White House says Signal controversy is ‘closed’
- An internal review of National Security Adviser Mike Waltz has concluded, according to White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt.
- Jeffrey Goldberg from The Atlantic claimed that Waltz lied about prior communications regarding his addition to a sensitive group chat.
- President Trump has publicly supported Waltz, emphasizing that he remains integral to national security despite the controversies.
73 Articles
73 Articles
'False': Trump admin rebukes claims intel officials are frequently using Signal to send classified info – Democratic Accent
The White House is clapping back against media reports alleging intelligence officials have been using the end-to-end encrypted messaging app Signal to send classified information, describing the allegations as “false” in a statement to Fox News Digital. The statement from National Security Council (NSC) spokesman Brian Hughes comes after Politico published a report suggesting Trump …
Letter: Congress and GOP need to quell political mayhem
To the editor, The question is serious: When is it going to reach the point of saturation of political mayhem being caused before the GOP/Congress say "enough," before they move to action? As a former military member, I would already be in Fort Leavenworth for discussing any sort of operational plans/attack plans/war plans (whatever semantics you wish to use) as Hegseth, et al, did when they chose to use the Signal chat. And now to read that the…
The number of users who downloaded Signal doubled in the US: after the scandal of the journalist invited to a group chat where the attacks on the Houthis were organized, the peak of 200,000 downloads reached in 24 hours
High government officials in the USA communicate about war plans with the help of Emojis. Emoji researcher Lilian Stolk explains why this is a particularly bad idea.
Letter: An obvious fix for Signal ‘attack plan’ mess
I don’t see why President Trump doesn’t just fire all the public officials who were on the infamous Signal chat. There are certainly plenty more candidates to be scraped off the bottom of the same barrel where these came from. If they just reach in and grab anyone by the ears, it seems unlikely that […]
Trompian insults rain on anyone who fails the American president. Jeffrey Goldberg, the editor of the American magazine "The Atlantic", thus attracted Donald Trump's lightnings after revealing that he had been mistakenly included in an ultra-confidential military security discussion group.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 37% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium































