President Trump's national security adviser has denied knowing the editor of The Atlantic after accidentally adding him to a sensitive group chat.
The Trump administration tried to paint the Atlantic editor as a liar, so he felt compelled to prove them wrong -- and he had the receipts.
Mr. Goldberg, who was included on a private text thread discussing war plans, was a longtime national security reporter who became editor of The Atlantic in 2016.
The Atlantic's editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, has released more messages from the Signal chat group for senior Trump administration officials that he was accidentally added to, in which discussions about an upcoming strike on the Houthis took place.
An inadvertent invitation to a group chat thrust The Atlantic's editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg into the center of an explosive national security breach that's put the White House on the defensive. Why it matters: Goldberg's decision to disclose the discussion of planned strikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen and publish the group chat's contents has embroiled top Trump officials in scandal and exposed them to potential legal jeopardy.
Atlantic editor Jeffrey Goldberg defended his decision Wednesday to publish the full transcript of messages from a secret government group chat he was added to, as White House officials struggle to downplay the catastrophic leak.
Journalist Jeffrey Goldberg is accusing Mike Waltz of lying about talking with him — ridiculing on Sunday the claim that his phone number was mysteriously “sucked into” the national security adviser’s cellphone before being included in a Signal group chat about Yemen airstrikes.
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CNN’s Jake Tapper offered a short but scathing assessment on Monday amid the White House’s efforts to sweep the war group chat fiasco under the rug. Tapper interviewed The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg,
Screenshots shared by Goldberg show Waltz added the journalist to the Signal chat about an upcoming attack on the Houthi rebels in Yemen, but Waltz has repeatedly said he had neve
Is Jeffrey Goldberg legally allowed to release the Signal messages he received? - Goldberg published vague information about the attacks in Yemen more than a week after they occurred
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Irish Star on MSNMichael Waltz suggests Jeffrey Goldberg may have ‘deliberately’ hacked into Signal chatNational security advisor, Michael Waltz, has reportedly suggested that Jeffrey Goldberg, the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, hacked his way into the Signal group chat, which detailed plans to bomb the country and Houthi rebels.
Hours after this hearing, “PBS News Hour” put on Jeffrey Goldberg for almost seven unchallenged minutes to toot his own horn for having the fortune of Team Trump messing up and including him in a chat on the private encrypted app Signal as officials discussed bombing the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen.