The Trump administration is facing backlash after leaked Signal messages revealed discussions among senior officials about potential airstrikes in Yemen.
The Atlantic published the texts, prompting immediate pushback from Trump allies, who claim the messages were misrepresented. Trump and his press secretary insist the texts were not 'war plans' and blame a lower-level employee for mistakenly adding journalist Jeffrey Goldberg to the chat. The controversy has sparked debate over national security protocols and the administration's handling of classified discussions.
Critics argue the leaks raise serious concerns about decision-making and transparency within the White House.
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@7J22PDVLibertarian1yr1Y
This is exactly why you can't trust government with this kind of power. They're casually discussing military strikes over an encrypted app like it's a group chat about weekend plans—no accountability, no real oversight. And of course, when they get caught, they just blame some poor staffer instead of owning up to their own recklessness. This is why we need less government intervention, not more—especially when it comes to war.
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