Atlantic Publishes Trump Admin’s Leaked Signal Messages on Houthis

The Atlantic has released a trove of Signal messages accidentally sent to its editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg by Trump administration officials. The texts detail plans for an imminent U.S. military strike on Yemen’s Houthi rebels. The publication has thrust the administration’s foreign policy into a harsh spotlight amid rising Middle East tensions.

The leaked messages reveal heated internal discussions about targeting Houthi sites linked to Iran. They suggest Trump aims to send a strong message to Tehran through this action. Officials appear caught off guard by the blunder exposing their strategy to the public prematurely.

The White House has not denied the messages’ authenticity but called the leak a security lapse. Spokespeople insist the strike plans remain fluid and no final decision has been made. Critics argue the exposure undermines U.S. credibility at a delicate moment in global diplomacy.

The Atlantic justified publishing the texts as a public service to reveal Trump’s intentions. Editor Jeffrey Goldberg said the error handed his team a rare window into administration thinking. The move has drawn both praise and condemnation from media and political circles alike.

Yemen’s Houthis have escalated attacks on Red Sea shipping lanes prompting U.S. concern. The leaked plans hint at airstrikes to cripple their missile capabilities. Military experts warn such a move could inflame the region further drawing in Iran and its proxies more directly.

Democrats have pounced on the leak to question Trump’s competence in handling classified matters. They argue it reflects chaos within his national security team at a critical time. Progressive lawmakers called for oversight hearings to probe how such a breach occurred unchecked.

Republicans largely downplayed the incident as an overblown distraction from Trump’s goals. Some like Speaker Mike Johnson suggested the media is hyping it for clicks not substance. Yet privately GOP hawks worry it could embolden adversaries watching the U.S. stumble publicly.

The fallout leaves Trump’s team scrambling to regain control of the narrative before any strike. The Houthis have vowed retaliation if hit raising stakes for an already volatile situation. For now the leak has turned a clandestine plan into a global debate testing Trump’s resolve anew.

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Total News Sources31
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Center8
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