“Former Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has left the Pentagon, but not the Defense Department,” the Washington Times reports. “On Jan. 4, Mr. Rumsfeld opened a government-provided transition office in Arlington and has seven Pentagon-paid staffers working for him, a Pentagon official said.“

The Pentagon lists Mr. Rumsfeld as a “nonpaid consultant,” a status he needs in order to review secret and top-secret documents, the official said.
Mr. Rumsfeld and his aides, who include close adviser Stephen Cambone, are sifting through the thousands of pages of documents generated during his tenure.
The Pentagon official said former secretaries are entitled to a transition office to sort papers, some of which can be taken with them for a library, for archives or to write a book.
The transition office has raised some eyebrows inside the Pentagon. Some question the size of the staff, which includes two military officers and two enlisted men.

I didn’t want to be the one to break the news, but now that it is out of the bag — Rumsfeld is in my building, on the floor above my office. Nominally, I work in the Pentagon on the Army secretariat, but our office was sent into exile in northern Arlington about 1.5 years ago because of renovations.
He’s not always around, but my coworkers and I experience a “Rummy-sighting” about 3–4 times a week.
Sweet.
So what?