Trump and his team have continued to insist that classified information was not shared in the signal group chat that included the editor in chief of the atlantic, jeffrey goldberg. Atlantic publishes attack plan details after trump, top officials deny classified information was shared in group chat Goldberg said he got an unsolicited invitation on the signal messaging platform on 11 march by an account named michael waltz, and was then added to the group chat about yemen two days later. A reality check about the signal chat leak a national security insider explains what counts as a war plan and why top officials don't even need signal. The white house continued to downplay the seriousness of the incident, parsing semantics and attacking the journalist who was inadvertently added to the chat. Us secretary of defense pete hegseth and vice president jd vance discussed a military strike on yemen in a signal group — and a journalist said he was accidentally included in the chat.
This is why democrats and security experts are alarmed. The leak of classified information by president donald trump's national security team on an unsecured chat app may have broken three basic rules, according to analysts
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