Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SENTELLE.
Larry Flynt and L.F.P., Inc. (the company that publishes Hustler magazine) (collectively “Flynt” or “appellants”) sued Donald H. Rumsfeld, Secretary of Defense, and the United States Department of Defense (“DOD”) seeking, inter alia, injunctive relief against interference with its exercise of a claimed First Amendment right of the news media to have access to U.S. troops in combat operations, and claiming that DOD’s delay in granting Hustler*s reporter access to U.S. troops in Afghanistan infringed that right. They further argued that DOD’s Directive controlling media access to military forces facially violates this same constitutional right. The District Court dismissed Flynt’s as-applied constitutional claims for lack of ripeness and standing, and refused to exercise its discretion under the Declaratory Judgment Act to declare the pertinent DOD Directive facially unconstitutional. This appeal followed. Because we find that no such constitutional right exists, we will affirm the District Court’s decision on other grounds.
I. Background
A. Hustler* s attempts to gain access
Shortly after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the United States mili *699 tary began combat operations in Afghanistan in support of the global war on terrorism. On October 30, 2001, Flynt wrote a letter to the Honorable Victoria Clarke, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs, requesting that Hustler correspondents “be permitted to accompany ground troops on combat missions and that said correspondents be allowed free access to the theater of United States military operations in Afghanistan and other countries where hostilities may be occurring as part of Operation Enduring Freedom.” Two weeks later, on November 12, 2001, Flynt wrote Clarke again requesting the same access and complaining about her failure to respond to his October 30 letter. Three days later, on November 15, Clarke sent Flynt a fax stating that access to ground operations was not immediately possible because “... the only U.S. troops on the ground in Afghanistan are small numbers of servicemen involved in special operations activity.” Clarke explained that “[t]he highly dangerous and unique nature of their work makes it very difficult to embed media” with ground troops, but also stated that there had been “extensive” media access to other aspects of military operations. Specifically, “[sjcores of reporters and photographers have covered the [air] strikes, witnessed the humanitarian drops and interviewed dozens of [soldiers].” Clarke then provided Flynt with contact information for the Fifth Fleet Public Affairs Officer so that Hustler could have similar access.
Not satisfied with the access■provided by DOD, and that other media outlets had received, Flynt did not contact the Fifth Fleet Public Affairs Officer; rather, he filed this lawsuit the day after he received Clarke’s fax. Shortly after filing suit, Flynt sent another letter to Clarke on January 15, 2002, stating that “I did not contact [the Fifth Fleet Public Affairs Officer] because I did not request any such access or similar access. Rather, I specifically requested reporter access to actual battlefield combat activities.” The letter also characterized Clarke’s description of special operations activities as vague. Two weeks later, Flynt sent another letter to' Clarke requesting an immediate response to his January 15 letter. Clarke responded by letter on February 4, 2002, reiterated DOD’s position, and again described the access that was currently available. Furthermore, she stated that “all [your reporter] needs to do is work with [DOD’s] people on the ground.” She also provided Flynt with an extensive list of contact persons and explained that DOD decisions regarding media access were controlled by Department of Defense Directive 5122.5.
On February 19, 2002, Flynt’s lawyer sent an email to Lieutenant Commander Bonnie Hebert, one of the contacts Clarke had provided, requesting “permission to have Hustler magazine correspondents accompany and report on the activities of American soldiers on the ground in Afghanistan who are engaged in combat actions.” Hebert responded three days later, asking “[w]here exactly in Afghanistan would you like to go?” and requesting the identity of the reporter. This began a series of communications that ultimately resulted in David Buchbinder, a Hustler reporter, arriving at Bagram, Air Force Base by May 7, 2002. Once in Afghanistan, Buchbinder placed himself on a list of reporters awaiting access to ground units. Since his arrival in Afghanistan, Buchbin-der has filed several stories, at least one of which shows he has accompanied troops on a search for al Qaeda operatives.
. B. The Directive
As stated above, DOD decisions regarding media access to combat troops are guided by Department of Defense Di *700 rective 5122.5. This Directive, issued on September 27, 2000, assigns the responsibility of “[e]nsur[ing] a free flow of news and information to the news media” to the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs. Directive 5122.5. The Directive contains three enclosures. At issue in this case is Enclosure 3, entitled “Statement of DOD Principles for News Media.” This enclosure begins with the command that “[o]pen and independent reporting shall be the principal means of coverage of U.S. military operations.” ¶E3.1.1. It then outlines the manner in which such coverage should occur. It allows for media pools, limited numbers of press persons who represent a larger number of news media organizations and share material, but states that pools are not to be the “standard means of covering U.S. military operations.” ¶ E3.1.2. Rather, pools are only to be used when space is limited or areas to be visited are extremely remote. ¶£3.1.3. It also directs that “field commanders should be instructed to permit journalists to ride on military vehicles and aircraft when possible.” ¶ E3.1.7. In sum, the Directive represents an attempt to facilitate broad media coverage, and contains few restrictions, including limited restrictions on media communications for security purposes and expulsion for members of the media who violate the ground rules. Id. at ¶ ¶ E3.1.4. & E3.1.8. It also includes the caveat that “[sjpecial operations restrictions may limit access in some cases.” ¶ E3.1.5.
C. Proceedings Below
Flynt and L.F.P., Inc., filed their initial complaint against the DOD and Secretary Rumsfeld on November 16, 2001, requesting preliminary and permanent injunctive relief. In addition, Flynt challenged Directive 5122.5 on the grounds that (1) enforcement of the policies violated his historical and constitutional rights of access to the battlefield; (2) enforcement of the policies amounted to a content-based prior restraint that deprived him of his First Amendment rights; (3) DOD’s denial of his request was not narrowly tailored to further a substantial government interest; and (4) DOD’s denial was arbitrary and capricious and made without reference to specific and objective standards.
After a hearing on Flynt’s motion for a preliminary injunction, the District Court denied the motion, stating that it was “persuaded that in an appropriate case there could be a substantial likelihood of demonstrating that under the First Amendment the press is guaranteed a right to gather and report news” about U.S. military operations, subject to reasonable regulations.
Flynt v. Rumsfeld,
On January 17, 2002, nine days after the District Court denied his motion for a preliminary injunction, Flynt filed an amended complaint. The amended claim presented ten claims, including: (Claim 1) a request for a declaration that the First Amendment guarantees Flynt a right of access to the battlefield, subject to reasonable regulations for safety and security; (Claims 2-4) a claim that DOD Directive 5122.5 fails to recognize and protect Flynt’s First Amendment right of access to the battlefield and DOD’s denial of his request violated these same rights; (Claim 5) an assertion that the Directive does not contain constitutionally required definite and objective standards for determining press access; (Claim 6) a claim that the Directive fails to place reasonable time limits on DOD’s decision-making process; *701 (Claim 7) a contention -that the Directive does not provide for prompt administrative appeal; (Claims 8-9) a claim that the Directive imposes an unlawful content-based prior restraint on the media’s constitutional right to - battlefield access; and (Claim 10) a request for preliminary and permanent injunctive relief. By motion filed February 7, 2002, DOD moved to dismiss the amended complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6) or, in the alternative, for summary judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c).
In considering DOD’s motion, the District Court grouped appellants’ claims as follows: claims 1-3, 8-9, and portions of claims 4-7 that alleged DOD improperly applied Enclosure 3 to Flynt’s request, were considered as “as-applied claims;” and claims 4-7 were considered as facial challenges to Enclosure 3.
Flynt v. Rumsfeld,
With regard to the as-applied claims, the District Court held they were unripe because the record did not reflect DOD ever made a final decision with respect to Flynt’s request. Id. at 102. Furthermore, Flynt would suffer no concrete hardship by delaying review. Id. at 103. Also citing the absence of a final decision, the District Court held Flynt had not suffered a concrete injury-in-fact and, thus, had no standing to press the as-applied claims. Id.
Turning to the facial challenges,- the District Court held that Flynt had both constitutional and prudential standing. Id. at 104. The Court stated that because the DOD had already crystallized its policies in Enclosure 3, the “posture of these particular claims ma[de] it inappropriate to dismiss on prudential ripeness grounds.” Id. at 105. The District Court also held that dismissal on political question grounds was inappropriate because Flynt’s claims did not “implicate the President’s activities as Commander in Chief or the authority of the Secretary of Defense to direct military actions,” nor did they require a court to apply principles beyond normal judicial competence. Id. at 107. The District Court did, however, refuse to exercise its discretion under the Declaratory Judgment Act to consider Flynt’s facial claims. Id. Citing the considerable discretion the Declaratory Judgment Act gives to district courts, the court relied on the absence of a concrete controversy and the uncertainty surrounding Flynt’s constitutional claims in withholding declaratory relief. Id. at 109-10. The court further refused to grant injunctive relief. Id. This appeal followed.
II. Analysis
This court reviews
de novo
the District Court’s dismissal of a complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Empagran S.A. v. F. Hoffman-LaRoehe, Ltd.,
A. Appellants’ Claims
As a threshold matter, it is important to clarify the right appellants seek to protect. In candor, it is not at all clear from appellants’ complaint below or briefs in this court precisely what right they believe was violated or contend the courts should vindicate. After some pressing, at oral argu *702 ment it became clear that they claimed a right, protected under the First Amendment, in their own words, to “go[ ] in [to battle] with the military.” This right is different from merely a right to cover war. The Government has no rule-at least so far as Flynt has made known to us-that prohibits the media from generally covering war. Although it would be dangerous, a media outlet could presumably purchase a vehicle, equip it with the necessary technical equipment, take it to a region in conflict, and cover events there. Such action would not violate Enclosure 3 or any other identified DOD rule.
With that distinction made, appellants’ claim comes more sharply into focus. They claim that the Constitution guarantees to the media-specifically Hustler’s eorrespondent-the right to travel with military units into combat, with all of the accommodations and protections that entails-essentially what is currently known as “embedding.” Indeed, at oral argument appellants’ counsel stated that the military is “obligated to accommodate the press because the press is what informs the electorate as to what our government is doing in war.”
B. Ripeness and Standing
We first consider appellees’ contention that appellants lack standing to assert their “as applied” claims and that those claims were not ripe. For the reasons set forth below, we conclude that appellants do have standing and that the claims are ripe.
Standing requires that plaintiffs allege “an injury in fact” that is “concrete and particularized and actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.”
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
In order to test the ripeness and justiciability of the claims, we again assume that they are otherwise valid. Ripeness analysis tests whether a question has sufficiently matured to be amenable to adjudication. The Supreme Court has explained that when considering whether an issue is ripe for judicial review, a court must “evaluate both the fitness of the issues for judicial decision and the hardship to the parties” of refusing a decision.
Texas v. United States,
Appellants’ claim is that credentialed press persons have an immediate right, upon request, to accompany U.S. troops in combat. So understood, the as-applied claims are ripe. Flynt requested that Hustler reporters gain access to combat operations, and that access was not immediately granted. Instead, access of another sort was provided-that of covering “the [air] strikes, witnessing] the humanitarian drops and interviewing]” soldiers. Flynt’s claim does not depend on “contin *703 gent future events.” He asked for immediate access, which he contends is his constitutional right, and that access was not granted. On these facts, the question is presented in a concrete factual setting and is fit for judicial review.
C. Facial Challenge
With all of appellants’ claims properly before us, we now turn to their validity. Because it is clear to us that appellants have asserted no cognizable First Amendment claim, both the as-applied and facial challenges fail.
The facial challenge is premised on the assertion that there is a First Amendment right for legitimate press representatives to travel with the military, and to be accommodated and otherwise facilitated by the military in their reporting efforts during combat, subject only to reasonable security and safety restrictions. There is nothing we have found in the Constitution American history, or our case law to support this claim.
To support the position that there is such a constitutional right, appellants first point to cases that discuss the general purposes underlying the First Amendment.
See New York Times Co. v. United States,
Appellants also cite cases that allow facial challenges to statutes or regulations that vest public officials with unfettered discretion to grant or deny licenses to engage in expressive activity, such as
City of Lakewood v. Plain Dealer Publishing Co.,
Likewise, this Court has held that “freedom of speech [and] of the press do not create any per se right of access to government ... activities simply because such access might lead to more thorough or better reporting.”
JB Pictures, Inc. v. Dep’t of Defense,
In
Richmond Newspapers,
a plurality of the Supreme Court held that a constitutional right of public access to criminal trials existed based on a long history of such access in the United States and in England at the time our organic laws were created.
Id.
at 581,
In
Center for National Security Studies v. Department of Justice,
Appellants argue that we did, however, use the
analysis
underlying the
Richmond Newspapers
decision in
JB Pictures Inc. v. Department of Defense,
Even if we were to apply a
Richmond Newspapers
test, which again, we do not, it would not support appellants’ facial challenge to the Directive. As an initial matter, the history of press access to military units is not remotely as extensive as public access to criminal trials. Without going into great historic detail, it is sufficient that in
Richmond Newspapers
the Supreme Court relied on the “unbroken, un-contradicted history” of public access to criminal trials.
Id.
at 573. This includes the time when “our organic laws were adopted.”
Id.
at 569,
No comparable history exists to support a right of media access to U.S. military units in combat. The very article cited by appellants for the proposition that media have traditionally had broad access to soldiers in combat does not support this position. See John E. Smith, From the Front *705 Lines to the Front Page: Media Access to War in the Persian Gulf and Beyond, 26 Colum. J.L. & Soc. Probs. 291, 292-305 (1993). Beginning with the American Revolution, war reporting was primarily in the form of private letters from soldiers and official reports that were sent home and published in newspapers. Id. at 293. Indeed, the rise of the professional war correspondent did not begin until at least the time of the Civil War. Id. In addition, it is not entirely clear that in any of our early wars the media was actively embedded into units, which is the right appellants seek. In sum, even if we were to attempt a Richmond Newspapers analysis and consider the historical foundations of a right of media access to combat units, appellants’ claim would fail miserably.
Even if
Richmond Neivspapers
applied in this context, and even if there was a historical basis for media access to troops in combat, the Directive would still not violate the First Amendment.
Richmond Neivspapers
expressly stated that “[j]ust as a government may impose reasonable time, place, and manner restrictions” in granting access to public streets, “so may a trial judge ... impose reasonable limitations on access to a trial.”
The District Court, therefore, was more than correct when it stated that declaring the Directive unconstitutional would entail announcing an uncertain, yet “significant principle of First Amendment protection in the context of a new application of the facial challenge mechanism.”
Flynt v. Rumsfeld,
D. As-applied Challenges
We now turn to the as-applied challenges. As explained above, the constitutional right appellants assert does not exist, so the as-applied claim could only survive if this otherwise constitutional Directive was applied to them in some unconstitutional way. It was not. At no time has Flynt ever claimed that he, or Hustler, was treated differently under the Directive than any other media outlet. Nor has he claimed that the Directive is some sort of a sham that was not followed.
Even if there were some underlying constitutional right of media access to U.S. troops in battle, the Directive, and its application to appellants in this case, cer *706 tainly would not have violated it. When Flynt made his request, Clarke explained that “the highly dangerous and unique nature of [special operations] work makes it very difficult to embed media” with ground troops, but also said that there had been “extensive” media access to other aspects of military operations. Specifically, “[s]cores of reporters and photographers have covered the [air] strikes, witnessed humanitarian drops and interviewed dozens of [soldiers].” Clarke then provided Flynt with contact information for the Fifth Fleet Public Affairs Officer so that Hustler could have similar access. The explanation was clear and consistent with the Directive, which states that “[s]pecial operations restrictions may limit access in some cases.” Directive 5122.5 ¶£3.1.5. Indeed, in conformity with the letter and spirit of the Directive, Clarke not only explained why direct access to ground troops was not currently possible, but she also immediately gave Flynt the information necessary to receive the access that was available. It was Flynt who failed initially to contact the designated public affairs officer. Ultimately, Flynt’s reporter was given broad access to troops and has filed several stories, at least one of which shows he has accompanied troops on a search for al Qaeda operatives.
At oral argument, appellants asserted that DOD waited too long in making a final decision, and that they should have been required to promptly tell him that “this is a special forces operation, and you can’t go.” According to appellants, if this were the case, “at least there would be an answer and [we would have been] denied.” This is, of course, precisely what happened. Within 16 days of Flynt’s initial request, DOD responded by informing him that only special operations were underway. They also, however, advised him that access would be expanding in the future and that substantial access was already available. They provided him with the necessary contact information to ensure that his Hustler reporter would be there with other media representatives. All of this occurred within 90 days of the September 11 attacks. In sum, there is nothing in the record that shows the otherwise constitutional Directive was applied to appellants in any illegal manner.
III. Conclusion
Because we hold that there is no constitutionally based right for the media to embed with U.S. military forces in combat, and because we further hold that the Directive was not applied to Flynt or Hustler magazine in any unconstitutional manner, the District Court’s judgment is affirmed.
