White House Subpoenas NYT Journalists Over Trump's New Air Force One Security Leaks
The Trump administration has escalated its confrontation with the media by issuing federal subpoenas to New York Times journalists, demanding grand jury testimony following reports that the newly acquired presidential aircraft gifted by Qatar lacks critical defense capabilities.
July 11, 2026 Ahmet Koçak
Donald Trump before boarding the new Air Force One in Maryland, July 1, 2026 - AP
Ahmet Koçak
Editor
The Trump administration issued federal subpoenas on Friday to multiple New York Times journalists following reports detailing critical security vulnerabilities on the new presidential aircraft donated by Qatar.
The legal action demands that the reporters testify before a Manhattan grand jury regarding an unspecified breach of criminal law.
Escalation Against Independent News
Federal law enforcement agents delivered the orders directly to the residences of journalists Julian E. Barnes, Eric Lipton, Tyler Pager, and Eric Schmitt on Friday evening.
The legal offensive marks an aggressive shift in executive efforts to control classified operational disclosures during the administration's second term.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton, whom President Trump recently selected to lead the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, authorized the summonses.
The newspaper immediately condemned the move as a direct assault on constitutional protections.
"This brazen act should be seen as nothing more than an attempt to prevent the public from knowing what is happening in their country by intimidating journalists from doing their jobs," stated David McCraw, the top newsroom attorney for the publication.
Air Force One Security Gaps
The targeted reporting revealed that President Trump recently departed Türkiye utilizing the older presidential aircraft as a precautionary measure advised by the Secret Service.
Subsequent disclosures revealed that the newly donated Qatari Boeing 747-8 lacks standard defense systems, including anti-missile countermeasures.
Prior to publication, a senior official within the Federal Bureau of Investigation attempted to block the reporting, citing national security concerns. The federal agency demanded that the news organization reveal its confidential inputs, an instruction the publication rejected.
Systemic Pressure on the Press
The administrative action builds on the Department of Justice's earlier efforts this year to compel testimony from reporters at The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post, which were later withdrawn under legal pressure.
Furthermore, federal agents executed a residential search warrant against a Washington Post reporter in January, seizing electronic devices during a separate leak investigation.
The legal standoff coincides with broader judicial disputes involving the publication and the administration.
The newspaper is currently engaged in litigation against the Department of Defense over restricted press access at the Pentagon, and has filed a countersuit against the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleging state retaliation.
Sources:
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