United States President Donald Trump has downplayed a recent Signal chat leak as a “witch hunt” and said, without evidence, ...
The White House continued to downplay the seriousness of the incident, parsing semantics and attacking the journalist who was ...
Here, five takeaways from a week when the Trump administration has had to deal with the Signal chat leak, announced new ...
President Trump defended Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who reportedly shared sensitive logistical details about a strike on ...
The fallout continues over a security breach in which high-ranking members of the Trump administration accidentally shared ...
Top officials from the Trump administration faced criticism — and calls to resign — after a journalist gained access to a ...
Top Trump officials are facing a firestorm after using the commercially available app Signal to discuss a U.S. military ...
The Signal chat about U.S. plans for a strike against Houthi militants revealed how the Trump administration is ... big test for how officials handle the fallout. WSJ’s Alex Ward reports.
The White House is criticizing the news media and playing down the security risk of a group chat that included a journalist from the Atlantic.
President Trump swiftly navigated his response to bombshell reports of Cabinet members conversing about the United States’ strikes on Houthi targets in Yemen via Signal, an online messaging ...
President Trump told reporters he does not believe national security adviser Mike Waltz should apologize for inadvertently ...
Senators lined up to question Trump's top intelligence officials Tuesday over their discussion of highly sensitive war plans on a commercial messaging chat that also included a journalist.