News
Striking the Iranian-backed Houthi militia serves U.S. interests and puts pressure on Iran over its nuclear ambitions.
The Defense Department inspector general has opened an investigation into Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s reported use of Signal to discuss U.S. attack plans against the Houthis.
The leak furor will fade but not JD Vance’s contempt for allies.
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth again on Tuesday dodged questions about whether the information he put in a Signal group chat was classified. In Hawaii, he repeated almost word for word his short ...
President Trump suggested Wednesday that the Signal messaging platform his top national security brass used to discuss the Houthi strike may be “defective.” While defending Defense Secretary ...
The CIA’s chief data officer testified in court last month that he was unable to locate any “substantive messages” from CIA ...
The president of Signal defended the messaging app’s security ... they used to discuss a looming US attack on Yemen’s Houthis. Signal’s Meredith Whittaker did not directly address the ...
The Pentagon’s acting inspector general has announced that he will review Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s use of the Signal ...
Washington — The Signal group chat that conveyed details of the timing and weapons descriptions of a planned attack against the Houthis in Yemen included the names or initials of 18 Trump ...
The Pentagon's inspector general launched a probe into the Trump administration's use of Signal to discuss a planned strike on the Houthis in Yemen.
The Atlantic published the entire Signal chat on Wednesday ... timings of warplane launches and when bombs would drop before the attacks against Yemen’s Houthis began earlier this month. Hegseth laid ...
The central problem here is that the chat thread manifestly included classified information up to the top secret level, including policy discussions related to Europe, the Houthi threat ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results