White House dismisses 'hoax' Atlantic magazine report, denies leak of war plans
- The Atlantic published an article about leaked Signal messages involving top U.S. Officials discussing military strikes in Yemen, leading to criticism of the Trump administration.
- Trump administration officials, including White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, claimed that the Atlantic's article did not contain classified material.
- National security advisor Mike Waltz accepted full responsibility for the incident, which involved accidentally including an Atlantic journalist in the Signal group chat.
- CIA Director John Ratcliffe testified that no classified materials were shared, and the NSA emphasized the risks of using Signal for sensitive information.
70 Articles
70 Articles


‘Hoax-Peddlers’: Pentagon Spokesman Attacks Atlantic After More Signal Chat Messages Released
By Jacob Adams, The Daily Signal | March 26, 2025 On heels of the testimony of several leaders of the U.S. intelligence agencies, The Atlantic released additional screenshots from the Signal group chat that was composed of high-ranking Trump administration national security officials and accidentally also included The Atlantic’s Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey Goldberg. “It’s no surprise hoax-peddlers at the Atlantic have already abandoned their ‘war pl…
Signal-Gate has legs enough for Trump to talk about women's 'Goodies-bags' as distraction
The Krasnov regime is trying its darndest to distract from SignalGate Calling something that definitely isn’t a hoax a hoax is helpful because it shows none of the other stuff they called a hoax was a hoax either. The Atlantic conceded no such thing....


WH Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt’s Latest Attempt To Spin Trump Admin’s Fiasco Backfires Spectacularly
The scandal revealed earlier this week, in which The Atlantic revealed that several Trump cabinet members discussed attack plans on the app Signal and accidentally added a journalist to that chat, has spiraled the way the most significant presidential scandals often do. On Wednesday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt tried to stop the bleeding, and the results were less than successful. In a White House briefing, Leavitt ludicrously c…
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