Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth pulled the airstrike information he posted into Signal chats with his wife, brother and dozens of others from a secure communications channel from U.S. Central Command.
1 hour agoWhere to watch ABC programming pre-empted by KSAT’s Fiesta 2025 coverageSpring into savings for your home and lifestyle with these Insider DealsEnjoy a lifetime of content about the world’s royals, past and present, for $200Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth speaks on the South Lawn of the White House before President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump participate in the White House Easter Egg Roll Monday, April 21, 2025, in Washington.
– Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth pulled the airstrike information he posted into Signal chats with his wife, brother and dozens of others from a secure communications channel used by U.S. Central Command, raising new questions as to whether the embattled Pentagon head leaked classified information over an open, unsecured network. NBC News first reported that the launch times and bomb drop times of U.S. warplanes that were about to strike Houthi targets in Yemen — details that multiple officials have said is highly classified — were taken from secure U.S. Central Command communications. A person familiar with the second chat confirmed that to The Associated Press.The information posted in the second chat was identical to the sensitive operations details shared in the first chat, which included members of President Donald Trump's National Security Council, the person said.It's the second chat involving Hegseth to be called into question This is the second chat group where Hegseth posted the Yemen airstrike information. The first leaked Signal chat accidentally included the editor of The Atlantic and has caused an inspector general investigation in the Defense Department. Hegseth has not directly acknowledged that he set up the second chat, which had more than a dozen people on it, including his wife, his lawyer and his brother Phil Hegseth, who was hired as a senior liaison to the Pentagon for the Department of Homeland Security. Instead, the secretary blamed the disclosure of the second Signal chat on leaks from disgruntled former staff. Hegseth has aggressively denied that the information he posted was classified. Regardless of that, Signal is a commercially available app that is encrypted but is not a government network and not authorized to carry classified information. “I said repeatedly, nobody is texting war plans,” Hegseth told Fox News on Tuesday. “I look at war plans every day. What was shared over Signal then and now, however you characterize it, was informal, unclassified coordinations, for media coordinations and other things. That’s what I’ve said from the beginning.”Based on the specificity of the launch times, that information would have been classified, former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told the AP in a phone interview. “It is unheard of to have a Secretary of Defense committing these kind of serious security breaches," said Panetta, who served during the Obama administration, and who also was director of the Central Intelligence Agency during Obama's term. ”Developing attack plans for defensive reasons is without question the most classified information you can have." The news comes as Hegseth has shaken up much of his inner circle. He is said to have become increasingly isolated and suspicious about whom he can trust, and is relying on an increasingly smaller and smaller circle of people.; the chief of staff to Deputy Defense Secretary Stephen Feinberg, Colin Carroll; and Hegseth’s deputy chief of staff, Darin Selnick.as the department hunts down leaks of inside information, and in his “Fox and Friends” interview Tuesday, an agitated Hegseth accused those staff — whom he had worked with and known for years — of “attempting to leak and sabotage” the administration. Hegseth confirmed Tuesday that chief of staff Joe Kasper would be transitioning to a new position. Former Pentagon chief spokesman Sean Parnell is also temporarily shifting to a more direct support role for Hegseth, and former Pentagon spokesman John Ullyot announced he was resigning last week, unrelated to the leaks. The Pentagon said, however, that Ullyot was asked to resign. Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.Spring into savings for your home and lifestyle with these Insider DealsEnjoy a lifetime of content about the world’s royals, past and present, for $200
Darin Selnick Phil Hegseth Joe Kasper Steve Feinberg Dan Caldwell U.S. News Politics Washington News Barack Obama Sean Parnell John Ullyot Donald Trump Leon Panetta
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
How Pete Hegseth Signal Group Chat Reacted to War Plans LeakTrump administration officials included a high-profile journalist in a group chat in which they discussed U.S. military plans.
Read more »
Trump reacts to Signal chat leak in phone call with NBC NewsThis is additional taxonomy that helps us with analytics
Read more »
Democrats Demand Full Text of Signal Chat, Want Pete Hegseth and Mike Waltz to ResignDemocratic Sen. Mark Warner denounced what he called a pattern of 'careless, incompetent behavior' by the Trump administration.
Read more »
Some Republicans dismiss Signal app incident, while some Democrats call for Pete Hegseth to step downLawmakers continue to weigh in after reports that Trump administration officials inadvertently included a journalist in a Signal app group chat where they discussed U.S. military operations in Yemen.
Read more »
Hegseth pulled airstrike info from secure military channel for Signal posts, NBC News reportsDefense Secretary Pete Hegseth pulled the airstrike information he posted into Signal chats with his wife, brother and dozens of others from a secure communications channel from U.S. Central Command.
Read more »
Hegseth pulled airstrike info from secure military channel for Signal posts, NBC News reportsThe information posted in the second chat was identical to the sensitive operations details shared in the first chat.
Read more »
