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 officials and, of course, Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg, who published his account of the messages. A spokesperson for the National Security Council has confirmed that the message thread "appears to be authentic," and none of the reported participants has denied their appearance in the "Houthi PC small group" chat.
Main Idea: A Signal group chat tied to a planned U.S. strike in Yemen included top Trump officials, and the White House is now facing questions about how the sensitive discussion was handled.
Key Points:
The Signal leak could weaken trust in national security leaders like Waltz, Hegseth, and Gabbard, and it may expose taxpayers and households to higher risk from a mismanaged crisis.
Public scrutiny and an inspector general review could push better safeguards for government communications and help prevent future leaks.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
National security adviser who created the Signal chat group and is a central subject of the article.
Defense secretary who reportedly sent the attack timing and weapons details, making him a primary focus.
The committee leaders asked it to investigate the incident, giving it an active role in the story.
CIA director whose participation in the chat and testimony about it are central to the story.
U.S. special envoy mentioned as a chat participant and part of the administration group under scrutiny.
Director of national intelligence whose apparent presence in the chat and congressional testimony are highlighted.
Vice president whose messages and stated concerns in the chat are a major focus.
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Sign in to commentMentioned for his comments defending Michael Waltz and Pete Hegseth, but not the main focus of the article.
Its top Republican and Democrat requested an investigation, making it a relevant oversight body.
White House chief of staff named as a chat contact, but with no substantive messages attributed to her.