Davis, Judge,
delivered the opinion of the court: Grumman Aerospace Corp. seeks review under the Wunderlich Act, 41 U.S.C. §§ 321,322 (1970), of two decisions of the National Aeronautical Space Administration Board of Contract Appeals (NASA BCA) on the company’s right to reimbursement, under cost-plus-fixed-fee contracts with NASA and the Department of the Navy,1 with respect to certain legal and accounting fees for outside services incurred by plaintiff during 1970, 1971 and 1972 in connection with renegotiation proceedings for its 1964 and 1965 fiscal years.2
[289]*289I
On November 30, 1960, Grumman was issued a letter contract by NASA for the design and development of an Orbiting Astronomical Observatory satellite and related ground equipment. The formalized contract included the standard clauses prescribed by NASA Procurement Regulations for use in cost-reimbursement research and development contracts.3 Those clauses provided that Part II, Section XV of the Armed Services Procurement Regulations (ASPR) would control the allowability of costs under the contract.4 The allowability of legal and accounting fees was thus governed by ASPR section 15-205.31, which provided for the reimbursement of such fees except when (inter alia) incurred in "the prosecution of claims against the Government.”5 This case concerns that exclusionary provision.
[290]*290Grumman’s proceedings before the Renegotiation Board were typical of the process faced by contractors prior to redetermination proceedings in this court (or the Tax Court).6 On October 27, 1967, the Eastern Regional Board, after reviewing Grumman’s filings to the Board for its 1965 fiscal year, made its recommendation that Grumman had earned excessive profits. After receiving the Regional Board’s summary of facts and reasons for its decision, Grumman refused to enter into an excessive profits refund agreement on the basis of these findings and pursued its right to de novo review before the statutory Renegotiation Board. Proceedings at that level ultimately resulted in the Board’s initial determination, on April 15, 1968, that plaintiff had earned excessive profits in 1965. On May 1, 1968, the Board confirmed its initial decision while denying plaintiffs request for certain information bearing upon the reasons for this decision. When negotiations for a refund agreement based upon this determination had reached an impasse, the Board, on May 21, 1968, issued its unilateral order determining its position as to the existence and amount of excessive profits for 1965. Its statement of facts and reasons was subsequently provided to plaintiff (at its request) on July 26, 1968. In early August, Grumman filed its petition for de novo review of the Board’s order in the Tax Court; the case was transferred to the Court of Claims in July 1971, pursuant to the extension of the Renegotiation Act of 1951, Pub. L. No. 92-41, § 3, 85 Stat. 97 (1971), and was referred to a trial judge of this court in August [291]*2911971. During and subsequent to this time, Grumman and the Justice Department were working on proposed stipulations for use in the judicial redetermination proceeding and were also negotiating the terms and conditions of a compromise settlement for both the 1965 and 1966 renegotiable years.
Renegotiation of Grumman’s earnings in 1966 had a slightly different history. Following Grumman’s refusal to accept the Regional Board’s August 15, 1967 final recommendation that it had earned excessive profits in 1966, the statutory Board confirmed, on December 16, 1970, the Regional Board’s decision as to the existence of excessive profits. Plaintiff was granted repeated extensions of time to indicate whether it would enter into a refund agreement on the basis of that decision. However, a unilateral order for 1966 was never issued because Grumman’s December 15, 1972 offer of full settlement for 1965 and 1966 was accepted by the Government in February 1973.
During its proceedings before the Renegotiation Board and pending its de novo appeal to the court, Grumman was also involved in a suit under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. § 552 (1970) (amended 1976), to force disclosure to it of two kinds of information used by the Board in determining the excessiveness of its profits for 1965 and 1966. The first request, made to the Board in April 1968 (after the Board’s initial determination of the excessiveness of the profits earned in 1965, but prior to the issuance of its unilateral order), sought disclosure of "the final opinions, determinations, unilateral orders, agreements, clearance notices and letters not to proceed, as well as the written summaries of facts and reasons upon which such were based, issued in the adjudication of renegotiation cases from 1962-65 involving fourteen of its competitors.” Grumman’s request was made "as further assistance in enabling us to determine whether to enter into an agreement with the Board.” On May 21, 1968, the date of the Board’s unilateral order for 1965, the Board upheld its General Counsel’s denial of this request on the basis that the records requested were subject to exemptions under the FOIA set forth in subsections (b)(3) and (b)(4),7 and under [292]*292Board Regulations 1480.9(a)(3M4), 1480.9(b).8 Before receiving notice of this decision, plaintiff made its second request to the Board to make available, in addition, all reports, correspondence and data contained in the Board’s files regarding its own performance on its renegotiable contracts in 1965. The Board denied this request on May 21 and June 13, 1968, citing the same statutes and regulations and also claiming that the request lacked the necessary specificity to be honored.
On June 27, 1968, Grumman filed suit in the District Court for the District of Columbia under 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(3) (1970) (amended 1974), seeking to enjoin the Board from withholding, and ordering the production of, the records relating to its competitors’ renegotiation cases and the documents concerning its own case. The District Court granted the Government’s motion for summary judgment without opinion. On appeal, the Court of Appeals held that plaintiff was entitled to access to the records and documents after suitable deletions by the Board of confidential commercial or financial information, as required by exemption (b)(4) of the Freedom of Information Act, see note 7, supra. Grumman Aircraft Eng’r Corp. v. Renegotiation Board, 425 F.2d 578 (D.C. Cir. 1&70). On remand, the District Court held that summaries of facts and reasons, [293]*293and certain other reports and documents, constituted "final orders and opinions” and had to be made available to plaintiff. Grumman Aircraft Eng’r Corp. v. Renegotiation Board, 325 F. Supp. 1146 (D.D.C. 1971). The Court of Appeals affirmed the District Court, Grumman Aircraft Eng’r Corp. v. Renegotiation Board, 482 F.2d 710 (D.C. Cir. 1973), but the Supreme Court reversed, holding that the documents sought were not subject to disclosure under the FOIA but were pre-decisional consultative memoranda exempted from disclosure by Exemption 5 of that Act. Renegotiation Board v. Grumman Aircraft Eng’r Corp., 421 U.S. 168 (1975).
Legal and accounting fees incurred in the renegotiation proceedings and in the FOIA suit were at stake in the NASA BCA decision we are asked to review. Plaintiff did not seek reimbursement of those fees as such, but only as part of the general and administrative expenses allocated to the particular contract (No. NAS5-814). Grumman’s expenses for these outside legal and accounting fees can be separated into three categories: (1) costs incurred in proceedings before the Renegotiation Board; (2) costs of appealing the Board’s unilateral order for 1965, including the costs of settlement negotiations pending such judicial redetermination, and (3) the expenses of suing to compel disclosure, under the Freedom of Information Act, of information used by the Renegotiation Board in making its decision. Plaintiff, however, did not so distinguish its legal and accounting fees incurred during 1970, 1971, and 1972, but instead recorded and charged them as a general and administrative expense, thereby allocating them among all of its contracts on a total cost input basis.9 During the summer of 1972, the Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA)10 resident auditor challenged this treatment of legal and accounting expenses during a routine review of [294]*294Grumman’s overhead accounts for 1970 and 1971. Acting upon the DCAA recommendation, the Contracting Officer issued, in May 1973, a Notice of Contract Costs Suspended and/or Disapproved, with supporting documents, which totally disallowed these fees for 1970, 1971 and 1972.11 Following expiration of sixty days, the notice matured into the final decision of the Contracting Officer, which Grumman timely appealed to the NASA Board of Contract Appeals.
Before the NASA Board, the Government conceded the allowability of those legal and accounting fees incurred before the Renegotiation Board on the theory that expenses, such as these, incurred in connection with the preparation of reports designed to help settle an issue before or during the formulation of the final Government position (unilateral order) were allowable, while subsequent expenses incurred in an adversarial relationship to that position were disallowed as "claims against the Government.” Following the defendant’s concession, the NASA Board granted Grumman’s expenses of pursuing renegotiation before the Renegotiation Board’s unilateral order of May 21, 1968 (for the 1965 year) and "with regard to its 1966 renegotiation case wherein at the instance of [plaintiff] a unilateral order was never issued, prior to the [Renegotiation] Board’s determination of excess profits dated December 16, 1970.” The NASA Board disallowed all the other legal and accounting expenses which were claimed.
In this court, the Government does not challenge the NASA Board’s decision insofar as it awarded reimbursement to Grumman. That portion of the administrative determination has not been put before us and even if we could we have no occasion to probe into it for ourselves. We shall be concerned only with the portion of Grumman’s demand which the NASA BCA rejected. In doing so, we shall treat separately with the disallowed expenses in the renegotiation proceedings themselves and then with those involved in the FOIA suit.
[295]*295II
As for the renegotiation proceeding itself, Grumman does not deny that "prosecution of claims against the Government” — the ASPR phrase see note 5, supra, we have to construe — includes (at the least) adversary monetary demands on the Government for sums the claimant alleges are owing. See Part III, infra.12 Plaintiffs position is, rather, that (1) the entire process of renegotiation involves continuous negotiation and bargaining, not the prosecution at any stage of a "claim” at all, i.e., of a formal adversary demand by one party against another, and (2) if perchance a "claim” is thought to be involved, then the "claim” is by the Government, not against it.
a. Relying heavily upon certain language in Renegotiation Board v. Bannercraft Clothing Co., 415 U.S. 1 (1974), plaintiff asserts that renegotiation consists of a series of stages of bargaining and consultation as to the appropriate level of profits — with each stage free to make new findings. When the proceedings leave the Renegotiation Board because the contractor and the Board cannot agree, the transfer to this court is alleged to be no more significant than the transfer between prior levels of negotiation under the Board — that is, the whole continuum from the first step in the administrative board through resolution in this court is merely a series of stages in a single process of negotiation. Issuance of a unilateral order does not, it is said, transform the nature of the proceeding into the prosecution of a claim by the contractor against the Government; rather it constitutes another factor in the contractor’s calculus in deciding whether to reach an agreement with the Government.
We do not, however, see renegotiation as a unique or distinctive process for the purposes of cost allowability; the similarities of proceedings before the Renegotiation Board and before a contracting officer in "under the contract” disputes make relevant the analogy to contract-appeals litigation (administrative and judicial) — the cost of which [296]*296would not be reimbursable under the ASPR clause. The informal negotiation which characterizes proceedings before the Renegotiation Board also accurately portrays the process occurring between a contractor and the contracting officer when attempts are first made to resolve "under the contract” disputes. Similarly, in each type of proceeding, the reaching of an agreement (between the contractor and the Renegotiation Board, or between the contractor and the contracting officer) finally resolves the dispute. Moreover, failure to reach an agreement initiates a similar process in each type of proceeding; under the Renegotiation Act, if negotiations reach an impasse, the statutory board issues a unilateral order which becomes final and conclusive if not contested within 90 days, 50 U.S.C. App. § 1215 (1970 & Supp. V 1975), while decisions of the contracting officer concerning a dispute are also final unless appealed to a board of contract appeals within 30 days of receipt, Standard Disputes Clause, Standard Form 23-A (October 1969). When the unilateral order or a contracting officer’s final decision is appealed, the contractor receives a de novo determination in the Court of Claims or before a board of contract appeals. 50 U.S.C. App. § 1218 (1970 & Supp. V 1975); Southwest Welding & Mfg. Co. v. United States, 188 Ct. Cl. 925, 954, 413 F.2d 1167, 1184-85 (1969). In both classes of case, this de novo proceeding is the first in which the contractor is afforded due process. Lichter v. United States, 334 U.S. 742, 791-92 (1948); Sandnes’ Sons, Inc. v. United States, 199 Ct. Cl. 107, 112-13, 462 F.2d 1388, 1391-92 (1972); L. Rosenman Corp. v. United States, 182 Ct. Cl. 586, 588 n.2, 390 F.2d 711, 712 n.2 (1968). Even burdens of persuasion may be identical in both types of proceedings: in renegotiation cases, the plaintiff of course has the burden of proof as to disputed accounting data; however, with regard to the existence and amount of excessive profits the Government has the burden of persuasion after the contractor has met its burden of going forward, Lykes Bros. S.S. Co. v. United States, 198 Ct. Cl. 312, 459 F.2d 1393 (1972); Camel Mfg. Co. v. United States, 215 Ct. Cl. 460, 572 F. 2d 280 (1978); in certain types of cases "under the contract,” the Government must also bear the ultimate burden of persuasion, Lykes Bros. S.S. Co. v. United States, 198 Ct. Cl. at 329, 459 F.2d at 1403, citing Eastern Tool & [297]*297Mfg. Co., ASBCA No. 4815, 58-2 BCA ¶ 1947 (excess costs of reprocurement).
The sum of it is that, for present purposes, renegotiation does not differ significantly from contract disputes, and therefore that plaintiff, which accepts the application of the ASPR clause to professional fees incurred in the course of an appeal to a board of contract appeals or in a court suit to review such a board decision (see, e.g., Reed & Prince Mfg. Co., ASBCA No. 3172, 59-1 BCA ¶ 2172 (1959), note 18, infra), cannot complain that it is improper to reimburse professional expenses at one stage of a continuous process while denying reimbursement at a later step; it is common to disallow such costs incurred in appealing a contracting officer’s final decision as constituting the "prosecution of a claim against the Government, see 3 J. McBride and I. Wachtel, Government Contracts, § 24.240 [10] (1974), even though the appeal is also part of a continuous process undertaken by the claimant.
Certainly, a renegotiation suit in this court differs so drastically from a proceeding before the Renegotiation Board — in the formal nature and due process of the proceedings here, the availability of discovery, the existence of other procedural and substantive legal rights — that the carrying on of renegotiation litigation in this court can properly be described as "prosecution of a claim” even if the parallel characterization for Renegotiation Board proceedings would be negotiation and bargaining.13
[298]*298b. Another of Grumman’s contentions, with respect to the professional fees incurred in connection with the process of renegotiation itself, is that in renegotiation, especially when suit is brought in this court, it is the Government that is making a claim against the contractor by asserting that the latter owes money to the Government.14 In a decision in which we placed the burden of persuasion upon the Government in renegotiation cases, Lykes Bros. S.S. Co. v. United States, 198 Ct. Cl. 312, 459 F.2d 1393, (1972), we noted that in renegotiation the Government asserts that the contractor owes it money, id. at 325, 459 F.2d at 1400.15 From this language in Lykes [299]*299Bros., and from the wording "prosecution of claims against the Government” (emphasis added), Grumman argues that the exclusionary clause in ASPR 15-205.31(d) does not come into play.
This Lykes Bros, statement is not dispositive because the opinion makes clear that it was deciding an issue wholly different from the one now before us. In Lykes Bros., the court drew support for its decision that the Government should bear the burden of persuasion by observing that "perhaps the best analogy involves those cases before the boards of contract appeals in which a contractor appeals from a contracting officer’s assessment of extra costs,” 198 Ct. Cl. at 329, 459 F.2d at 1402-03. "Here, as in those cases,” the court continued, "the Government claims that the contractor owes it money.” 198 Ct. Cl. at 330, 459 F.2d at 1403. The court’s purpose in drawing the analogy was to note that, in that type of contract case, the Government also had the burden of proof in the de novo hearing before the appeals board. Yet at the time Lykes Bros, was decided, a long-standing board of contract appeals case, interpreting ASPR 15-205.31(d) and identical language in a related ASPR, had indicated that a contractor appealing an excess cost determination was prosecuting a claim against the Government for cost-allowability purposes, Reed & Prince Mfg. Co., ASBCA No. 3172, 59-1 BCA ¶ 2172, (1959) see note 18, infra; and this was so notwithstanding that the burden of proof was on the Government, Eastern Tool & Mfg. Co., ASBCA No. 4815, 58-2 BCA ¶ 1947 (1958), and notwithstanding the Government’s assertion in that type of case that the contractor owed it money, Lykes Bros. S.S. Co. v. United States, 198 Ct. Cl. at 329-30, 459 F.2d at 1402-03. This explicit reliance in Lykes Bros, upon the rule in excess cost cases makes it apparent that the Lykes Bros, comment with regard to burden of proof in the renegotiation process is not dispositive in the different context we now have.16
[300]*300Although the Government may assert that the contractor owes it money in a renegotiation suit, we find the contractor’s suit sufficiently related to a demand by it for money or property to constitute a claim against the Government for the purposes of the ASPR clause. Such a suit is, in a very real sense, an action in which the contractor is seeking either a return of money paid over to the Government as a condition of bringing suit, or the release of a bond given as security for payment of the money. Under the Renegotiation Act, a contractor’s filing of a redetermination petition stays the Renegotiation Board’s unilateral order only if the contractor files a bond with the court, 50 U.S.C. App. § 1218 (1970 & Supp. V 1975), which bond must be for 100% of the Board’s decision less tax credits. Ct. Cl. R. 26. Absent such a stay, the Government will normally be entitled to judgment on its counterclaim for the amount determined by the Board. The contractor seeking judicial redetermination will thus be required to pay the amount ordered by the Board either before or during the pendency of its suit, or to give security in the form of a bond for that amount, and in the end its suit is for the release of the bond or the refund of the money already paid to the Government. Every successful contractor’s renegotiation suit therefore involves payment at some stage of some money back to the contractor, or the freeing of money not yet fully available to the contractor. 50 U.S.C. App. § 1218 (1970 & Supp. V 1975). The procedural mechanics by which the contractor makes, one way or another, a demand on the Government for money reflect the underlying monetary nature of a renegotiation suit and of its character as a "claim against the Government.” Had the renegotiation clause in this contract provided that the Government would withhold a certain percentage of payments due under all contracts with Grumman throughout the year, subject to payment upon issuance of a clearance by the Renegotiation Board, the [301]*301contractor’s suit to reverse the Board’s unilateral order and to obtain the withheld money would plainly constitute a claim against the Government17 — even though the Government would technically be asserting, through its unilateral order, that the contractor owed it money. In substance the normal renegotiation suit in this court does not differ from that hypothetical situation.18
c. Having rejected plaintiffs reasons why its case (as to the renegotiation aspects) differs from the rule applicable to reimbursement of fees incurred in contract disputes, we hold that a renegotiation suit in our court falls under ASPR 15-205.31(d). Whether viewed as a challenge to a final Government position or as the end of non-adversarial negotiations, a contractor’s failure to accept the Board’s unilateral order and its seeking of a de novo redetermination in the Court of Claims is the prosecution of a claim against the Government.19
[302]*302III
There remains the question of the fees expended by Grumman in pursuing its Freedom of Information Act suit in 1970, 1971, and 1972. On that aspect of the case, the controlling factor is, in our view, that the ASPR clause relating to "prosecution of claims against the Government” covers monetary claims only (or claims for property), not demands or suits against the Government for other types of relief.
The proscription on allowance for reimbursement of expenditures for prosecuting claims against the Government goes back at least to Treasury Department Regulation T.D. 5000, 1940-2 Cum Bull. 397, governing cost computations under the Vinson-Trammell Act which limited profits on certain war and defense items (now 10 U.S.C. §§2382, 7300 (1970)). At that time and for many years thereafter, the normal and usual understanding of a "claim against the Government” was a demand for money or property as of right. See United States v. McNinch, 356 U.S. 595, 599 (1958); United States v. Tieger, 234 F.2d 589, 591 (3rd Cir.), cert. denied, 352 U.S. 941 (1956). This traditional understanding of "claim against the Government” is reflected in the name of our court and the limitation of our jurisdiction to "judgments for money,” United States v. Alire, 73 U.S. (6 Wall.) 573, 575 (1868); see United States v. King, 395 U.S. 1, 2-3 (1969). Similarly with our basic jurisdictional statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1491 (1970 & Supp. V 1975), which refers and has long referred to a "claim against the United States” as meaning only a pecuniary demand. When T.D. 5000 was formulated in 1940 and even when this "prosecution of claims” provision was first [303]*303incorporated into the ASPR, non-monetary suits against the Government involving contract matters (i.e., for injunc-tive or other specific relief) were so rare as to be almost non-existent.20 With this background, it is highly improbable that the drafters of T.D. 5000 and of this ASPR clause had anything but monetary claims in mind. We think that their purpose was simply to free the Government from having to subsidize a portion of the expense of the contractor-claimant’s efforts to obtain money from the United States — and therefore that we are faithful to the drafters’ objective when we limit the phrase "prosecution of claims against the Government” to pecuniary claims.
The same result emerges from the present structure of ASPR 15-205.31 itself. In that subsection, "prosecution of claims against the Government” is juxtaposed to disal-lowance of "defense of antitrust suits”; had "claim” been defined as broadly as is advocated by the Government — any demand on the Government for some action as a matter of right or duty or to forbear from some activity as a matter of duty — the drafters would not have had to exclude antitrust litigation explicitly. Similarly the disputed phrase appears even more particularized when compared to the exclusion of professional fees incurred in connection with "patent infringement litigation”; had the drafters desired to exclude the expenses of "litigating” with or suing the Government, as defendant has urged, it seems plain that they knew how to use language to accomplish that result.
The NASA Board felt constrained to adopt the broader definition of "claim” in order to avoid reimbursing contractors for fees incurred in injunctive and/or private attorney general litigation, as well as for cases involving contractor resistance to Government assertions that it is owed money. We need not decide here whether other types of injunctive suit are sufficiently related to a demand by the contractor for money so as to constitute a claim within the meaning of ASPR 15 — 205.31(d); nor need we decide whether appeals from various kinds of contracting officer’s decisions, directing the transfer to or crediting to the [304]*304Government of sums of money, are so integrally related to and concerned with money claims by the contractor that they fall under this provision of ASPR even as we construe it. There may very well be such suits. But even so we are satisfied that it is incorrect to read "prosecution of claims against the Government,” in the context of this ASPR regulation, as if those words blanketed all non-monetary suits and demands against the Government, no matter how far removed from a monetary demand by the contractor.
On this premise it is clear to us that plaintiffs expenses in pursuing its Freedom of Information Act suit, which sought to enjoin the Renegotiation Board from withholding certain evidence and to order it to produce that information, did not constitute the prosecution of a "claim” against the Government within the meaning of the ASPR regulation.21 In contrast to the contractor’s renegotiation suit, which the court has held in Part II, supra, concerned a direct demand for money by the contractor, this suit sought merely the disclosure of information which the contractor felt might or might not prove helpful to it in its renegotiation proceedings then or in the future. If Grumman prevailed in its FOIA action, no monetary advantage would necessarily (or even probably) flow to it. At best, the FOIA suit was based on a judgment that the information sought could well enable the company to be better prepared in proceedings before the Renegotiation Board and better able to conclude a favorable settlement with the Board on the basis of that information (prior to access to this court’s discovery procedures), and that such a settlement could well be lower than it would be in the absence of this information. This is too tangential and speculative a relation to a contractor’s demand in the renegotiation proceeding itself to come within the proscriptive language of the regulation, and we must therefore hold these fees reimbursable under the general allowability provision in subsection (a) of ASPR 15-205.31.22
[305]*305
Conclusion
Plaintiffs legal and accounting expenses incurred in pursuing its 1965 renegotiation case subsequent to the Board’s unilateral order, and with respect to the 1966 year after December 16, 1970, are disallowed as constituting the prosecution of claims against the Government within the exclusionary provision of ASPR 15-205.31(d), while the legal expense incurred in its litigation to compel the production of Renegotiation Board information under the Freedom of Information Act is held to be reimbursable under ASPR 15-205.31(a) since it does not constitute a "claim” within the meaning of subsection (d)’s exclusion. The parties’ motions for summary judgment are granted and denied to this extent and the petition is partially dismissed in accord with this disposition. The case is remanded under Rule 149 to the NASA Board of Contract Appeals to determine the quantum of the allowed expenses and fees. Further proceedings in this court are suspended for a period not to exceed six (6) months, and plaintiffs attorney is designated to advise the court under Rule 149(f).