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The Editor Who Was Accidentally Texted War Plans

2025/3/26
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Rachel Abrams: 本期节目讨论了一起严重的国家安全事件:顶级特朗普政府官员误将记者杰弗里·戈德堡添加到Signal群聊中,泄露了美国的军事机密计划。这一事件引发了广泛关注,并引发了关于政府安全协议和问责制的讨论。 我们采访了杰弗里·戈德堡,详细了解了他发现这一事件的经过,以及他对事件后续发展的看法。戈德堡的报道揭示了政府官员在Signal上讨论机密信息,以及他们对安全协议的忽视。 此外,我们还讨论了共和党对这一事件的轻描淡写态度,以及将此次事件与希拉里·克林顿使用私人邮箱事件进行比较所引发的双重标准问题。 Jeffrey Goldberg: 我最初收到来自国家安全顾问迈克·沃尔茨的Signal信息邀请时,以为是某种骗局或圈套。后来,我被意外地加入了一个名为“Houthi PC Small Group”的群聊,该群聊包含了多位特朗普政府高级官员,例如国务卿、国防部长等。 群聊中,他们讨论了是否应该加大对也门胡塞武装的军事打击力度。J.D. Vance对总统的决定表示质疑,而迈克·沃尔茨和皮特·海格塞思则主张采取更强硬的军事行动。 最令人震惊的是,皮特·海格塞思在群聊中分享了针对也门的军事袭击计划细节,包括袭击时间、目标和武器。我通过实时追踪新闻确认了袭击计划正在实施。袭击发生后,群聊成员分享了袭击结果并使用了表情符号庆祝。 我意识到这是一个重大的安全漏洞,并离开了群聊。我随后联系了相关人员,并收到了国家安全委员会的回应,承认这是一个真实的群聊,并正在调查此事。我决定公开报道此事,因为公众有权了解政府官员如何违反安全协议。 政府官员使用Signal进行机密沟通存在安全风险,因为外国情报机构可能会针对他们的设备进行攻击。如果敌对势力获得了这些信息,可能会危及军事行动和人员安全。 我对政府官员对安全协议的忽视感到沮丧,因为军方人员因违反类似规定而受到处罚。即使是经验丰富的官员,也应该遵守安全协议,对安全协议的无知不能成为违规的借口。 政府官员可能出于方便或避免信息被存档的原因,选择在Signal上沟通。使用Signal进行沟通并设置信息自动消失,可能存在法律问题。 我对共和党对这一事件的轻描淡写态度感到担忧,这表明国家正处于危险之中。如果政府对这一事件置之不理,则表明国家正处于危险之中。

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From the New York Times, I'm Rachel Abrams. This is The Daily.

It's being called a reckless and devastating breach of national security. Revelations that top Trump officials inadvertently shared secret U.S. military plans with a prominent journalist by mistakenly adding him to a group chat. Today, Atlantic Magazine editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg explains how he initially thought the messages were a scam. And now, what he makes of the enormous fallout since going public.

It's Wednesday, March 26th. Jeffrey, is that you? Yeah, it's me.

Well, hello, Jeffrey. You've had quite a week. It's only Tuesday morning. Yeah, tell me what we're doing. What is this for? I'm with The Daily. My name is Rachel Abrams. Oh, The Daily. Oh, yeah. I'm familiar with it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's a little podcast of the New York Times. Local newspaper in New York. Yeah, yeah. No, we're just starting out, so thanks for bearing with us. No, that's great. It's cool. Do you have a lot of listeners? Yeah, we have a decent amount. My mom, my dad. My mom. And my mom.

Jeffrey and I talked on Tuesday morning. It was a full day after a story came out about how he'd been added accidentally to a group chat with top Trump administration officials. So, Jeffrey, we have never met before, but yesterday I think I texted you, I emailed you, I called you, I called your publicist. I was...

desperate to get you on the show to talk about your story and the reaction to it. Should have tried Signal. Should have tried Signal, that's right. So as we're hinting at, you just wrote something that really everybody is talking about. So tell us, where does the story begin? Well, the story begins in earnest about March 11th. I received a message request from

on Signal from someone identified as Michael Waltz. He's the National Security Advisor of the United States. - Signal, the secure messaging app. - Yeah, the commercial, non-government, end-to-end encrypted app that a lot of people in journalism and outside of journalism use because it's allegedly safer. And I don't know Waltz, I've met him a couple of times, but it struck me as unusual because I have a somewhat contentious relationship with the Trump administration, or more to the point,

with Trump, but certainly in the normal bandwidth of Washington experience for a magazine editor covers politics and foreign policy and national security to get a message request from the national security advisor, if it was indeed him. I accepted the request, forgot about it. A couple of days later, I'm

included in a group called the Houthi PC Small Group. Can you translate that for us? You have deep experience in foreign policy as a journalist, as you've said. What does Houthi's PC Small Group mean to you in this moment?

Houthis are obviously the Iran-backed terrorist organization that runs part of Yemen and been obviously attacking shipping, attacking Israel for the last year and a half, becoming quite a menace to international shipping. PC stands for Principals Committee, meaning that small group of principals, cabinet members, people who run intelligence agencies. And you are certainly, I think we need to point out, not a principal in this context. Right.

No, I have never been to a principals meeting. Right, just to be clear. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So that's what PC stands for. Small group is not actually that small. It was 18 people, 19 people. I wouldn't consider that a small group. I would consider it the medium group. And who is in the group at this point? J.D. Vance, Michael Waltz.

And the secretaries of state, defense, treasury, CIA director, director of national intelligence, et cetera. I mean, again, people who are identified as such on my phone, but I'm an appropriately suspicious journalist. And obviously, for reasons I can go into, I think this is a setup of some sort. I think this is a hoax, a deception, a non-state actor trying to entrap a journalist. I don't know what it is, but that...

On the face premise of this is ridiculous, so it had to be something other than what it was purporting to be. Right. Basically, like you being on a group chat with really top-tier officials in the administration, you're not believing this is the real thing. Maybe I can be included on something having to do with like the Easter egg roll or something at the White House, but I'm not going to be on this. And even though you think it's fake at this point, I'm sure you're still kind of curious. You're watching this thing. Yeah.

Well, yeah. I mean, because what if, you know, I mean, let's let's let's be honest, you know, you become a journalist because the the most interesting place on the planet is the other side of a closed door. Right. Right. I got to watch it one one way or the other, you know. So what do they start discussing?

Well, the first text in this chain is from Michael Waltz saying that he's setting up this discussion group. This is on a Thursday, I guess, for basically, you know, we're heading into this weekend. There's this sort of elliptical promise of something happening over the next 72 hours. And the Michael Waltz username asks these other principals to give their weekend POC, point of contact, a

in case there's a reason to have a further discussion. And so one after another, six or seven people respond, Marco Rubio, or the person playing Marco Rubio, responds with a name from somebody from the State Department and so on, the Defense Department, et cetera. And most interesting in this moment to me is that the CIA director, John Ratcliffe, names a person and says, this person is going to be representing the CIA in this discussion. Now,

What I learned over time is that the person he names is an active CIA officer whose name has never been discussed in public. I thought, well...

Like, this is really weird. What is happening here? But that's the initial foray. And then the next day, there's a really interesting substantive policy debate about whether the U.S. should ramp up its military activities against the Houthis in Yemen.

And there's a lot of criticism in the chain of the Biden administration's inability to get the Houthi situation under control. Mainly what there is, is a lot of resentment expressed toward the Europeans for not being able to float navies that could actually do this work and criticism of the Europeans for not being able to pay. You know, the sort of thing that we've heard for a while from these guys.

And J.D. Vance starts the conversation out by saying he disagrees with the decision to attack Yemen, at least right now. He goes on to say that we're sending the wrong message to Europe and why do we have to do this? And it's the European shipping that's in danger, not American shipping. And furthermore, the president doesn't really understand the consequences of doing this. And J.D. Vance, he's doing this in front of half the cabinet.

People who work for the president, he's telling them, I disagree with the president. And also, I'm not sure he gets it. And J.D. Vance is playing the role that we understand J.D. Vance to play, which is like kind of a

soft isolationism. It's like, why are we fighting Yemen? What are we doing? And then the more kind of traditional, muscular, interventionist philosophy is represented by Michael Waltz, the National Security Advisor, and Pete Hegseth, the Secretary of Defense, is, yes, we recognize that Europe is pathetic, and this is what Hegseth says about Europe, in all caps, by the way.

They recognize this European dynamic, but they're more interested in just like, let's get this thing going against the Houthis. So this conversation, just to recap, is them discussing whether ramping up attacks on the Houthis militarily will be a good political strategy. Yes. And you're telling it sounds like they're having a kind of a polite disagreement. J.D. Vance is seemingly disagreeing with the position that Trump has. And that disagreement is

seems like it hinges on whether or not we're making the Europeans pay enough, which is something we've talked about on the show quite a bit. Right. Exactly. So I want to check in with you here because in this moment, do you still think that this is a hoax? Are you starting to sense that it could be real? I am suspecting that it could be real because it's a pretty accurate depiction of what these guys sound like. Yeah. But I, again...

And let me put this in, like, it can't be true. That's what's keeping me from believing that it's true. It can't be true. It can't be true. Like, come on. Like, you know, I've been around this world for a long time. They don't do this. No, Bob Woodward has spent an entire career trying to infiltrate groups like this. So how could you possibly have just been added to a group chat? Yeah, yeah. I mean, you know, and also it's weird that substantive—

Government conversations will be taking place over Signal because Signal is not, by the U.S. government standards, secure. In part because, obviously, it's open to, technically open to anyone, including yours truly. And I know that previous administrations have used different messaging services, but not for substance. Right? I mean, I think in the Biden administration, it's a good example. They used Signal. Right.

But my impression is, based on some reporting, my impression is that they use Signal to do things like setting up lunch appointments or, hey, I've just left Saudi Arabia. I'll call you from a skiff when I get to whatever. And just to be clear, the skiff is a...

The SCIF is a compartmentalized facility that is built to protect conversations electronically. You know, you can't even take your phone or your Apple Watch or your Fitbit. These are very, very, very secure facilities. And by the way...

The senior people in the national security apparatus of the United States have these things built into their houses when they're serving. So they can just go down to the basement and make the secure phone call, right? And the whole idea is to protect these conversations from foreign surveillance. So what happens after this? How does the discussion progress from here? Well, it progressed very quickly so that on Saturday the 15th,

running some errands and the signal chat lights up. And probably the most important text in this entire series of texts comes from the account user Pete Hegseth, who provides what I would call basically the attack sequence, a summary of the war plan. And, you know, it's it's

It tells the exact time that attack will be launched. It tells the exact time the effects of the attack will be felt in Yemen. It talks about the weapons packages being used. It talks about some specific targets. Like actual military planning that is a settled business and about to happen. A forthcoming attack on Yemen. I'm also sitting there in my car. It's 1144 a.m. Eastern Time. I get this text.

The text promises that the effects of the first wave of attacks will be felt in Yemen at 1345, 1.45 p.m. Eastern Time. So it's two hours, right? And I'm thinking to myself...

Well, I guess in two hours I'm going to find out if this is a real chain or not, right, definitively. So, you know, I basically just kind of sit there and at 1.55 or so I go into Twitter and I, you know, put Yemen in the search bar. And then sure enough there are bombs falling all over Yemen just as the user identified as Pete Hegseth promised two hours earlier.

Breaking news overseas right now, where officials are confirming that U.S. air and naval assets hit dozens of Houthi targets in Yemen, including missiles, radar, drones, and air defense systems. These are the most significant airstrikes since President Trump returned to the White House. And the first time U.S. jets have struck these Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen since President Trump returned to the White House. Trump announced the strikes on social media, threatening the Houthi rebels with, quote,

overwhelming lethal force. The U.S. says it will keep attacking targets in Yemen until the Houthis stop their assault on global shipping in the Red Sea. I want you to describe to us what you're seeing in this group chat after the attacks start. It's a couple of updates on...

The consequences of the attack, that's all I'll say. The damage that they think that they have done, combined with some, you know, congratulatory texts. And this is, of course, where they start using emojis. Emojis? Which emojis are they using? Before the attack started, there was the prayer emoji used by a couple of people. And then during the attacks, when the reports are coming in that it's going well from the American perspective, there's the flexed

I guess, emoji. There's the fire emoji. There's an American flag emoji. Sometimes they're repeated a couple of times. And there I'm sitting there watching that and going, wow, every workplace is the same, huh? So what do you do next? So I'm sitting in the car. I'm watching the signal chat react to the Yemen attack. I'm realizing that this is almost certainly a real attack.

Signal Group and not some sort of deceptive disinformation campaign. And so then I had to begin to make a series of decisions, consulting with colleagues, that ultimately led me to remove myself from the Signal Group later that day. Knowing that the group administrator in Signal, and the members, I believe, of a group as well, are notified that you have left the group. I assumed at that point

that Mike Waltz was gonna call and say, "Hey, who is this?" Or call and say, "Why'd you leave the group?" And I would say, you know, "Director Waltz," or whatever, do you know? Do you even know who this is? But nobody -- Look, I mean, here's the truth of it is nobody noticed when I was added and nobody noticed when I was left. And can you tell us why you decided to leave the group chat? You know, I think people can make their own deductions here.

But I can't get into, for various reasons, the conversations I subsequently had with colleagues and others about...

my decision-making. All I will say is that I remove myself from the group, understanding the consequences of that. And what I do is I decide, oh, I have to write a story about the world's weirdest signal group. On Monday, I texted and emailed the relevant people in the chat. I used the signal contact. I sent long emails.

to a large number of players in this drama saying, you know, asking various questions. And what was the response? Well, I mean, I got one official response back from the National Security Council, which, you know, came pretty quickly saying, apparently this is a real chain and we're investigating why a journalist was inadvertently invited to the chain. But, you know, I think they had to acknowledge it, and they did. Once they acknowledged that it's real, I published our first piece on the subject.

We'll be right back. My name's Hannah Dreyer. I'm an investigative reporter at The New York Times.

So much of my process is challenging my own assumptions and trying to uncover new information that often goes against what I thought I would find. All of my reporting comes from going out, seeing something, and realizing, "Oh, that's actually the story." And that reporting helps readers challenge their own assumptions and come to new conclusions for themselves. This kind of journalism takes resources. It takes a lot of time. It takes a lot of reporting trips.

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You're talking about a...

deceitful and highly discredited so-called journalist who's made a profession of peddling hoaxes time and time again. I just can't, to this moment, get over the idea that during the days that group was going on, not one of the participants said, "We shouldn't be doing this on Signal." Do you believe that this warrants a congressional investigation?

Well, it will. Common sense says this was a major screw-up and somebody should be held accountable. Clearly, I think the administration has acknowledged it was a mistake and they'll tighten up and make sure it doesn't happen again. I don't know what else you can say about that. Should Mike Walton accept the discipline? No. Jeffrey, I want to talk about the immediate reaction. This is such a breach of security protocols. Can you explain the hazards of this from a security point of view?

Yeah. Put aside the weirdness of inviting a journalist by mistake. I mean, okay, it's hard to put aside, obviously, given what's happened. But one of the things that people don't understand, I think, about why there are rules governing privileged conversations within the national security community is that Signal might be end-to-end encrypted and it might be very hard to hack, but foreign intelligence services spend a lot of time

trying to target the actual devices that belong to government officials, right? Like, in other words...

The Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, is walking around with a cell phone in his pocket. It should not surprise anyone to know that the Chinese government is very interested in knowing what's going on inside that phone. And it uses all kinds of methods where, in a remote way, you can target that phone. And in this particular scenario, this particular attack on the Houthis, if a foreign adversary had gotten this information that you saw, what is the worst case scenario? Like, can you just play out the possibilities a little bit?

If somehow the Houthis understood that American warplanes were heading in their direction, that would give them conceivably more time to prepare a response, which would obviously put the pilots of those planes in danger. You're the National Security Advisor of the United States. You're the CIA director. You don't want your target...

in Yemen to know that in an hour or so he's going to get blown up. So, yes, like if you put this stuff out in the wild and signal and you're not talking about this in a secure way, face-to-face...

Theoretically, the danger level goes up. I mean, this is so obvious to me. Like, logic dictates this. Yeah, I just don't want to breeze over it. I want to make it really clear for people that the reason that it is important for the government to take all of these precautions and conceal these types of plans is that

This information getting out there could compromise a military mission. It could put military service members at risk. At greater risk. Yes. Greater risk. Those are the stakes here. But also the success and failure of your mission, right? Right. Of course. And because these are the stakes...

Did they break any laws here? Like we were talking about sort of how things are typically done, but did the existence of this group chat adding you, was any of this illegal? I can't answer that question. I'm not a national security lawyer. We've interviewed national security lawyers who say that, you know, there are various risks associated with doing this the way they did it. That will be discovered in the fullness of time. And there's a lot of

chatter right now in military forums and government forums of people who are saying, I'm an army captain in the artillery, right? But every year I have to be recertified in cybersecurity and I have to watch, you know, videos of how to make sure that your information is correct and what kind of information can you put on your personal phone and what kind of information can't you put on your personal phone.

And there are people who get kicked out of the military. There are people who go to prison for compromising security at a much lower level than we're about to attack Yemen. Here's how the attack is going to go. Right, right. So I can imagine that if you are a member of the military or the State Department, you are frustrated, to say the least. That's what you're – because you are held to a very, very high standard that these folks, at least for now –

do not seem like they were holding themselves to. Right, right. And that's why there was no sympathy among government employees. There's no particular sympathy for Hillary Clinton for having government emails on her personal server. But still, there's not, you know, guys, you make these rules, you got to follow them. Is there any chance that anybody on this group chat could...

believably say that they didn't know that they were supposed to take different kinds of precautions? I mean, I guess you could say that. It's the beginning of an administration. They're two months in. But is ignorance of the law, you know, does that absolve you of following the rules? Although some of them have obviously served. Marco Rubio's on the Intelligence Committee. John Ratcliffe was the former DNI. Pete Hexeth served in the Army and so on. Also, like, here's the thing. I mean, even at that level, there's a...

of an orientation moment. Here's your office. Here's your computer. Here's your SCIF. Here's your SCIF. This is the computer that you can communicate with other intelligence agencies with, but you cannot have your personal email on it. It's a closed system. And this is the computer that you get to use to do internet research. And this is the, you know, I mean, you're presumably told all this stuff. It really makes you wonder,

What else is being communicated this way? How many other small groups are there? And also, why would these folks be communicating this way? I mean, just... You know why? Why? You know why? Tell me. Because going into a skiff is a pain in the neck. Even if it's in your basement? I mean, I had to go to the supermarket. Maybe they got to go to the supermarket. I mean, you know, you got to go to the supermarket. You got to go take your kid to Little League. I mean, all these people do have security details, mind you. They're driven and armored Suburbans, and they have...

very extensive communications devices associated with those vehicles. I mean, the idea is to make it maximally convenient. And by the way, this is... So that's it. It's convenience. I don't know. Or if you talk about it on Signal, you're obligated to make a copy of that discussion and send it to an official government account so that it can be archived by the National Archives. Right.

but Signal is a disappearing app. Obviously, you know, the messages disappear. Well, they can. You can set it to disappear. Is that what happened here? Yeah, and these were set to disappear. I see. And so there is the plausible explanation that they're like, we just want to have real talk, and we don't want this to be archived forever in the National Archives. Right. Okay, so that sounds like it potentially could be a legal problem. Well, I mean, so it's convenience and also a way of having, a way of protecting your conversation from future threats

congressional oversight. It's a lot of other things. I think the natural question is to say, under normal circumstances, there would probably be an investigation led by Congress. Democrats are obviously calling for that, but it just feels like there must be so little interest in an investigation from anybody with the power to do it. And I just want to give you some examples of the reaction to your story that make me say that. Because over the past 24 hours,

The Republicans have really played this down. House Speaker Mike Johnson has said, this is not our issue. Senator John Kennedy said a mistake was made. It happens. A House Republican called it a learning moment. Trump himself said, Mike Waltz is a good man. He's learned a lesson. Do you think there will be any consequences for the people who initiated or participated in this breach of national security?

Nothing that's been said by the administration so far suggests to me that they're treating this seriously or treating it the way they would treat it if this were Democrats who had done this. You mentioned Hillary Clinton earlier, but I want to bring it back to her for a second because I.

It seems noteworthy that a lot of the people on this signal chat, and certainly President Trump, all of these people made a very big deal about Clinton and how she used a private email server for official business when she was Secretary of State. And everybody remembers the chants, lock her up. And every turn, they described what she did as a very serious breach of national security that should face consequences. And I just – can you, for a second –

Putting aside whether or not this is hypocritical, could you ruminate on whether you think what you have seen is as serious, more serious, far more serious just by comparison to what she did?

If this is not a big deal, then people like Pete Hegseth and Marco Rubio and all the rest have to go back into time and say that Hillary Clinton wasn't a big deal either. Right? I mean, this is this kind of arid, dispiriting Washington game where when you commit a crime, it's the worst thing that ever happened on the planet. And when I do it, it's perfectly acceptable and understandable. Here's the thing, and this is sort of what I would love to say to Pete Hegseth. Six months ago,

If Tony Blinken and Jake Sullivan and Lloyd Austin, Secretary of State, the National Security Advisor and the Secretary of Defense and the Joe Biden administration were communicating with Kamala Harris over Signal about an imminent military attack and describing to Kamala Harris which weapons are going to be used in the attack. And they mistakenly included a journalist who

in that conversation, do you really think Pete Hegseth would say it's not a big deal? Do you think that they think that the mistake here is being accidentally included and this getting out or having used Signal in the first place? What I understand from inside the White House, I've talked to a couple people and obviously read some of the reporting in the last period of time. They think that...

Mike Waltz is a dope for including me in the chat. And they're really focused on that. I mean, there's not a fantastic record of Democrats being completely assiduous about the storage and safekeeping of classified information. I mean, nobody's perfect here, but we're coming out of a situation where the current president was actually indicted for high...

hiding classified information in a bathroom. This is the president, of course, who is known to have discussed classified operations online

on the veranda of Mar-a-Lago. So, you know, the tone is set from the top. I mean, there are people who take security very seriously and there are people who don't take it very seriously. I wouldn't, you know, I don't think anybody would say that Donald Trump is one of those presidents who took it extremely seriously. I think this sort of speaks to the question I asked you about whether you think there are going to be any consequences, because like all of the examples you just laid out, those suggest that

maybe these are folks that think that the mistake here was most likely just including you, which makes me wonder, do you think that you are going to be now targeted by the administration? And I just want to quote from Pete Hegseth here because immediately after your story came out, he denied that he had shared...

He said that you yourself were a deceitful and highly discredited so-called journalist who made a profession of peddling hoaxes time and time again. And just given how aggressive this administration has been toward the press generally, I just wonder if you think you might be the only one, ironically, that could face any punishment from this. Well, I don't think about that. By the way, those are words that hurt. I'm really sorry that he said that.

Donald Trump has called me terrible things for five years. Just a few months ago, he called me a

radical, left, disgraceful, something I can't even remember. It's like a bunch of words. The usual words that he uses when he's mad at a reporter. So, A, I'm used to it. B, I don't care. C, I'm going to do my job harder when I'm running up against opposition. D, this is our current reality in America and someone has to just keep trying to

do accountability journalism, even though there are a lot of pressures on people not to do accountability journalism. I got to push back on you because every journalist at a major institution right now is thinking about whether or not the administration is going to be more aggressive.

with its journalists. And when you are in the position that you found yourself, you are consulting with people like at The Atlantic. You know, every major news organization has teams of lawyers, has people to talk to when you find yourselves in situations where you're wondering...

What should I do next? Are there any legal consequences? And you had mentioned earlier that people could deduce why you left that chat ultimately. And I respect the fact that you can't go into the details. But I do want to ask you whether part of the reason why you left was that you were concerned you could get in trouble for it. Like, were you worried at all that you had stayed in that chat too long? And not just you, the people that you're talking to at The Atlantic that presumably you're getting advice from.

I'm going to, Your Honor, I'm going to respectfully decline to answer that question on the grounds that I can't answer the question. I take the nation's laws very seriously, but I am not in a position to discuss decision-making related to the type of material that I was seeing. I understand. And obviously, at the end of the day, the Atlantic public...

published your story. And I just want to zoom out for a second because, as we mentioned earlier, you have covered foreign policy for decades. You have covered a lot of White Houses. And I assume that this is not the first time that you have had to weigh the public interest in publishing information that could be embarrassing or that the government doesn't want you to publish. This is not the first time that you've weighed that against national security risks. And clearly,

You decided that the story was worth publishing in the public interest to know how national security leaders are flouting security protocols. And I'm wondering, as you're sitting here now at 1141 a.m. on Tuesday, how are you thinking about this calculation? Do you think that we're safer now knowing what you reported? First and foremost, what I discovered was what I consider to be a massive security breach of

Right. A breach you can drive a Mack truck through. The idea of reporting and the idea of having a free press and the idea of holding government officials accountable is that you make the world a better place by telling the citizens what's going on and what the government is doing. And so let's assume that this is a functional government and responds in ordinary ways to the discovery of flaws. With any luck, they'll tighten up their procedures and policies. I guess the answer to my question depends on if they actually do anything. Right.

Yeah, I mean, I don't know. It's too early to say. I mean, we all can speculate about the unusual qualities of this administration and whether they respond in the way that other administrations would respond to these kind of events or these kind of revelations.

Do you think that this event was so egregious that it'll break through just actually just to regular people? Or is this going to be kind of the same thing that we're so used to, which is one side gets very upset, the other side tries to dismiss it, downplay it until it eventually goes away? Like, is this so bad that it'll break through to the immunity people feel to claims of hypocrisy? Look, 10 years ago, Donald Trump

Mm-hmm.

But the rest is history. We know what happened four years ago, five years ago, I reported that Donald Trump referred to the World War I and World War II war dead as suckers and losers. And there are people who said, so what? There's always a contingent of people these days who say, so what, for partisan reasons. And so I've gotten out of the prediction business. The ordinary rules of political physics don't really apply anymore.

But if it does get brushed off, like, what does that say to you? It says that we're in a dangerous place. Successful countries respond to observable reality by changing course to account for that reality. If these guys go back to using Signal to discuss war planning, that's on them.

That is what you would call reckless behavior. If they're going to not change certain procedures because they don't like the media or because they think that the Democrats are also bad, it just doesn't sound like a healthy country. It doesn't sound like a healthy way to run a country. Jeffrey, I want to thank you very much for your time. Thank you.

During a contentious hearing on Tuesday in front of the Senate Intelligence Committee, two members of President Trump's cabinet who were included in the text exchanges with Jeffrey Goldberg, CIA Director John Radcliffe and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, both denied that any classified material was shared in the messages. That prompted expressions of disbelief from several senators, including Angus King of Maine, an independent. Secretary Hedseff said,

put into this group text a detailed operation plan including targets, the weapons we were going to be using, attack sequences and timing. And yet you've testified that nothing in that chain was classified. Wouldn't that be classified? What if that had been made public that morning before the attack took place?

Senator, I can attest to the fact that there were no classified or intelligence equities that were included in that chat group at any time. At one point during the hearing, Democratic Senator John Ossoff of Georgia pressed Radcliffe to acknowledge the seriousness of the situation. Director Radcliffe, this was a huge mistake, correct? No. No.

A national political... Hold on. No, no, you hold on. Let me answer. No, no, Director Ratcliffe. I asked you a yes or no question, and now you'll hold on. A national political reporter... You can characterize it how you want. ...was made privy to sensitive information about imminent military operations against a foreign terrorist organization. And that wasn't a huge mistake? That wasn't a huge mistake? Well, I think they characterized it as a mistake. This is an embarrassment.

This is utterly unprofessional. There's been no apology. There has been no recognition of the gravity of this error. Meanwhile, after we spoke with him, Jeffrey Goldberg rejected the claims from Radcliffe and Gabber that there was no classified material in the messages, saying, quote, they are wrong. We'll be right back. You just realized your business needed to hire someone yesterday. How can you find amazing candidates fast?

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Indeed is all you need. In 10 minutes or less, the Opinions podcast brings you a fresh way to understand the news. With voices from New York Times Opinion. I've got a break for you. I'm actually going to tell you some good news today. One idea, one analysis, one perspective at a time. Featuring David Brooks, Tressie McMillan-Pottom, Michelle Goldberg, Thomas Friedman, and many more. Find the Opinions in your podcast player.

Here's what else you need to know today. Ukraine and Russia agreed to cease fighting in the Black Sea and to hash out the details for halting strikes on energy facilities in what would be the first significant step toward a ceasefire three years after Russia launched its war against Ukraine. But the deal falls short of a complete pause in fighting, and it remains unclear how and when the limited truce would be carried out. And...

President Trump signed a pardon for Devin Archer, a former business partner of Hunter Biden whose congressional testimony two years ago helped to fuel House Republicans' investigation into the Biden family. Archer, who had been convicted in a fraud case, earned fans on the right after he testified against Hunter Biden.

Today's episode was produced by Claire Tennis-Getter, Carlos Prieto, and Mary Wilson. It was edited by Paige Cowett and Maria Byrne, contains original music by Pat McCusker, Alicia Bietoup, and Rowan Nemisto, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly. That's it for The Daily. I'm Rachel Abrams. See you tomorrow.

You just realized your business needed to hire someone yesterday. How can you find amazing candidates fast?

Easy. Just use Indeed. Join the 3.5 million employers worldwide that use Indeed to hire great talent fast. There's no need to wait any longer. Speed up your hiring right now with Indeed. And listeners of this show will get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at Indeed.com slash NYT. Just go to Indeed.com slash NYT right now and support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast. Indeed.com slash NYT. Terms and conditions apply. Hiring.

Indeed is all you need.