In the wake of last weekend's U.S. military action in Venezuela, the news media got something it has seldom heard from the Trump administration: a ''thank you.''
Secretary of State Marco Rubio credited news organizations that had learned in advance about Saturday's strike that led to the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro with not putting the mission in jeopardy by publicly reporting on it before it happened.
Rubio's acknowledgment was particularly noteworthy because Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has cited a mistrust of journalists' ability to responsibly handle sensitive information as one of the chief reasons for imposing restrictive new press rules on Pentagon reporters. Most mainstream news organizations have left posts in the Pentagon rather than agree to Hegseth's policy.
Speaking on ABC's ''This Week'' on Sunday, Rubio said the Republican administration withheld information about the mission from Congress ahead of time because ''it will leak. It's as simple as that.'' But the primary reason was operational security, he said.
''Frankly, a number of media outlets had gotten leaks that this was coming and held it for that very reason,'' Rubio said. ''And we thank them for doing that or lives could have been lost. American lives.''
Advance word got out
Semafor, citing ''people familiar with communications between the administration and news organizations,'' reported that The New York Times and The Washington Post had both learned of the raid in advance but held off reporting on it to avoid endangering U.S. military personnel. Representatives for both outlets declined to comment to The Associated Press on Monday.
Withholding information on a planned mission for that reason is routine for news organizations, said Dana Priest, a longtime national security reporter at the Post who now teaches at the University of Maryland. Even after the fact, the Post has asked government authorities about whether revealing certain details could endanger people, she said.