Pentagon, Pete Hegseth and Signal
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Hegseth has maintained he did not share “war plans” in the group chat. However, the Atlantic published the group chat’s contents, which revealed the defense secretary spoke about when the attacks wou...
From Washington Examiner
The Pentagon’s inspector general said Thursday it had launched a review into Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s sharing of military plans ahead of U.S. strikes on Yemen in a Signal chat group.
From Wall Street Journal
The lawmakers have voiced concern about whether Hegseth and other top national security officials shared classified information on a commercially available encrypted messaging app as they discussed a...
From Boise State Public Radio
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Attorney General Pam Bondi seemed to foreclose the possibility of a Justice Department investigation into officials’ use of Signal to discuss attacks on Yemen.
The White House is saying the case of the Signal group chat is 'closed' as more lawmakers are calling for an investigation. The Morning Joe panel discusses.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s use of the Signal group chat with other national security officials to discuss plans for airstrikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen will be investigated, the Pentagon’s acting inspector general announced Thursday.
Oklahoma Senator James Lankford is the latest senior Republican to endorse an independent probe into how President Donald Trump 's national security officials ended up discussing military plans with a journalist on the messaging app Signal.
New York Times' White House correspondent Peter Baker on 'Washington Week' told host Jeffrey Goldberg that there should be a "real investigation" into the Signal chat controversy, even if nothing wrong was done.