White House figures out how it texted secret bombing plans to a reporter
- Jeffrey Goldberg, editor of The Atlantic, was mistakenly added to a sensitive Signal group chat in March 2025.
- A cellphone snafu involving Mike Waltz's iPhone caused Goldberg to be added instead of Brian Hughes.
- Hughes forwarded Goldberg's email to Waltz, and Waltz's iPhone suggested saving Goldberg's number as Hughes' contact.
- Waltz stated he 'never met' Goldberg, but Goldberg refuted this, stating, 'I do know him'.
- The mistake went unnoticed until The Atlantic reached out, prompting an internal review and raising security concerns.
109 Articles
109 Articles
Thursday GNR: Atlantic Publishes Full Details of War Plans FUBAR
The Denialists are strenuously denying the undeniable about leaking classified war plans to the Editor-in-Chief of The Atlantic. They are being variously met with indignation, raging anger, and high-grade pointing and laughing. In particular Jeffrey...
Former CIA Analyst on Signal Group Chat: I Don't Think Jeffery Goldberg Was There By Accident
The Trump administration wants the story to disappear, but one key question remains. The White House said it has wrapped up its investigation into how Jeffery Goldberg, The Atlantic editor, was somehow mistakenly invited into a Signal chat and not noticed by anyone involved in the conversation that included precise war plans before a bombing campaign in Yemen. SUBSCRIBE “This case has been closed here at the White House as far as we are concerne…
How the ‘Signalgate’ security leak makes NSA’s work much more challenging
A Signal chat created by President Donald Trump’s foreign policy team to discuss the plan for the bombing of Houthis in Yemen included an Atlantic journalist because National Security Adviser Mike Waltz mistakenly saved the reporter’s phone number under the contact of someone else, according to The Guardian, citing three White House sources. Waltz’s phone saved journalist Jeffrey Goldberg’s number after the Atlantic editor-in-chief emailed the T…
As Houthi Attacks Persist. 'Signalgate' Defense Fails
In their quest to undermine the scandal about key Trump administration national security officials discussing detailed military attack plans on a commercial messaging app, President Donald Trump and his media propagandists repeatedly claimed that the uproar was a minor sideshow that paled in comparison to the fact that the mission had been a resounding military victory.“The mission in Yemen was operationally a complete success,” Fox News host an…


Letter: Don't tolerate politicians who put politics over our safety
National security isn’t a partisan issue — it’s about keeping Americans safe. Yet, the Trump administration carelessly leaked U.S. war plans in a Signal group chat that included a journalist. This reckless breach wasn’t just an accident; it was a…
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