President Donald Trump is standing by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth as some Democrats have called for him to resign because of a leaked Signal chat that had information about a military strike in Yemen.
The president talked about the controversy after Hegseth sent details about the strike to people in the administration in a Signal chat that included Jeffrey Goldberg, the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, by mistake. Goldberg published the full messages on Wednesday morning.
After several Democrats in Congress called for Hegseth to step down because of the scandal, reporters asked Trump if he thought Hegseth might want to resign.
âHegseth is doing a great job, he had nothing to do with this. Hegseth. How do you bring Hegseth into this?â Trump replied.
Trump also acknowledged that his White House national security advisor, Mike Waltz, took responsibility for mistakenly adding Goldberg to the Signal chat.
âMike Waltz ⌠he claimed responsibility, I would imagine. It had nothing to do with anyone else. It was Mike, I guess, I donât know, I was told it was Mike,â Trump said when asked about the investigation.
Trump again played down the controversy over whether or not Hegseth shared secret information that could have put the operation at risk by focusing on the missionâs success.
âThere was no harm done because the attack was unbelievably successful that night,â Trump said.
Trump asked Democrats why they were calling for Hegseth to step down and questioned whether the Signal app was even working right.
âLook, itâs all a witch hunt ⌠you wanna ask about whether or not Signal works, I donât know if Signal works, I think that Signal could be defective to be honest with you,â Trump said.
The encrypted app that deletes messages after they have been received is popular in Washington, DC, for communications.
âYou use Signal, we use Signal, and everybody uses Signal, but it could be a defective platform, and weâre going to have to find that out,â Trump said.
Arizona Democratic Sen. Ruben Gallego and Mark Kelly called for Hegsethâs resignation for sharing details of the operation on the platform.
âThe Signal incident is what happens when you have the most unqualified Secretary of Defense weâve ever seen. Weâre lucky it didnât cost any servicemembers their lives, but for the safety of our military and our country, Secretary Hegseth needs to resign,â Kelly wrote on X.
âThis could have gotten our men and women killed!â Gallego wrote on social media. âThe Secretary of Defense needs to resign. The incompetence and cover up is embarrassing.â
Hegseth fired back on X, insisting that he did not share any classified information in the chat and criticized The Atlantic for mischaracterizing his texts as âwar plansâ on Tuesday.
âThe Atlantic released the so-called âwar plansâ and those âplansâ include: No names. No targets. No locations. No units. No routes. No sources. No methods. And no classified information. Those are some really sh***y war plans,â Hegseth wrote on X.
Hegseth sent a message called âTeam Updateâ to a group of top Trump administration officials on March 15 that included information about the planned military strikes, including when they would happen and what weapons would be used.
Hegseth argued he was only providing a âteam update,â repeating that he did not share any âwar plans.â
âMy job â team update, to provide updates in real time. General updates in real time keep everybody informed. That is what I did. Thatâs my job,â Hegseth added.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio also responded to questions about the incident.
âObviously, someone made a mistake, someone made a big mistake and added a journalist. Nothing against journalists but you ainât supposed to be on that thing. None of the information on there at any point threatened the operation or the lives of our servicemen,â Rubio said, adding that there was no classified information on the chat.