When the Atlantic editor is mistakenly informed of Trump’s plans to attack Yemen
Jeffrey Goldberg, a well -known American journalist and editor -in -chief of the Atlantic Magazine, has added that Trump’s national security team has mistakenly added him to a secret confidential conversation about military attacks in Yemen.
According to RCO News Agency, Mike Waltz, the White House National Security Adviser, began the conversation through an encrypted signal messenger app.
The interview included users as Vice President Jedi Venus, Foreign Minister Marco Rubio, Defense Minister Pete Hegest, and Tolsi Gabard, but Jeffrey Goldberg, editor -in -chief of the Atlantic Magazine, and Journalist.
Goldberg wrote in Atlantic: “But I say – anyway – I have never been invited to the White House Committee meeting, and for many years I have been covering national security News, I have never heard of such a meeting through a commercial messenger app.”
This amazing story showed that US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegst and former Fox News presenter revealed operational details that could endanger Americans. He is now under severe inspection and supervision because of this gross mistake.
Goldberg told this strange story when he was skeptical of the realization of the conversation, but when the “bombs began to fall” it was confirmed to be real.
“I couldn’t believe that the president’s national security adviser would be so unnecessary that I – the editor of the Atlantic – – to do so that US senior officials, including the Vice President, would do,” Goldberg confessed. He did not disclose all the information in the conversation because of security considerations.
Goldberg said he doubts that the message chain is a series of “inaccurate information” but its content seems real, and some details are even detailed, such as the message that he was in the session (White House Committee meeting) because of an economic event in Michigan.
Goldberg, who followed the conversation through the signal app, wrote, “I am amazed at that no one in the group noticed me.”
He also noted that voluntarily refused to publish some of the information contained in the long letter of Hegst, saying that its content “may be used by US enemies to harm US forces and intelligence personnel.”
The end of the message
(Tagstotranslate) US (T) Yemen (T) Journalist (T) Journalist (T) Security Scandal
RCO NEWS
RCO