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Tuesday, March 25, 2025

The Trump Administration Accidentally Texted Me Its War Plans

The Trump Administration Accidentally Texted Me Its War Plans

“The author, Jeffrey Goldberg, recounts receiving a Signal group chat invitation from someone posing as Michael Waltz, the National Security Advisor. The group, ostensibly a “Houthi PC small group,” included senior Trump administration officials discussing imminent military strikes in Yemen. Despite initial skepticism about the authenticity of the chat, Goldberg found himself privy to sensitive information, including the war plan, which ultimately unfolded as described.

U.S. national-security leaders included me in a group chat about upcoming military strikes in Yemen. I didn’t think it could be real. Then the bombs started falling.

A photo of Mike Waltz, JD Vance, and Pete Hegseth in the Oval Office
Andrew Harnik / Getty

Produced by ElevenLabs and News Over Audio (Noa) using AI narration. Listen to more stories on the Noa app.

The world found out shortly before 2 p.m. eastern time on March 15 that the United States was bombing Houthi targets across Yemen.

I, however, knew two hours before the first bombs exploded that the attack might be coming. The reason I knew this is that Pete Hegseth, the secretary of defense, had texted me the war plan at 11:44 a.m. The plan included precise information about weapons packages, targets, and timing.

This is going to require some explaining.


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The story technically begins shortly after the Hamas invasion of southern Israel, in October 2023. The Houthis—an Iran-backed terrorist organization whose motto is “God is great, death to America, death to Israel, curse on the Jews, victory to Islam”—soon launched attacks on Israel and on international shipping, creating havoc for global trade. Throughout 2024, the Biden administration was ineffective in countering these Houthi attacks; the incoming Trump administration promised a tougher response.

This is where Pete Hegseth and I come in.

On Tuesday, March 11, I received a connection request on Signal from a user identified as Michael Waltz. Signal is an open-source encrypted messaging service popular with journalists and others who seek more privacy than other text-messaging services are capable of delivering. I assumed that the Michael Waltz in question was President Donald Trump’s national security adviser. I did not assume, however, that the request was from the actual Michael Waltz. I have met him in the past, and though I didn’t find it particularly strange that he might be reaching out to me, I did think it somewhat unusual, given the Trump administration’s contentious relationship with journalists—and Trump’s periodic fixation on me specifically. It immediately crossed my mind that someone could be masquerading as Waltz in order to somehow entrap me. It is not at all uncommon these days for nefarious actors to try to induce journalists to share information that could be used against them.

I accepted the connection request, hoping that this was the actual national security adviser, and that he wanted to chat about Ukraine, or Iran, or some other important matter.

Two days later—Thursday—at 4:28 p.m., I received a notice that I was to be included in a Signal chat group. It was called the “Houthi PC small group.”

A message to the group, from “Michael Waltz,” read as follows: “Team – establishing a principles [sic] group for coordination on Houthis, particularly for over the next 72 hours. My deputy Alex Wong is pulling together a tiger team at deputies/agency Chief of Staff level following up from the meeting in the Sit Room this morning for action items and will be sending that out later this evening.”

The message continued, “Pls provide the best staff POC from your team for us to coordinate with over the next couple days and over the weekend. Thx.”

The term principals committee generally refers to a group of the senior-most national-security officials, including the secretaries of defense, state, and the treasury, as well as the director of the CIA. It should go without saying—but I’ll say it anyway—that I have never been invited to a White House principals-committee meeting, and that, in my many years of reporting on national-security matters, I had never heard of one being convened over a commercial messaging app.

One minute later, a person identified only as “MAR”—the secretary of state is Marco Antonio Rubio—wrote, “Mike Needham for State,” apparently designating the current counselor of the State Department as his representative. At that same moment, a Signal user identified as “JD Vance” wrote, “Andy baker for VP.” One minute after that, “TG” (presumably Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, or someone masquerading as her) wrote, “Joe Kent for DNI.” Nine minutes later, “Scott B”—apparently Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, or someone spoofing his identity, wrote, “Dan Katz for Treasury.” At 4:53 p.m., a user called “Pete Hegseth” wrote, “Dan Caldwell for DoD.” And at 6:34 p.m., “Brian” wrote “Brian McCormack for NSC.” One more person responded: “John Ratcliffe” wrote at 5:24 p.m. with the name of a CIA official to be included in the group. I am not publishing that name, because that person is an active intelligence officer.

The principals had apparently assembled. In all, 18 individuals were listed as members of this group, including various National Security Council officials; Steve Witkoff, President Trump’s Middle East and Ukraine negotiator; Susie Wiles, the White House chief of staff; and someone identified only as “S M,” which I took to stand for Stephen Miller. I appeared on my own screen only as “JG.”

That was the end of the Thursday text chain.

After receiving the Waltz text related to the “Houthi PC small group,” I consulted a number of colleagues. We discussed the possibility that these texts were part of a disinformation campaign, initiated by either a foreign intelligence service or, more likely, a media-gadfly organization, the sort of group that attempts to place journalists in embarrassing positions, and sometimes succeeds. I had very strong doubts that this text group was real, because I could not believe that the national-security leadership of the United States would communicate on Signal about imminent war plans. I also could not believe that the national security adviser to the president would be so reckless as to include the editor in chief of The Atlantic in such discussions with senior U.S. officials, up to and including the vice president.


The next day, things got even stranger.

At 8:05 a.m. on Friday, March 14, “Michael Waltz” texted the group: “Team, you should have a statement of conclusions with taskings per the Presidents guidance this morning in your high side inboxes.” (High side, in government parlance, refers to classified computer and communications systems.) “State and DOD, we developed suggested notification lists for regional Allies and partners. Joint Staff is sending this am a more specific sequence of events in the coming days and we will work w DOD to ensure COS, OVP and POTUS are briefed.”

At this point, a fascinating policy discussion commenced. The account labeled “JD Vance” responded at 8:16: “Team, I am out for the day doing an economic event in Michigan. But I think we are making a mistake.” (Vance was indeed in Michigan that day.) The Vance account goes on to state, “3 percent of US trade runs through the suez. 40 percent of European trade does. There is a real risk that the public doesn’t understand this or why it’s necessary. The strongest reason to do this is, as POTUS said, to send a message.”

The Vance account then goes on to make a noteworthy statement, considering that the vice president has not deviated publicly from Trump’s position on virtually any issue. “I am not sure the president is aware how inconsistent this is with his message on Europe right now. There’s a further risk that we see a moderate to severe spike in oil prices. I am willing to support the consensus of the team and keep these concerns to myself. But there is a strong argument for delaying this a month, doing the messaging work on why this matters, seeing where the economy is, etc.”

A person identified in Signal as “Joe Kent” (Trump’s nominee to run the National Counterterrorism Center is named Joe Kent) wrote at 8:22, “There is nothing time sensitive driving the time line. We’ll have the exact same options in a month.”

Then, at 8:26 a.m., a message landed in my Signal app from the user “John Ratcliffe.” The message contained information that might be interpreted as related to actual and current intelligence operations.

At 8:27, a message arrived from the “Pete Hegseth” account. “VP: I understand your concerns – and fully support you raising w/ POTUS. Important considerations, most of which are tough to know how they play out (economy, Ukraine peace, Gaza, etc). I think messaging is going to be tough no matter what – nobody knows who the Houthis are – which is why we would need to stay focused on: 1) Biden failed & 2) Iran funded.”

The Hegseth message goes on to state, “Waiting a few weeks or a month does not fundamentally change the calculus. 2 immediate risks on waiting: 1) this leaks, and we look indecisive; 2) Israel takes an action first – or Gaza cease fire falls apart – and we don’t get to start this on our own terms. We can manage both. We are prepared to execute, and if I had final go or no go vote, I believe we should. This [is] not about the Houthis. I see it as two things: 1) Restoring Freedom of Navigation, a core national interest; and 2) Reestablish deterrence, which Biden cratered. But, we can easily pause. And if we do, I will do all we can to enforce 100% OPSEC”—operations security. “I welcome other thoughts.”

A few minutes later, the “Michael Waltz” account posted a lengthy note about trade figures, and the limited capabilities of European navies. “Whether it’s now or several weeks from now, it will have to be the United States that reopens these shipping lanes. Per the president’s request we are working with DOD and State to determine how to compile the cost associated and levy them on the Europeans.”

The account identified as “JD Vance” addressed a message at 8:45 to @Pete Hegseth: “if you think we should do it let’s go. I just hate bailing Europe out again.” (The administration has argued that America’s European allies benefit economically from the U.S. Navy’s protection of international shipping lanes.)

The user identified as Hegseth responded three minutes later: “VP: I fully share your loathing of European free-loading. It’s PATHETIC. But Mike is correct, we are the only ones on the planet (on our side of the ledger) who can do this. Nobody else even close. Question is timing. I feel like now is as good a time as any, given POTUS directive to reopen shipping lanes. I think we should go; but POTUS still retains 24 hours of decision space.”

At this point, the previously silent “S M” joined the conversation. “As I heard it, the president was clear: green light, but we soon make clear to Egypt and Europe what we expect in return. We also need to figure out how to enforce such a requirement. EG, if Europe doesn’t remunerate, then what? If the US successfully restores freedom of navigation at great cost there needs to be some further economic gain extracted in return.”

That message from “S M”—presumably President Trump’s confidant Stephen Miller, the deputy White House chief of staff, or someone playing Stephen Miller—effectively shut down the conversation. The last text of the day came from “Pete Hegseth,” who wrote at 9:46 a.m., “Agree.”

After reading this chain, I recognized that this conversation possessed a high degree of verisimilitude. The texts, in their word choice and arguments, sounded as if they were written by the people who purportedly sent them, or by a particularly adept AI text generator. I was still concerned that this could be a disinformation operation, or a simulation of some sort. And I remained mystified that no one in the group seemed to have noticed my presence. But if it was a hoax, the quality of mimicry and the level of foreign-policy insight were impressive.


It was the next morning, Saturday, March 15, when this story became truly bizarre.

At 11:44 a.m., the account labeled “Pete Hegseth” posted in Signal a “TEAM UPDATE.” I will not quote from this update, or from certain other subsequent texts. The information contained in them, if they had been read by an adversary of the United States, could conceivably have been used to harm American military and intelligence personnel, particularly in the broader Middle East, Central Command’s area of responsibility. What I will say, in order to illustrate the shocking recklessness of this Signal conversation, is that the Hegseth post contained operational details of forthcoming strikes on Yemen, including information about targets, weapons the U.S. would be deploying, and attack sequencing.

The only person to reply to the update from Hegseth was the person identified as the vice president. “I will say a prayer for victory,” Vance wrote. (Two other users subsequently added prayer emoji.)

According to the lengthy Hegseth text, the first detonations in Yemen would be felt two hours hence, at 1:45 p.m. eastern time. So I waited in my car in a supermarket parking lot. If this Signal chat was real, I reasoned, Houthi targets would soon be bombed. At about 1:55, I checked X and searched Yemen. Explosions were then being heard across Sanaa, the capital city.

I went back to the Signal channel. At 1:48, “Michael Waltz” had provided the group an update. Again, I won’t quote from this text, except to note that he described the operation as an “amazing job.” A few minutes later, “John Ratcliffe” wrote, “A good start.” Not long after, Waltz responded with three emoji: a fist, an American flag, and fire. Others soon joined in, including “MAR,” who wrote, “Good Job Pete and your team!!,” and “Susie Wiles,” who texted, “Kudos to all – most particularly those in theater and CENTCOM! Really great. God bless.” “Steve Witkoff” responded with five emoji: two hands-praying, a flexed bicep, and two American flags. “TG” responded, “Great work and effects!” The after-action discussion included assessments of damage done, including the likely death of a specific individual. The Houthi-run Yemeni health ministry reported that at least 53 people were killed in the strikes, a number that has not been independently verified.

On Sunday, Waltz appeared on ABC’s This Week and contrasted the strikes with the Biden administration’s more hesitant approach. “These were not kind of pinprick, back-and-forth—what ultimately proved to be feckless attacks,” he said. “This was an overwhelming response that actually targeted multiple Houthi leaders and took them out.”

The Signal chat group, I concluded, was almost certainly real. Having come to this realization, one that seemed nearly impossible only hours before, I removed myself from the Signal group, understanding that this would trigger an automatic notification to the group’s creator, “Michael Waltz,” that I had left. No one in the chat had seemed to notice that I was there. And I received no subsequent questions about why I left—or, more to the point, who I was.

Earlier today, I emailed Waltz and sent him a message on his Signal account. I also wrote to Pete Hegseth, John Ratcliffe, Tulsi Gabbard, and other officials. In an email, I outlined some of my questions: Is the “Houthi PC small group” a genuine Signal thread? Did they know that I was included in this group? Was I (on the off chance) included on purpose? If not, who did they think I was? Did anyone realize who I was when I was added, or when I removed myself from the group? Do senior Trump-administration officials use Signal regularly for sensitive discussions? Do the officials believe that the use of such a channel could endanger American personnel?

Brian Hughes, the spokesman for the National Security Council, responded two hours later, confirming the veracity of the Signal group. “This appears to be an authentic message chain, and we are reviewing how an inadvertent number was added to the chain,” Hughes wrote. “The thread is a demonstration of the deep and thoughtful policy coordination between senior officials. The ongoing success of the Houthi operation demonstrates that there were no threats to troops or national security.”

William Martin, a spokesperson for Vance, said that despite the impression created by the texts, the vice president is fully aligned with the president. “The Vice President’s first priority is always making sure that the President’s advisers are adequately briefing him on the substance of their internal deliberations,” he said. “Vice President Vance unequivocally supports this administration’s foreign policy. The President and the Vice President have had subsequent conversations about this matter and are in complete agreement.”


I have never seen a breach quite like this. It is not uncommon for national-security officials to communicate on Signal. But the app is used primarily for meeting planning and other logistical matters—not for detailed and highly confidential discussions of a pending military action. And, of course, I’ve never heard of an instance in which a journalist has been invited to such a discussion.

Read: A conversation with Jeffrey Goldberg about his extraordinary scoop

Conceivably, Waltz, by coordinating a national-security-related action over Signal, may have violated several provisions of the Espionage Act, which governs the handling of “national defense” information, according to several national-security lawyers interviewed by my colleague Shane Harris for this story. Harris asked them to consider a hypothetical scenario in which a senior U.S. official creates a Signal thread for the express purpose of sharing information with Cabinet officials about an active military operation. He did not show them the actual Signal messages or tell them specifically what had occurred.

All of these lawyers said that a U.S. official should not establish a Signal thread in the first place. Information about an active operation would presumably fit the law’s definition of “national defense” information. The Signal app is not approved by the government for sharing classified information. The government has its own systems for that purpose. If officials want to discuss military activity, they should go into a specially designed space known as a sensitive compartmented information facility, or SCIF—most Cabinet-level national-security officials have one installed in their home—or communicate only on approved government equipment, the lawyers said. Normally, cellphones are not permitted inside a SCIF, which suggests that as these officials were sharing information about an active military operation, they could have been moving around in public. Had they lost their phones, or had they been stolen, the potential risk to national security would have been severe.

Hegseth, Ratcliffe, and other Cabinet-level officials presumably would have the authority to declassify information, and several of the national-security lawyers noted that the hypothetical officials on the Signal chain might claim that they had declassified the information they shared. But this argument rings hollow, they cautioned, because Signal is not an authorized venue for sharing information of such a sensitive nature, regardless of whether it has been stamped “top secret” or not.

There was another potential problem: Waltz set some of the messages in the Signal group to disappear after one week, and some after four. That raises questions about whether the officials may have violated federal records law: Text messages about official acts are considered records that should be preserved.

“Under the records laws applicable to the White House and federal agencies, all government employees are prohibited from using electronic-messaging applications such as Signal for official business, unless those messages are promptly forwarded or copied to an official government account,” Jason R. Baron, a professor at the University of Maryland and the former director of litigation at the National Archives and Records Administration, told Harris.

“Intentional violations of these requirements are a basis for disciplinary action. Additionally, agencies such as the Department of Defense restrict electronic messaging containing classified information to classified government networks and/or networks with government-approved encrypted features,” Baron said.

Several former U.S. officials told Harris and me that they had used Signal to share unclassified information and to discuss routine matters, particularly when traveling overseas without access to U.S. government systems. But they knew never to share classified or sensitive information on the app, because their phones could have been hacked by a foreign intelligence service, which would have been able to read the messages on the devices. It is worth noting that Donald Trump, as a candidate for president (and as president), repeatedly and vociferously demanded that Hillary Clinton be imprisoned for using a private email server for official business when she was secretary of state. (It is also worth noting that Trump was indicted in 2023 for mishandling classified documents, but the charges were dropped after his election.)

Waltz and the other Cabinet-level officials were already potentially violating government policy and the law simply by texting one another about the operation. But when Waltz added a journalist—presumably by mistake—to his principals committee, he created new security and legal issues. Now the group was transmitting information to someone not authorized to receive it. That is the classic definition of a leak, even if it was unintentional, and even if the recipient of the leak did not actually believe it was a leak until Yemen came under American attack.

All along, members of the Signal group were aware of the need for secrecy and operations security. In his text detailing aspects of the forthcoming attack on Houthi targets, Hegseth wrote to the group—which, at the time, included me—“We are currently clean on OPSEC.”

Shane Harris contributed reporting.“

Monday, March 24, 2025

Trump Live Updates: Hegseth's War Plan Texts, Tariffs and Federal Layoffs - The New York Times

Trump Administration Live Updates: Officials Included Journalist in Group Chat on Yemen Attack Plans in Extraordinary Breach

President Trump, from left, Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth in the Oval Office on Monday.Doug Mills/The New York Times

Where Things Stand

  • Security breach: The White House confirmed an extraordinary breach of security involving top government officials — including Vice President JD Vance and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth — who discussed plans for military strikes on Houthi rebels in Yemen in a group chat on a commercial messaging app that inadvertently included the top editor of The Atlantic. President Trump denied knowing about it. Read more ›

  • Deportation order: A federal judge kept in place his ruling barring the Trump administration from using a powerful wartime statute to deport Venezuelan migrants it deemed to be members of a violent street gang. The judge, James E. Boasberg, said migrants should have the opportunity to challenge accusations that they belong to the gang, Tren de Aragua, before being flown to a prison in El Salvador under the 1798 law, the Alien Enemies Act. Read more ›

  • Education Department suit: The American Federation of Teachers, the American Association of University Professors and a pair of public school districts in Massachusetts sued the Trump administration, seeking to block its attempts to dismantle the Education Department. They say Mr. Trump’s executive order last week to “facilitate the closure of the department” was an attempt to evade congressional authority. "



Trump Live Updates: Hegseth's War Plan Texts, Tariffs and Federal Layoffs - The New York Times

DNA From Beethoven's Hair Reveals Surprise Nearly 200 Years Later

Trump’s national security adviser added a journalist to text chat on highly sensitive Yemen strike plans

Trump’s national security adviser added a journalist to text chat on highly sensitive Yemen strike plans

“Former national security officials expressed shock and horror over revelations that top Trump administration officials, including the Vice President, Defense Secretary, and Secretary of State, discussed highly classified Yemen strike plans on a Signal group chat to which a reporter was accidentally added. The use of Signal for such sensitive information, which could have compromised operational security and endangered American lives, is considered a significant breach of protocol and a potential violation of federal laws. While the Trump administration acknowledged the authenticity of the messages, they have yet to provide an explanation for the security lapse.

In this March 13 photo, Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and National Security Advisor Mike Waltz listen to President Donald Trump, not pictured, in the Oval Office in Washington, DC.
CNN  — 

Former national security officials reacted with shock and horror to revelations in The Atlantic that top members of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet sent detailed operational plans and other likely highly classified information about US military strikes on Yemen to a group thread on a messaging app to which a reporter had accidentally been added.

The Trump administration acknowledged the messages, sent over the nongovernment encrypted chat app Signal, seem to be authentic without offering any explanation for why senior officials were discussing national defense information outside of approved classified government systems.

According to the Atlantic, national security adviser Mike Waltz earlier this month convened a text conversation with top US officials, including Vice President JD Vance, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, to discuss strikes on Houthi militants in Yemen who had been threatening international shipping in the Red Sea. Waltz, apparently accidentally, added Atlantic editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg to the chain.

The messages started with a discussion about when the action should be launched while Goldberg followed along. The strikes were carried out and the principals congratulated themselves on a job well done during a brief after-action discussion before Goldberg removed himself.

“Dear Sweet Baby Jesus,” said one former senior US official, reacting to the reporting.

“No,” another said, flatly, when asked if there was any analogous use of the app during the Biden administration.

Signal is an encrypted messaging app that is popular around the world, including among journalists and government officials. Biden administration officials also routinely used it to discuss logistical planning for meetings and at times to communicate with foreign counterparts.

But the use of Signal to discuss planning for military operations – among the most closely guarded secrets the United States has in part because of the potential impact on American service members’ lives – is a shocking risk to national security, former officials said. Multiple officials said they could recall no instance in which Signal was used to communicate classified information or discuss military operations. The top officials on the group chat have access to classified communications systems, and they have staff whose job it is to ensure communications of sensitive information remains secure.

“They broke every procedure known to man about protecting operational material before a military strike,” said a former senior intelligence official. “You have a total breakdown in security about a military operation.”

Trust in the security of Signal is bolstered by the fact that the app is open-source, meaning its code is available for independent experts to scrutinize for vulnerabilities. But like any messaging app with high-value targets, state-backed hackers have tried to find a way into Signal chats  leaving open the possibility that it may be vulnerable to prying eyes.

A report last month from Google-owned security firm Mandiant found that Russian-linked spies had tried to break into the Signal accounts of Ukrainian military personnel by posing as trusted Signal contacts.

A western intelligence official praised Signal as excellent for its encryption but said it “should never be used for classified or operational data, let alone policy discussions at a top government level.”

This kind of breach could “impact the level of trust between partners and allies,” the official said. “Now is definitely a good time for a lesson or two to their most senior officials on internal communications and how to do that in a proper way.”

A mistake that would normally prompt an investigation

Using a Signal chat to share highly classified information and accidentally including a reporter on the discussion also raises the possibility of violations of federal laws such as the Espionage Act, which makes it a crime to mishandle national defense information. It’s a law that was used in the Justice Department’s prosecution of Trump for hoarding classified documents in unauthorized locations such as a bathroom at Mar-a-Lago after leaving his first term.

Under normal circumstances, a mistake such as this would prompt an investigation by the FBI and the Justice Department’s national security division, according to former Justice Department officials.

That’s unlikely here, in part because some of the top Trump administration officials on the Signal chat would be the ones to ask for such an investigation.

The Justice Department typically relies on receiving a crime report from the originating agency of the national defense information – in this case the Defense Department. The senior officials in the discussion also have what’s known as original classification authority, meaning they can downgrade the classification status of the information.

But if lower-level government officials made a similar mistake, there’s little doubt there would be consequences, including possible loss of their security clearances, current and former officials say. Pentagon regulations specifically state that messaging apps, including Signal, “are NOT authorized to access, transmit, process non-public DoD information.”

“If anyone else did it, no question it would be investigated,” a former Justice official said.

Trump claimed not to know anything about what happened.

“I don’t know anything about it,” Trump told reporters on Monday when asked about Goldberg’s piece.

“I’m not a big fan of the Atlantic. It’s, to me, it’s a magazine that’s going out of business. I think it’s not much of a magazine. But I know nothing about it,” Trump said.

“It couldn’t have been very effective, because the attack was very effective. I can tell you, I don’t know anything about it. You’re telling me about it for the first time,” he added.

‘Somebody needs to get fired’

Over the course of the conversation, Hegseth sent “operational details of forthcoming strikes on Yemen, including information about targets, weapons the U.S. would be deploying, and attack sequencing,” according to The Atlantic. Elsewhere in the conversation, CIA Director John Ratcliffe sent “information that might be interpreted as related to actual and current intelligence operations.”

All would almost certainly be classified at the highest level, former officials said.

“Somebody needs to get fired,” former Defense Secretary and CIA Director Leon Panetta told CNN. “How the name of a journalist was added to that list – this is just a serious blunder,” he said, noting that if it had been someone other Goldberg, they “could reveal this information immediately to the Houthis in Yemen that they were about to be attacked and they in turn could have… attacked US facilities in the Red Sea, causing casualties of our troops.”

The US government has several systems in place to transfer and communicate classified information, including the Secret Internet Protocol Router (SIPR) network and the Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communications System (JWICS). Senior government officials, including the defense secretary, vice president, secretary of state, and others have access to these systems at virtually all times, including phones and laptops specifically configured for classified information.

A former senior US defense official said you cannot send secret information from one of these systems to an unclassified network. Hegseth - or someone working for him - would have had to do it manually. The official said this amounts to a blatant mishandling of classified information and an illegal transfer of the material from a classified system to an unclassified network.

Hegseth “somehow had to transfer it or copy it to get it onto Signal in the first place,” the official said. “You can’t forward a classified email to an unclassified system. You would either have to print it out or type it up while looking at both screens. So he had to have done it or somebody would’ve had to have done it for him that way.”

“This appears to be an authentic message chain, and we are reviewing how an inadvertent number was added to the chain. The thread is a demonstration of the deep and thoughtful policy coordination between senior officials. The ongoing success of the Houthi operation demonstrates that there were no threats to troops or national security,” Brian Hughes, National Security Council spokesperson, said in a statement to CNN.

Vance is quoted in the texts expressing concern about the strikes being a “mistake” and uncertainty that Trump was aware of how strikes on the Houthi rebels would be inconsistent with messaging on Europe.

“I am not sure the president is aware how inconsistent this is with his message on Europe right now. There’s a further risk that we see a moderate to severe spike in oil prices. I am willing to support the consensus of the team and keep these concerns to myself. But there is a strong argument for delaying this a month, doing the messaging work on why this matters, seeing where the economy is, etc.” Vance wrote in the Signal group chat, according to The Atlantic.

Trump administration officials appear to have reacted to that element of the reporting – not any suggestion that the use of Signal at all for this purpose raised national security concerns.

In a statement to CNN, William Martin, communications director to the vice president, said, “The Vice President’s first priority is always making sure that the President’s advisers are adequately briefing him on the substance of their internal deliberations. Vice President Vance unequivocally supports this administration’s foreign policy. The President and the Vice President have had subsequent conversations about this matter and are in complete agreement.”

Democrats on Capitol Hill instantly reacted with outrage, with at least one senior member signaling that he planned to press senior intelligence officials when they appear before Congress at a previously scheduled hearing before the House Intelligence Committee on national security threats on Wednesday. (The same officials, including Ratcliffe, will also appear before a Senate panel on Tuesday.)

“I am horrified by reports that our most senior national security officials, including the heads of multiple agencies, shared sensitive and almost certainly classified information via a commercial messaging application, including imminent war plans,” said Rep. Jim Himes, Connecticut, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, citing the “calamitous risks of transmitting classified information across unclassified systems.”

“If true, these actions are a brazen violation of laws and regulations that exist to protect national security, including the safety of Americans serving in harm’s way.”

Some of the participants in the text chain have in the past railed against the use of nongovernment platforms to conduct sensitive official business.

“Hillary Clinton put some of the highest, most sensitive intelligence information on her private server because maybe she thinks she’s above the law,” then-Florida Sen. Marco Rubio said at a town hall event in Iowa in 2016. “Or maybe she just wanted the convenience of being able to read this stuff on her Blackberry. This is unacceptable. This is a disqualifier.”

CNN’s Josh Campbell, Alex Marquardt and Morgan Rimmer contributed reporting.“

Sunday, March 23, 2025

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Opinion | Democrats Can Stop Trump and Save America - The New York Times

There Is a Way for Democrats to Stop Trump and Save America

A stack of blue baseball caps with American flags and the words Make America Great Again.
Justin Metz

By Ben Rhodes

"Mr. Rhodes is a contributing Opinion writer. He was a deputy national security adviser under President Barack Obama.

You are meant to feel powerless. That is what a strongman wants: to make you feel as if nothing can stop the takeover of your country.

The richest man in the world is destroying parts of the government. A former weekend Fox News host runs the Pentagon. There is the potential for corruption on a huge scale. The global order is being deconstructed. Allies are being humiliated and dictators embraced. Threats of territorial expansion are repeated until they are no longer funny or fanciful. Everything feels extreme. Yet there are no mass protests, no corporate or cultural pushback, no daylight between Republicans and only a faint pulse from the Democrats.

That paralysis can be chalked up to the fact that Americans elected Donald Trump despite knowing the risks he posed. This has prompted a public soul-searching among Democrats. But their tactics only seem to highlight their own powerlessness: whether holding press conferences in front of shuttered federal agencies, displaying paddles marked “FALSE” and “MUSK STEALS” when Mr. Trump addressed Congress or capitulating during a recent fight over funding the government. And while the strategies being debated — from strategic retreat to new approaches to communications to various policy ideas — have merits, they fall short of arresting the country’s spiral into autocracy and oligarchy.

The hard truth is that the Democratic Party, in its current form, cannot lead the opposition that is required. Faced with a relentless onslaught from Mr. Trump, the party has lost touch with an electorate that sees it as emblematic of what they hate about politics, a polarized culture, overseas commitments and an economy where it doesn’t feel as if being middle class is enough to get by.

The party has a credibility gap rooted in its initial willingness to support Joe Biden’s decision to run for re-election while warning that the stakes were existential. If that was the case, then why ignore the overwhelming majorities of Americans who believed that he was too old to run and choose loyalty to a Washington stalwart over the country’s appetite for drastic change?

We are living through a reckoning with the cost of defending the status quo.

Yet there is opportunity in this drift: to reimagine what the party stands for, how it will fight its way back and who will lead it. Over the last few weeks, I’ve spoken to some members of the newer generation of Democrats in Congress wrestling with these questions, to the up-and-coming governor of Maryland and to activists who have battled authoritarianism in other countries. Their ideas leave me hopeful that there is a path for America’s political opposition if it casts off a top-down Washington strategy, stale talking points about democracy and the middle class and its own circular firing squads.

“If this is a unique, ahistorical challenge to American order and American traditions,” said Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut, “you need to respond with exceptional tactics and messaging.” Mr. Murphy has kept up a frenetic pace in the media, narrating the extremity of Mr. Trump’s actions in real time. That heightened awareness mixed with unusual action is a necessary response to extreme circumstances.

Being cynical or apathetic will change nothing. Mr. Trump’s political opponents cannot wait for the MAGA movement to collapse under the weight of its own contradictions or a recession. Biding your time works only if the normal rules of political gravity still apply, and they don’t — not anymore.

The history of other countries captured by autocratic populist nationalism suggests that often it is a financial crisis, a war or some other major event that leads to the quashing of dissent. That may be when America joins the ranks of countries, like Vladimir Putin’s Russia, that turned to imperial conquest. If that sounds alarmist, consider that the relatively normal first Trump administration ended with a deadly riot amid a pandemic.

“The idea that we should sit back and let them collapse is ridiculous,” Mr. Murphy told me. “They are going to define their project as something legitimate if we don’t define them as something corrupt.”

A growing number of Democrats are right about the need for a populism focused on corruption: Mr. Trump and his billionaire cabal are redistributing wealth and power in ways that will harm most Americans. The administration offers evidence of this every day.

But this critique is only a starting point. Recently, the most promising signs have been seen in the actions of ordinary people protesting at Republican town halls and the enormous crowds that turned out in several states to see Bernie Sanders rail against oligarchy. Something is stirring. To succeed, the opposition must become a movement out in the country rather than a party trying to discover a formula in Washington.

***

Ece Temulkuram lost her country. She was fired from her job at the Turkish newspaper Haberturk in 2012 after she wrote columns criticizing the government of President Recip Tayyip Erdogan. She left Turkey and watched it descend into autocracy; every crisis offered a pretext for power grabs against a “deep state,” opponents were harassed, the leader exalted, corruption normalized.

When I asked her about Mr. Trump’s return to power, she said that America was in the “shame stage” of losing democracy. Not only is Mr. Trump shameless, but his opposition feels a paralyzing shame watching a once-unthinkable reality take hold.

“As a citizen, you feel like this country was a paper tiger,” she told me. “All those institutions that we believed would stop this sense of insanity didn’t even exist. There is shame that comes from the defeat of a system that you’ve been living in.”

The challenge, for the opposition, is shaking off that paralysis.

Nika Kovac, a 31-year-old activist from Slovenia, has led successful movements against authoritarian politics in Europe. A few years ago, she helped transition a grass-roots movement to protect clean water into a coalition that mobilized a giant get-out-the-vote effort to oust a Trumpian right-wing prime minister.

“When you want to fight them,” she said, “you have to build huge coalitions around one particular topic, when they are attacking something that really matters to people.” Looking at the United States, she volunteered health care as a place to start.

The enormous cuts proposed for Medicaid and services for veterans are deadly serious for Americans, including many who voted for Mr. Trump or didn’t vote at all. Make that the basis for a movement.

Spotlight harms that will come to everyday people, not bureaucracies or the prerogatives of a loathed institution like Congress. Protest at shuttered facilities in communities, not agencies in the capital. Make noise however you can. Amplify the voices of people out in the country. Hold town halls where Republicans are afraid to. Boycott the businesses of specific billionaires, like Elon Musk. File lawsuits. Sign petitions. Organize communities, including deep red ones. Support people who get arrested. Create a culture around the movement.

Of course, health care is not the only issue to build on: Pushback could come on income inequality, housing, education, Social Security and free speech, to name a few. The broader idea is to create a series of issue-based movements that generate momentum and converge in elections this year and next.

This approach sidesteps purity tests and the pursuit of an agreed-upon national message that has shrunk the Democratic Party. “There’s a lot of folks who are nervous about getting into our tent,” Mr. Murphy said, “because they think they’ll use the wrong words, or they’ll get canceled, or if they’re with us on 11 out of 12 issues we don’t want them.” It is easier to invite someone into a movement if all you both must agree on is one issue, not a dozen.

This approach will not stop all the harm that Mr. Trump is doing or the danger he poses. But if you can get a win on one issue, it punctures the sense of invincibility and inevitability that a strongman relies on.

“The thing that is making him powerful now is he’s thinking that nothing can stop him,” Ms. Kovac said. “You need one victory.” When you get that win, people start to feel that they still have power because of what they did together. The actions of self-interested men like Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos matter less. Self-censorship gives way to strength in numbers. The grip of apathy and cynicism loosens. The weight of shame is lifted by collective action. This gives Democrats an opportunity to make that framing about corruption tangible.

***

Until the first Trump election, Andy Kim, the 42-year-old newly elected senator from New Jersey, had never run for anything. In 2017, his congressman voted to repeal Obamacare, and Mr. Kim decided to run against him, motivated by the grass-roots movement that had emerged to protect health care. That vote against Obamacare gave Mr. Kim a way to connect the dots for voters. When we spoke, he said he didn’t just attack his opponent for that one vote; he’d often ask voters, “Whyis he doing it? Because he was taking hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from special interests.”

That kind of money in politics is what people hate because it affects their lives. Mr. Kim was credible because he wasn’t a politician. And he didn’t just take on Republicans. In 2023, when Senator Robert Menendez, a Democrat, was charged for taking bribes of gold bars to do favors for Egypt’s dictator, Mr. Kim announced that he would challenge him for the party’s nomination. The party machine later threw its weight behind Tammy Murphy, the wife of the governor and a big Democratic Party donor. Running a guerrilla campaign, Mr. Kim not only won the primary; he also sued to change a ballot system that favored Democratic machine politicians and went on to win the general election.

New Jersey voters know Mr. Kim will fight for them because he was willing to fight his own party. Sound familiar? Mr. Trump’s hostile takeover, and occasional humiliation, of the Republican Party proved to voters that he was unafraid to take on a corrupt establishment that looked out for itself.

While Democrats are right to cast themselves as a party that opposes corruption and concentrated wealth, they are often deferential to a donor class that includes the same oligarchy they rail against, special interests with powerful lobbyists and aging politicians standing in the way of generational change.

How are you going to reform how politics works in this country if you won’t reform how it works inside your own party?

You can’t build movements without breaking things. That entails risk. You will lose some donors, antagonize some interest groups and even alienate some voters.

But nothing could be riskier than our current course. This country is being destroyed from within, and what are we talking about? We don’t need a detailed new policy agenda from Democrats that they can’t implement now and that most people will never read. We don’t need politicians fanning out as awkward guests on podcasts about sports or culture or conspiracy theories.

We need authenticity. We need to know that the party is willing to fight for the things that matter most to people in this country and is unafraid to take on the special interests that are destroying it. Don’t just tell us what policy or program you are for; tell us why you are for it. Show leadership by letting a new generation ascend. Look for people like Andy Kim who are showing courage and creativity in communities. Amplify those voices so there is a resistance that doesn’t feel manufactured.

For all his flaws, Mr. Trump took control of American politics because he was an authentic outsider who led a movement. He saw people who were ignored by most politicians, and he transformed the Republican Party in their image. At a time when capitalism and technology have bred a crisis of belonging in this country, MAGA offers people community and purpose.

Gov. Wes Moore of Maryland is among the Democratic Party’s most charismatic younger politicians. He identifies something essential about movement building. The MAGA faithful “see a movement which did not just see them, but needed them,” he told me. “There’s something powerful about that, when you see that you are a useful part of the solution.”

I believe that people across the country want to be asked to join an opposition where they can be part of the solution. I believe that most Americans don’t want to rip health care away from veterans, defund schools or deregulate cryptocurrencies so that billionaires can scam ordinary people without consequence. I believe that most Americans do not want to destroy the economy through stupid trade wars or go in search of minerals in Canada or Greenland to suit the boundless ego of our president. I believe that most Americans are sick of culture wars that force us to care about the political views of athletes, the restroom policies of some school on the other side of the country or the programming decisions at the Kennedy Center. I believe that most Americans would rather raise their kids in a society that values empathy and not cruelty.

If you don’t like what is happening to this country, you don’t need to wait for someone to come along and save it: You need each other. That should be the message that Democrats embrace, because most Americans don’t want to go where Donald Trump and Elon Musk are leading us.

The opposite of shame is pride. Let’s be proud of fighting back, of caring about one another, of committing to rebuild what is being destroyed. Because America is not just about the powerful becoming more powerful; at its best, it is about the underdog beating the longest of odds.

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section SR, Page 6 of the New York edition with the headline: There Is a Way for Democrats To Stop Trump and Save America."

Opinion | Democrats Can Stop Trump and Save America - The New York Times