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US judge orders administration to save ‘Signalgate’ chat

District Judge James Boasberg has moved to ensure Mike Waltz, Pete Hegseth and other top White House officials don’t delete their texts from the shared Signal war chat.

What to know about the Houthis group chat leak with Atlantic editor, Pete Hegseth, JD Vance and Mike Waltz
AFP

A US judge has ordered Donald Trump’s administration to preserve messages from the Signal chat group used by top national security officials to discuss plans for an attack on Yemen’s Houthi rebels.

The ruling adds to the pressure on the White House after the Atlantic magazine revealed that its editor had been accidentally added to the group on the commercially-available Signal app.

The US President has dismissed the scandal as a “witch-hunt” while attacking the Atlantic and its editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg, who broke the story earlier this week.

District Judge James Boasberg – who has already incurred Mr Trump’s wrath after ruling against the administration in a separate migration case – said he would order the government to “preserve all Signal communication between March 11 and March 15.” He also ordered the government to file details by Monday showing the steps it had taken to preserve the messages.

The dates cover the period between when National Security Adviser Mike Waltz set up the chat – and mistakenly added Goldberg – and the day of deadly US air strikes on the Iran-backed Houthis.

The Atlantic said Mr Waltz had set some of the Signal messages to disappear after one week, and others after four.

‘Not their finest hour’: US officials accidentally added journalist to group-chat on war plans

“That raises questions about whether the officials may have violated federal records law,” Mr Goldberg wrote.

The magazine published the full chat on Wednesday, including sensational messages in which Mr Hegseth revealed the timings of strikes hours before they happened and details of planes and missiles used.

Mr Waltz sent real-time intelligence on the aftermath of an attack, writing that US forces had identified the target “walking into his girlfriend’s building and it’s now collapsed.” Mr Trump has largely pinned the blame on Mr Waltz – saying he had admitted he was “responsible” – while denying that any classified material was shared in the group.

But he has also dismissed calls by Democrats for top officials to resign and insisted instead on what he called the success of the raids on the Yemeni rebels.

Mr Trump had also launched a fresh attack on Judge Boasberg the night before the latest ruling, saying it was “disgraceful” that he was dealing with the Signal case and calling the judge “highly conflicted.”

The president earlier this month called for Mr Boasberg to be impeached after the judge barred the administration’s use of an obscure wartime law to deport alleged Venezuelan gang members to El Salvador.

Pressure continues to mount on the White House over “Signalgate,” however. The top Republican and Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee issued a bipartisan call on Thursday for a Pentagon watchdog to probe the claims in the Atlantic.

“If true, this reporting raises questions as to the use of unclassified networks to discuss sensitive and classified information,” said a letter from Republican committee chair Roger Wicker and ranking Democrat Jack Reed.

AFP

Read related topics:Donald Trump

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/us-judge-orders-administration-to-save-signalgate-chat/news-story/9b7d390b6f87533b65765a7521a15dd0