Conflicted Pentagon Pundits Asked to 'Fess Up
"The Federal Communications Commission has begun notifying several TV military analysts that it is probing congressional complaints that the pundits did not properly disclose their ties to the Pentagon when reviewing the war in Iraq on air," reports Paul Bedard. The FCC sent letters to some of the so-called "Pentagon pundits" on October 2, in response to a complaint filed with the agency by Representatives John Dingell and Rosa DeLauro. Several of the pundits named in the New York Times expose of the Pentagon pundit program were employees of or lobbyists for military contractors. The FCC letter to the pundits "suggests that TV stations and networks may have violated two sections of the Communications Act of 1934 by not identifying the ties to the Pentagon." The agency is asking the pundits "to respond to the allegations of wrongdoing within 30 days."
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More on who got the FCC letters
The [http://www.navytimes.com/news/2008/10/ap_militaryanalysts_100709/ Associated Press] reports that the FCC sent letters of inquiry to "five television networks and 19 former military officers." CBS News and ABC News confirmed that they received letters.
Dingell and DeLauro letter
The text to the Dingell and DeLauro letter to the FCC is located here: http://delauro.house.gov/release.cfm?id=566.