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The administration has downplayed the importance of the text messages inadvertently sent to The Atlantic’s editor in chief.
It took Atlantic Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey Goldberg four days to exit a Signal group chat with Trump administration officials ...
The Trump administration scandal involving a Signal chain that inadvertently included the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic has continued to dominate the news in the days since it was first reported.
Donald Trump's administration was left red-faced last month after journalist Jeffrey Goldberg was mistakenly added to a top ...
Jeffrey Goldberg, the Atlantic's top editor who was included in a Signal chat of Trump administration officials discussing plans for a military strike, pushed back Sunday on National Security ...
A report on Sunday revealed the phone error months earlier that eventually led to a journalist being added to a secret ...
His inclusion on a high-level Signal chat about American war plans highlights how the Trump administration is operating — and ...
Before he was given access to insider information about the United States cabinet’s most secretive war plans, Jeffrey Goldberg spent some of the early years of his journalism career at the Forward. As ...
Though he disparaged Goldberg's reputation as a Trump critic, Waltz also said he took "full responsibility" for the journalist winding up in the chat.
A phone contact error led US national security adviser Mike Waltz to inadvertently add journalist Jeffrey Goldberg to a ...
Probe finds that, months earlier, National Security Adviser Mike Waltz inadvertently saved journalist Jeffrey Goldberg's ...
The Signal chat story is the latest one Goldberg ... between President Donald Trump and The Atlantic Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey Goldberg, who once reported that Trump referred to fallen military ...