Daniel Ellsberg, the military analyst who became infamous for leaking the Pentagon Papers to news outlets in 1971, has died, according to his family. He was 92 years old.
Ellsberg died Friday of pancreatic cancer, which he was diagnosed with in February, his family said.
Ellsberg worked as an analyst for the RAND Corporation in the late 1950s and early '60s, before working in the Pentagon and in the State Department, for which he traveled to South Vietnam for two years. He rejoined RAND in the late 1960s and worked on secret documents about the Vietnam War for the U.S. government. Those documents would come to be known as the Pentagon Papers.
The Harvard graduate and former Marine would eventually become sympathetic to the antiwar movement in the U.S. against involvement in Vietnam.
After attempting to call attention to the classified documents -- which showed the U.S. did not believe it could win the war in Vietnam despite claims to the contrary from the administration -- among politicians, Ellsberg eventually passed the documents to The New York Times, which published them on the front page in June 1971.
"Daniel was a seeker of truth and a patriotic truth-teller, an antiwar activist, a beloved husband, father, grandfather, and great-grandfather, a dear friend to many, and an inspiration to countless more," Ellsberg's wife, Patricia, and three children -- Mary, Robert and Michael -- said in a...
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