"What a macho night," began a Post report on a White House correspondents' dinner.
The Post report said that this could be done covertly, using soldiers in an undercover role.
Pentagon officials declined to confirm or deny the accuracy of The Post report.
But The Post report had its biggest fact right.
White House officials declined to comment on the Post report.
The Post report cited sources familiar with the meeting.
Along with mushroom clouds, uranium was another favored image, the Post report noted, "because anyone could see its connection to an atomic bomb."
About two years elapsed between the program's disbanding and the Post report.
And high up, the Post reports, without breaking stride, that the campaign's other new changes include "an updated wardrobe."
Such payments sometimes come about through bad information, accounting errors, or fraud, the Post reports.