Pete Hegseth, Signal and Pentagon
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The White House said that the “case has been closed” on Signalgate, but he Pentagon’s inspector general just opened it back up, examining Pete Hegseth.
From MSNBC
The Pentagon’s inspector general said Thursday it had launched a review into Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s sharing of military plans ahead of U.S. strikes on Yemen in a Signal chat group.
From Wall Street Journal
The lawmakers have voiced concern about whether Hegseth and other top national security officials shared classified information on a commercially available encrypted messaging app as they discussed a...
From Boise State Public Radio
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1don MSN
White House sources keep going to news organizations with damaging details about National Security Advisor Mike Waltz.
At the heart of the Trump administration’s Signal scandal lies the familiar psychological pitfall of groupthink
There are plenty of lingering questions about the "Signalgate" fiasco. Donald Trump and his team are apparently no longer interested in getting answers.
Anora' star Mikey Madison also makes her hosting debut on the sketch comedy show, with musical guest Morgan Wallen.
Encrypted messaging app Signal continues to see spiking downloads in the wake of the messaging scandal that saw The Atlantic’s editor-in-chief Jeffrey
"Lolololol. Imagine if that actually happened?" Cast member Andrews Dismukes as Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said in the chat at one point.
Iran said it saw another reason for skepticism over recent diplomatic overtures by the United States following the release of a Signal chat that included sensitive information on air strikes on the Houthi militant group in Yemen. U.S. officials have accused Iran of supporting the Islamist group.
Show's Ronny Chieng has weighed in on Trump administration's now infamous Signal group chat, in which U.S. officials planned to bomb Yemen without realising that national security advisor Michael Waltz had inadvertently added The Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg to the conversation.
An "SNL" cold open skit saw Hegseth, Vance, and Rubio crash a high school group chat to discuss military plans.
Chief Investigative Reporter Lauren Inman asked CBS News Chief Justice Correspondent Scott McFarlane about how President Trump's sweeping cuts to the federal workforce will hold up in court, Friday's stock market reaction to threats of auto tariffs,