Reed: IG report confirms Hegseth's disregard for safety of U.S. troops

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Reed: IG report confirms Hegseth's disregard for safety of U.S. troops

Senator Jack Reed (D-R.I.), the top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, stated that a recent Pentagon Inspector General report confirms that Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseths use of the commercial messaging app Signal to transmit sensitive details about a military operation displayed reckless disregard for the safety of U.S. troops.

The report clearly shows that Secretary Hegseth broke Department of Defense rules by sharing information that was classified at the time. These messages included exact timings and locations of strikes, which, if intercepted by adversaries, could have allowed Houthi forces to target American pilots, Reed commented after the report was provided to members of the Senate Armed Services Committee on Wednesday.

Reed noted that the report concluded this transmission of information posed a serious risk to the mission and endangered U.S. personnel.

He also criticized Hegseth for previously assuring Congress and the public that no classified data was shared. The Inspector Generals findings now directly challenge those assertions, Reed added.

Earlier this year, Reed and Committee Chairman Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) requested that Acting Pentagon Inspector General Steven Stebbins investigate the circumstances of Hegseths Signal communications regarding a planned strike against Houthi militants in Yemen. During the investigation, it was revealed that Jeffrey Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, was mistakenly added to the chat, exposing candid discussions between Hegseth and other senior officials including CIA Director John Ratcliffe, Vice President Vance, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

Chairman Wicker stated Thursday that Hegseth acted within his authority in communicating information to Cabinet-level officials. The reports make it evident that the Secretary had the authority to share this information with other Cabinet members. It also highlights the need for senior leaders to have better tools to handle classified information securely in real time across various situations, Wicker said.

Author: Harper Simmons

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