Hegseth threatened top military officers with polygraph tests: WSJ
- Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth threatened military officials with polygraph tests to uncover who leaked information, as reported by the Wall Street Journal.
- Hegseth's behavior has created an atmosphere of intimidation at the Pentagon, with sources describing the environment as a 'knife fight' regarding information security.
- At least five Pentagon employees have been fired or resigned due to concerns about leaks, as reported by multiple outlets.
- Hegseth is increasingly paranoid about leaks, suspecting his own staffers of leaking information about his activities.
28 Articles
28 Articles
SECDEF Hegseth threatened to 'polygraph' top military officials: Report
A new report claims that Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth threatened to “polygraph” two top U.S. military officials. ABC News reported that it confirmed a new Wall Street Journal report that claimed the secretary of defense issued a “polygraph” threat to two top U.S. military officials in at least two different meetings amid issues with Pentagon officials leaking information to the news media. A source familiar with the meetings claimed that He…
Screamin' Pete Hegseth Lucky This Old Admiral Didn't *Lay Him Out*
Photo by Katie Bernotsky on UnsplashPete Hegseth does not seem to get that his job is to play the TV Defense secretary, because our two-bit dictator is more obsessed with the performance of masculinity than Tom of Finland. Big Daddy Trump just wants a GI Joe doll who can talk good, and all Boozehole’s gotta do to make Dear Leader happy is pat some pretty makeup on top of his grey pallor, stick in his earpiece, make unga bunga WE IS KILLING MUSLI…
Hegseth threatened polygraph test over leak of classified briefing for Musk: WSJ
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth demanded proof that Adm. Christopher Grady, the then-acting Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, hadn’t leaked news of a March 21 classified briefing for Elon Musk on China, the Wall Street Journal reports. Hegseth threatened to hook Grady up to a polygraph. Nancy Youssef discusses.
(S+) USA: Pete Hegseth used public mobile phone number available for chat on air attack
The »New York Times« brought Pentagon boss Pete Hegseth into distress: He also revealed details of a military strike in a private chat. SPIEGEL research now shows that the mobile number used is open on the net.
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