The Atlantic releases the entire Signal chat showing Hegseth’s detailed attack plans against Houthis
- The Atlantic published an unredacted Signal chat from the Trump administration that included plans for U.S. Military strikes, mistakenly shared with a journalist.
- Goldberg stated that the texts contained information that 'could conceivably have been used to harm American military and intelligence personnel.'
- The published chat revealed specific military details about the strike, including timing and target locations, which are usually kept secret for operational security.
- Hegseth shared detailed information about the military strike timing and resources used in the group chat.
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449 Articles

‘Obviously classified’: Experts say Hegseth chat leaks invited danger
Former U.S. defense officials said the details Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth texted on a non-government group chat ahead of U.S. airstrikes in Yemen earlier this month represent a serious breach of department policies and could have placed American troops at higher risk.But White House officials insist that senior leaders did nothing wrong and blasted critics for alleged exaggerations and fear-mongering instead of celebrating a successful milit…

‘The first bombs will definitely drop’: Full text of US military group chat scandal revealed
The Atlantic released the operational details sent by Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth to the breached Signal group after the Trump administration insisted the information wasn’t classified.
The Atlantic releases the entire Signal chat showing Hegseth’s attack plans against Houthis
The Atlantic released the entire Signal chat among Trump senior national security officials Wednesday, showing that Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth provided the exact times of warplane launches, strike packages and targets.
The Atlantic releases entire Signal chat that included defense secretary’s attack plans against Houthis
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth provided the exact times of war plane launches, strike packages and targets — before the men and women flying those attacks over Yemen were airborne.
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