“Perhaps in the coming days”: The Atlantic Editor Goldberg weighs the participation of the texts of the Yemen War plan
Jeffrey Goldberg is studying letters he accidentally sent by senior Trump administration officials regarding the US war plans in Yemen.
The editor -in -chief of the Atlantic Ocean revealed that he weighs the participation of the content content after the Minister of Defense Higseth House Refusal to send any sensitive information in a group chat on the encrypted messaging application signal.
“Perhaps in the coming days, I will be able to tell you,” Well, I have a plan to publicly hold these materials. “But I will not say that now, because there are many conversations that should happen about it,” Tell Goldberg “Blueck“Podcast on Tuesday.” I have my colleagues and I and the people who advise us about this have some interesting conversations about this. But just because they are not responsible for the material, it does not mean that I will be irresponsible. “
Goldberg shared his story about adding it to the group chat unintentionally in a story of Atlantic on Monday. Since its release, Trump administration officials have resorted to explicit denial and personal attacks. Higseth Goldberg described the “so -called journalist” who was “wandering in deception.”
Goldberg said the defensive reaction is equal to the path of Trump officials.
“In such moments, when they are under pressure because they have been arrested in their hand on the jar of cookies or anything else, as you know, they will literally say anything they take out of the moment,” Goldberg said.
In the face of the Higseth, Goldberg said that the messages he sent included targets that the army was “trying to kill in the next two hours.” This leak was ignored by the Republican Party.
Senator John Kennedy, R. La, said.
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