Hegseth says ‘nobody was texting war plans’ after group chat breach
- Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth denied that sensitive 'war plans' were shared in a group chat that included journalist Jeffrey Goldberg, despite allegations in The Atlantic article.
- Goldberg was added to the Signal chat on March 13 and reported details of the U.S. military strikes on March 15.
- Hegseth criticized Goldberg as a 'deceitful and highly discredited' journalist, insisting that no war plans were discussed in the chat.
- White House National Security Council spokesman Brian Hughes stated that the messages in Goldberg's report seem 'authentic' and an investigation is underway into how he was included in the chat.
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168 Articles
ThePatriotLight - No “War Plans” Leaked * 100PercentFedUp.com * by Noah
ThePatriotLight - I am still not convinced these text leaked text chains were real, and I’m sticking with my gut on that, but for now the Trump Administration and Pete Hegseth himself seem to be admitting to the leaks but claiming nothing sensitive was disclosed. Here is Hegseth laying it out with some fire: “Nobody is texting war plans…There’s no units, no locations, no routes, no flight paths, no sources, no methods, no classified information…
White House maintains compromised chat group didn't discuss 'war plans'
The White House says details about a targeted strike accidentally shared with a journalist in a group chat were not "war plans," but some officials say someone must be held accountable.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is arguing about semantics when he said “nobody was texting war plans.” Technically, there is no Ddefense Ddepartment definition of a “war plan.” However, the messages included operational details about an upcoming attack.
Standing on a Hawaii runway, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told a reporter March 24, "Nobody was texting war plans, and
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