Dark
Light
March 25, 2025
5 mins read
120 views

Anti-Trump Hoax Peddler Jeffrey Goldberg Doubles Down, Accuses Pete Hegseth of Lying About War Plan Texts


Screenshot: The Source with Kaitlan Collins / CNN

Jeffrey Goldberg, the rabidly anti-Trump editor-in-chief of the failing Atlantic, has doubled down on his latest hit piece.

Goldberg alleges that Hegseth disseminated classified military plans via an unsecured group chatโ€”a charge that Hegseth has firmly denied.

Goldberg โ€” the same disgraced journalist behind the infamous and widely debunked โ€œsuckers and losersโ€ hoax against President Trump โ€” published a story alleging that Hegseth, along with National Security Adviser Mike Waltz, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Vice President J.D. Vance, and other Trump officials, was part of a Signal group chat discussing military strikes against Iran-backed Houthi terrorists in Yemen.

According to Goldberg, it all started with a Signal connection request from Mike Waltz on March 11, followed by an invite to the chat on March 13โ€”just days before America bombs the Iran-backed Houthi terrorists in Yemen.

Goldberg claims he sat back and watched as Trumpโ€™s heavyweights supposedly texted war plans right under his nose.

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth isnโ€™t taking this lying down. After landing at a military base in Pearl Harbor, Hegseth torched Goldberg and his hit piece:

โ€œYouโ€™re talking about a deceitful and highly discredited so-called journalist whoโ€™s made a profession of peddling hoaxes time and time again, including the hoaxes of Russia, Russia, Russia, the โ€œfine people on both sidesโ€ hoax, and the โ€œSuckers and Losersโ€ hoax. This is the guy that peddles in garbage. This is what he does,โ€ Hegseth told the reporters.

He continued, โ€œIโ€™ve heard that was characterized. Nobody was texting war plans, and thatโ€™s all I have to say about that.โ€

Despite Hegsethโ€™s crystal-clear rebuttal, Goldberg went on CNNโ€™s The Source with Kaitlan Collins to call the Secretary a liar.

Goldberg persisted in his narrative, claiming the details were indeed shared in the chat and were of such a sensitive nature that he chose not to publish them for fear of compromising American military personnel.

According to Goldberg, not only did no one in the group ever stop to question why this conversation was happening on Signal, but when Goldberg eventually exited the chatโ€”his initials clearly showing as โ€œJ.G.โ€โ€”no one even asked who he was or why he was there.

Kaitlan Collins:
โ€œI want to start by getting your reaction to what we heard from Secretary Heggsett, who said that nobody was texting war plans. Given that you were privy to this group, Chad, is that how you saw it?โ€

Jeffrey Goldberg:
โ€œNo, thatโ€™s a lie. He was texting war plans. He was texting attack plans. He detailed when targets were going to be targeted, how they were going to be targeted, who was at the targets, and when the next sequence of attacks was happening. I didnโ€™t publish this, and I continue not to publish it because it felt confidential and too technical. Honestly, I worry that sharing that information in public could endanger American military personnel. But no, there were plans for the attack. They were texted before the attack.โ€

Kaitlan Collins:
โ€œThere were things texted that you viewed as so sensitive you did not even publish them in your report today.โ€

Jeffrey Goldberg:
โ€œI made the decision that the technical aspects of this, including what weapons packages and the attack sequencing, were not necessarily in the public interest. Whatโ€™s in the public interest is that they were running a war plan on a messaging app and didnโ€™t even know who was invited into the conversation. I mean, itโ€™s an obvious, ridiculous security breach. If you notice, he didnโ€™t actually answer the question.โ€

Kaitlan Collins:
โ€œBut his attempt at a denial also stood out to me, because no one that I talked to at the White House today argued this or tried to say these were misconstrued, or altered, or this is not real. I mean, the National Security Council confirmed the veracity of it.โ€

Jeffrey Goldberg:
โ€œThe National Security Councilโ€”I asked various officials, including Pete Hegseth this morning, for a comment. The first question I had for everyone: Is this real? I wanted to make sure, obviously, before we go public, and say, โ€œAre you sure this is not a disinformation campaign run by a foreign state, a nonstate actor of some sort, trying to target a journalist for reasons I couldnโ€™t explain?โ€ And they were like, โ€œNo, this is apparently a real channel.โ€ I appreciate them telling the truth about that. And we published.โ€

Kaitlan Collins:
โ€œDid they seem alarmed when you reached out for comment?โ€

Jeffrey Goldberg:
โ€œProbably not the happiest day that they experienced in the White House so far, but they were professional about it.โ€

Kaitlan Collins:
โ€œI thought that as you were walking through when this began, you werenโ€™t even sure if it was real yourself. You thought, โ€œMaybe Iโ€™m being spun or conned, or something is happening here?โ€

Jeffrey Goldberg:
โ€œUntil the day that I received the attack plan from Pete Hegseth at 11:44 a.m. on Saturday, March 15th, and then saw that the attack plan said that at 1:45 p.m. Eastern Time, the first bombs would be dropping in Yemenโ€”until that moment, during that two-hour period between the text and the first bombs being droppedโ€”I thought it was a hoax. I thought somebody was trying to entrap me.

Again, could it have been a foreign intelligence service? Could it have been a gadfly organization that tries to entrap journalists, which we know happens? I didnโ€™t know what it was or who it was. But what I did know was that the obvious answerโ€”that this is a real conversation of the national security leadership of the United Statesโ€”seemed improbable to me. Because why would they do it on Signal? Why would they do this on a messaging app? And why would they invite the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic to watch?โ€

Kaitlan Collins:
โ€œAnd how many people were on this chat?โ€

Jeffrey Goldberg:
โ€œEighteen.โ€

Kaitlan Collins:
โ€œAnd did any of them, at any point when you were included in there, ever raise that question: โ€œWhy are we talking about this over Signal?โ€โ€

Jeffrey Goldberg:
โ€œNobody raised the question, โ€œWhy are we talking about this over Signal?โ€ And nobody said, โ€œHey, who is J.G.?โ€ Because you show up in a little bubble as your initials. No one at any point said, โ€œWhoโ€™s J.G.?โ€ When I withdrew from the groupโ€”you formally remove yourselfโ€”you hit a button, it says: โ€œJ.G. has removed himself from the group.โ€ I assumed that somebody would say, โ€œHey, who just removed himself from the group?โ€ Nothing.โ€

WATCH:

0:00 / 0:00
image/svg+xml

15 seconds

15 seconds

The post Anti-Trump Hoax Peddler Jeffrey Goldberg Doubles Down, Accuses Pete Hegseth of Lying About War Plan Texts appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

Source: The Gateway Pundit
TruthPuke LLC hereby clarifies that the editors, in numerous instances, are not accountable for the origination of news posts. Furthermore, the expression of opinions within exclusives authored by TruthPuke Editors does not automatically reflect the viewpoints or convictions held by TruthPuke Management.


Previous Story

Pardoned J6er Loses Asylum. Eliel Rosa Came to the US and Followed All the Processes and Rules to Become a US Citizen. As President Trump would sayโ€ฆ Heโ€™s the Kind of Immigrant WE WANT โ€“ Now He Needs Your Help

Next Story

The Letitia Files: Did Letitia James Illegally Hire a Nonprofit for Her 2013 Campaign?

Latest from Blog

Go toTop