Pentagon, Signal chat and Inspector general
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The inspector general review follows revelations that top Trump officials used the unclassified platform Signal to coordinate military strikes in Yemen.
From The Washington Post
President Donald Trump's administration is facing a scandal over the accidental leak of a group chat by senior security officials on the strikes, which targeted Yemen's Huthi rebels.
From Wyoming News
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National security advisor Mike Waltz and his office have repeatedly come under fire since news broke on the Signal chat leak with a journalist.
A judge has ordered the Trump administration to preserve the contents of the Signal app chat in which top officials discussed Yemen military strikes earlier this month.
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's office announced on Thursday it was opening a probe into Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's use of an unclassified commercial texting application to coordinate on the highly sensitive March 15 launch of U.
A federal judge on Thursday ordered key Trump administration agencies to preserve messages sent on Signal between March 11 to March 15.
The fallout continues over a security breach in which high-ranking members of the Trump administration accidentally shared plans about a forthcoming U.S. military attack on Yemen with the top editor of the Atlantic magazine on the Signal messaging app.
The nonprofit American Oversight sued Trump Cabinet members to force them to preserve Signal messages that could otherwise be automatically deleted.
Defence chief Pete Hegseth and others coordinated March 15 US military strikes in messaging app conversation that included journalist The Pentagon's Inspector General's office said on Thursday it was opening an investigation into US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth's use of an unclassified commercial texting app to coordinate on the highly sensitive
James E. Boasberg, the chief judge of the US District Court in D.C., ordered the agencies relevant to the case “to preserve all Signal communications between March 11 and March 15.”
The group discussed potential U.S. military strikes on Iran-backed Houthi targets in Yemen ... who is now Trump's secretary of state and was in the Signal chat, repeatedly attacked Clinton ...
President Donald Trump's approval rating fell to 43%, the lowest since his return to office, as Americans soured on his tariff moves and his administration's handling of information about a military strike in Yemen,