WASHINGTON (AP) – The Atlantic released an entire signal chat Wednesday between senior Trump national security officials, indicating that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth provided the exact period on the fighter plane, with men and women attacking all attacks in oferand, representing the United States before men and women attacking Yemen’s oferand, this month.
The disclosure comes two days later, during which most cabinet members of Trump’s senior cabinet members’ intelligence and defense agencies worked hard to explain how the details said by current and former U.S. officials were classified in uncategorized signal chats, including Atlantic chief editors including Atlantic Geoffrey Goldberg, Geoffrey Goldberg, Geoffrey Goldberg, Geoffrey Goldberg, Geoffrey Goldberg,
Hegseth declined to say whether he had posted confidential information to the signal. He is traveling in the Indo-Pacific and so far he has just ridiculed the issue, saying he has not revealed a “war plan.” National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe told Senate Intelligence Committee members Tuesday to determine whether the information he posted was classified.
Revealed that its specificity is jaw-dropping, including very closely held types of information to protect the operational security of military strikes.
In group chat, Hegseth posted:
“1215ET: F-18S Launch (First Strike Kit)”
“1345:’Triggered based’ F-18 First Strike Window Begins (Target Terrorist is @He is known to the location, so should be on time – Strike Drone Launch (MQ-9S)”
“1410: More F-18 Launches (Second Strike Package)”
“1415: Strike drone on target (this is the first bomb that will certainly drop, pending ‘based’ triggered’ target)”
“The second strike of 1536 F-18 begins – and the first sea battle axe was launched.”
“(Each schedule) has more to follow”
“We are currently very clean on OPSEC”, that is, operational safety.
“Propose to our warriors.”
Goldberg said he asked the White House if it was against publishing, and the White House replied that he did not want him not to publish.
Tara Copp, Associated Press