The Western Journal

White House Quickly Responds to The Atlantic’s Full Signal Chat Release: ‘Just Another Hoax

The article discusses a controversial incident involving the Trump administration, where a private chat on the Signal messaging app inadvertently included the private phone number of The Atlantic’s editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg. This chat reportedly discussed potential military actions against the Houthis in Yemen and involved senior cabinet members, including the Secretary of Defense and National Security Advisor.

While goldberg characterized the event as a serious security breach, the White House dismissed it as an overblown public relations issue, asserting that no classified war plans were leaked. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt and Trump himself downplayed the significance of the incident, highlighting that only an unknown staffer mistakenly added Goldberg to the chat and insisting that the texts did not contain actionable military details.

In response to Goldberg’s claims, the White House officials expressed skepticism about his journalistic integrity and criticized his portrayal of the situation. The atlantic subsequently released more information from the chat to clarify the nature of the discussions, leading to further rebuttals from Trump’s team, who continued to assert that no sensitive information was compromised.


Was it actually a serious, national security breach that put lives at risk?

Or was it more of a disastrous public relations blunder that’s being overblown for clicks and views?

When it comes to the highly criticized text chain snafu that has captured national attention this week, the White House firmly believes it’s the latter — even as more information comes to light regarding the incident.

To wit, on Monday, The Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg published a piece straightforwardly titled, “The Trump Administration Accidentally Texted Me Its War Plans.”

In it, Goldberg made the explosive claims that his private phone number was somehow added to a private chat in the Signal messaging app discussing possible military strikes against Houthis in Yemen, that included top Trump cabinet members, such as Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Vice President J.D. Vance, and National Security Advisor Mike Waltz.

For obvious reasons, this is not the best look for the Trump administration, but it also doesn’t quite appear to be the administration-killing debacle that some — like The Atlantic — are making it out to be.

Or, at least, that’s the way it was framed by Team Trump when they were inevitably asked about it.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt set the facts straight that no actual “war plans” had been divulged, while Trump explained that he thought it was much ado about nothing and that they’ve already pinpointed the issue. (Trump confirmed that an unknown staffer of Waltz accidentally added Goldberg.)

Both Leavitt and Trump took shots at Goldberg’s integrity (“Jeffrey Goldberg is well-known for his sensationalist spin”) during their respective responses — perhaps prompting the editor to feel compelled to release the entire chat he was privy to.

“As a general rule, we do not publish information about military operations if that information could possibly jeopardize the lives of U.S. personnel,” this new Atlantic piece claimed. “That is why we chose to characterize the nature of the information being d, not specific details about the attacks.”

But since Trump and his team have insisted that no classified information was in those texts, Goldberg felt compelled to release the information, seemingly to prove some sort of point.

Only, the White House isn’t standing for it.

Various top White House representatives, including Leavitt, Waltz, and Vance, all responded to this latest Atlantic “bombshell” with a mixture of derision, mockery and annoyance.

Leavitt pointed out the immediate discrepancy with The Atlantic’s narrative, ping-ponging from “war plans” to “attack plans.”

Waltz hammered home what wasn’t in those text messages.

Vance — whom The Atlantic revealed said “a prayer for victory” in the text chain — also chimed in.

“It’s very clear Goldberg oversold what he had,” Vance posted. “But one thing in particular really stands out.

“Remember when he was attacking [CIA director John] Ratcliffe for blowing the cover for a CIA agent? Turns out Ratcliffe was simply naming his chief of staff.”




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