Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.), the ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, on Monday railed against the Trump ...
A quiet messaging app. A powerful inner circle. And one accidental invite that triggered a storm. What followed inside the group chat stunned even veteran security insiders.
United States President Donald Trump's top officials talked about war plans for upcoming military strikes in Yemen in a group chat where the editor-in-chief of a local magazine has been inadvertently ...
In an article titled The Trump Administration Accidentally Texted Me Its War Plans, the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic ...
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was slammed online after she issued a cheeky response to the Trump administration's ...
Top national officials in the Trump administration, including Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth and National Security Advisor ...
In any other presidency, the story would rock the US: top national security advisers mistakenly adding a journalist to their group chat. But Washington is not what it used to be.
Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth, a retired Army National Guard lieutenant colonel, posted on X: Pete Hegseth, the most ...
The texts on the Signal encrypted messaging service revealed disagreements about whether to strike Houthis in Yemen.
The journalist added to a group chat that involving several of Donald Trump's most important cabinet members discussing war ...
Few journalists would presume, however, that the ideal leaker might, in fact, be the head of the U.S. Armed Services. That ...