Signal, DOD watchdog
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The Atlantic |
“Nobody was texting war plans. And that’s all I have to say about that.”
U.S. News & World Report |
The Pentagon's Inspector General's office announced on Thursday it was opening a probe into Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's use of an unclassified commercial texting application to coordinate the Ma...
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Screenshots shared by Goldberg show Waltz added the journalist to the Signal chat about an upcoming attack on the Houthi rebels in Yemen, but Waltz has repeatedly said he had neve
3don MSN
CNN’s Jake Tapper offered a short but scathing assessment on Monday amid the White House’s efforts to sweep the war group chat fiasco under the rug.Tapper interviewed The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg,
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Audacy on MSNExcerpts of Signal war group chat released by Atlantic Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey GoldbergThe Atlantic published additional text messages from the Signal group chat that its Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey Goldberg was added to accidentally last week.
The Atlantic's editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, has released more messages from the Signal chat group for senior Trump administration officials that he was accidentally added to, in which discussions about an upcoming strike on the Houthis took place.
Chief of The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, disputes the idea he had never met national security adviser Mike Waltz before being added to a Signal chat with top government officials.
9dOpinion
The Forward on MSNJeffrey Goldberg, journalist included in Signal warchat, once worked for the ForwardBefore he was given access to insider information about the United States cabinet’s most secretive war plans, Jeffrey Goldberg spent some of the early years of his journalism career at the Forward. As a reporter,
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The Forward on MSNWould the Talmud have told Jeffrey Goldberg to stay in the Signal chat?Jeffrey Goldberg was added to a Signal group chat discussing matters of national security. He left it, but many think he should have stayed.
An inadvertent invitation to a group chat thrust The Atlantic's editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg into the center of an explosive national security breach that's put the White House on the defensive. Why it matters: Goldberg's decision to disclose the discussion of planned strikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen and publish the group chat's contents has embroiled top Trump officials in scandal and exposed them to potential legal jeopardy.
Journalist Jeffrey Goldberg is accusing Mike Waltz of lying about talking with him — ridiculing on Sunday the claim that his phone number was mysteriously “sucked into” the national security adviser’s cellphone before being included in a Signal group chat about Yemen airstrikes.
Is Jeffrey Goldberg legally allowed to release the Signal messages he received? - Goldberg published vague information about the attacks in Yemen more than a week after they occurred
We are currently clear on OPSEC — that is, operational security,' Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth writes in a group chat that accidentally