“The Breakfast Club” challenged Atlantic Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey Goldberg’s decision to publish a piece detailing that was incorrectly included in a group chat with cabinet officials on the signal messaging platform.
In a group chat entitled “Houthi PC Small Group,” Goldberg identified or speculated the presence of officials such as Secretary of Defense Pete Hegses, National Security Adviser Mike Waltz and Vice President JD Vance. According to The editor-in-chief’s work was released on Monday. vy Nozomi “has questioned Goldberg’s decision to publish the story with “.Front Page News” Segments of his show claim it could harm America. (Related: Trump was able to end the world’s busiest transport lane, which terrorizes Iran-backed rebel groups.)
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“Do you know that I don’t understand? You understand whether you received those texts correctly, and you know that those texts are not supposed to be on you, why do you put them there?” vy Nozomi asked. “That’s something I don’t understand. You’re a journalist, but this is your country. And you know that releasing some of those things could probably affect some of the things that happen. Why do you put it there?”
Co-host Lauren Rorosa responded by saying that Goldberg had released the film because it was “big” in the story. Envy agreed, but suggested that it “may have an impact on the army” before Rorosa cut off him.
“No one cares about that,” she said. “Because you want to get – you have a byline, you want to get clicks, you want to be sensational.”
“Don’t care about people, do they care more about likes and tiktok numbers?” asked vy Nozomi.
Rorosa doubled the fact that journalists are interested in reaching the article.
“But I think it’s like, depending on where the journalist is sitting politically, that’s what I think is what they’re trying to do. “So that might be the way they say it.
Goldberg withheld some of the content of the conversation to maintain national security interests, he argued in his work.
“At 11:44am, an account labeled “Pete Hegseth” posted a “Team Update” on Signal A. He wrote about the March 15 message he said he had received. “The information they contain could be used to injure American military and intelligence agents, especially in the area of responsibility of Central Command, the broader Middle East, if they were read by US enemies.”
However, he wrote that Hegseth’s message “contains details of the operation of upcoming strikes in Yemen, including information on targets, weapons deployed by the US, and attack sequences.”
Brian Hughes, a spokesman for the White House National Security Council, told daily callers he believes communication is authentic. He also said he is investigating how Goldberg’s numbers were added to group chats.
“This thread is an empirical demonstration of deep and thoughtful policy coordination among senior officials,” Hughes said in a statement provided to the caller. “The continued success of Operation Houthi shows that there was no threat to service members or national security.”
Journalist Mark Halperin I said If he was added to it at Tuesday’s “morning meeting,” he would have left the group chat.
“If it’s a private chain of information of its own, I’ll come out soon,” he asserted.
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