Trump, Yemen and Signal
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Officials from the Trump administration assured a judge Thursday they are preserving messages shared on the Signal app about an attack on Houthis in Yemen, despite the app's option to automatically d...
From USA TODAY
Voice of America, which was founded in 1942, provides news programming in 49 languages to dozens of countries around the world, including places like China and Iran where citizens have limited access...
From The New York Times
Intelligence experts argue that it gave foreign adversaries priceless insight into US spycraft far beyond the obvious.
From Bloomberg L.P.
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U.S. officials seek to curb the militants’ attacks on ships in the Red Sea, but the group was not deterred by strikes in the Biden era and won’t be beaten by air power alone, experts say.
Signal’s convenience and the lack of clear agency guidelines makes the commercial app a popular choice for government officials. But transmitting sensitive information is still prohibited.
Officials were crisscrossing the world as they sent and received sensitive messages on Signal about an imminent U.S. attack on Yemen.
1don MSN
Officials inadvertently added a reporter to an unsecured group chat discussing plans for a U.S. attack on Houthis in Yemen. Here's a look at a timeline of the events.
Mistake.” “Glitch.” “Entirely permissible.” “Hoax.” See the varied and shifting responses President Donald Trump and his allies have put forth.
The U.S. launched what analysts are describing as one of the largest bombing missions in Yemen in years. The strikes targeted what the U.S. says are Houthi leaders and terrorist infrastructure. The Trump administration’s campaign has been ongoing for two weeks,
President Donald Trump and his administration raised eyebrows about how they handled sensitive national security information long before his top national security advisor added a journalist to a Signal chat.
Judge James E. Boasberg, who has already drawn President Donald Trump’s ire, ordered national security agencies to preserve the records of a leaked group Signal chat, reportedly set to auto-delete.