A remarkable failure by US federal safety director Mike Waltz apparently led to The Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg being mistakenly added to a top-level Signal talk discussing American attacks in Yemen.
According to three unknown sources quoted by The Guardian, the violation stemmed from a mobile phone mix-up traced back to the 2024 plan, a disaster that US President Donald Trump considered firing Waltz over.
The internal White House investigation found that Goldberg’s quantity was saved on Waltz’s mobile under a totally different email, Brian Hughes, now director for the National Security Council.
The dilemma began when Hughes, in October 2024, forwarded Goldberg’s important message about Trump’s attitude on wounded US troops to Waltz. The information included Goldberg’s personal wall, full with his phone number.
Waltz didn’t call Goldberg, but somehow his quantity was saved in the wrong phone cards according to an iPhone’s touch advice algorithm, reported The Guardian.
The mistake went unnoticed until March 13, when Waltz created a Signal group talk called” Houthi PC little group” to integrate military strategies. Intending to add Hughes, Waltz inadvertently added Goldberg.
The group included 18 senior officials, among them Vice President JD Vance, defense secretary Pete Hegseth, secretary of state Marco Rubio and others.
Goldberg’s presence was only discovered after sensitive operational messages had already circulated.
Despite the gravity of the error, Trump reportedly chose not to fire Waltz, more irritated by the fact that he had Goldberg’s number at all, given Trump’s long-standing contempt for The Atlantic, than by the security lapse itself. He was also reassured by the internal review, which showed no classified data had been shared.
Goldberg declined to offer details but told The Guardian,” I’m not going to comment on my relationship with Mike Waltz beyond saying I do know him and have spoken to him”.
In public remarks, Waltz said he had “never met, don’t know, never communicated with” Goldberg. On Fox News, he later admitted,” We made a mistake. We’re moving forward”, taking “full responsibility” for the breach and suggesting the contact may have been” sucked in” through iPhone syncing.
Trump, addressing the incident during a Newsmax interview, downplayed its impact. ” It wasn’t classified, as I understand it”, he said. ” The attack was a tremendous success … We feel very comfortable”. He also signalled a retreat from using Signal, saying,” We won’t be using it very much”, advocating instead for in-person meetings with” solid lead walls and a lead ceiling and lead floor”.
The episode prompted a forensic review by the White House IT office and drew sympathy from within Trump’s circle, who noted Signal had been authorised for inter-agency communication due to the lack of a secure alternative. Even the Biden administration had failed to implement a replacement, reported The Guardian citing sources.
Trending
- Top Harris staffer’s secret plan to replace Biden revealed in new book: Report
- If Only Republicans Cared As Much About Cutting Federal Spending As They Do Trump’s Tariffs
- Are ‘Neutral’ Chinese Soldiers Fighting a War for Russia?
- Tuesday, Booze Day! Trump Stacks Wins as Commies Weep Into Their Soy Lattes
- Ending Biden’s Most Outrageous Violations of Immigration Law
- Supreme Court blocks order to rehire thousands of Fed workers fired under Trump admin
- Trump will be incredibly gracious if China reaches out but…: White House on 104% tariff
- White House tight-lipped on External Revenue Service on eve of tariff implementation