National Security Breach & Policy Violation - The Pentagon's Inspector General report indicates Pete Hegsth shared information in a Signal chat, potentially endangering mission operations and servicemen in Yemen [1] - Hegsth violated department policies by using Signal, a commercial messaging app, for sharing classified information [1] - The shared information included detailed timing of US warplanes over targets in Yemen [1][2] - The Inspector General's report states the information was classified when Hegsth received it from US Central Command [2] Potential Consequences & Double Standards - Lower-level employees would face military discharge and potential criminal prosecution for similar actions [1] - The situation creates an impression of two sets of rules: one for leadership and one for everyone else [1] Information Shared & Operational Security - Hegsth shared real-time updates on a military operation, including launch times for F-18s and strike drones [4] - The shared information included "Time now 11:44 Eastern time The weather is favorable I just confirmed with Sentcom we are a go for mission launch" [3] - The texts also mentioned "12:15 Eastern time F-18's launch first strike package 1345 so 145 triggerbased F-18 first strike window starts target terrorist is at his known location so should be on time also strike drones launch" [4] - The real-time sharing of information posed a risk to pilots if it had fallen into the wrong hands, such as the Houthis [14] Justification & Context - Hegsth may claim he declassified the information before sharing it [2] - However, sharing with individuals who already possess high-level security clearances negates the need for declassification [5][7]
Nicolle Wallace on Pete Hegseth: ‘How much more embarrassment is Donald Trump going to tolerate?’
MSNBC·2025-12-03 22:38