A public watchdog group, American Oversight, wants Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and other officials to take responsibility for Signalgate. On Monday, a security breach was experienced when leaked classified war information went viral. This occurred after The Atlantic journalist Jeffrey Goldberg revealed that he was mistakenly added to a Signal group chat where Hegseth and other top officials discussed war plans.
Following the security breach, the watchdog group has sued the Minnesota native and some other administration officials in connection with the incident. Per a report from HuffPost, the lawsuit sought a declaration from a federal judge that the government officials on the chat had violated their duty to uphold laws around the preservation of official communication.
The filing highlighted that agency heads must make and preserve policies and procedures according to the Federal Records Act. However, the Signal app had an auto-delete feature, which National Adviser Michael Waltz reportedly set up. With the delete feature, texts would be automatically cleared after a week or more. As such, there would be no preservation of the policies implemented, leading to a breach of the Act.
As reported by Goldberg, the texts in the chat included conversations on weapons, tactics, and detailed targets for a U.S. strike on Houthi rebels in Yemen. The journalist also showed Hegseth’s message to the group, declaring that they were “currently clean on OPSEC.”
In no time, news of the lawsuit made the rounds and aroused reactions from internet users. This user wrote, “Exactly. They don’t learn from mistakes because they, like Trump, are incapable of admitting they make any or that they’re responsible for anything.”
Another netizen theorized that the leak had something to do with Russia gaining control over the U.S. The commenter wrote, “Once people accept and understand that this is all deliberate because the US had been taken over by Russia, it all makes sense. We need to stop acting shocked at the ‘ineptitude’ and start acting like a country under attack.”
A third user criticized, “He legit texted war plans! And sensitive classified information. If anyone in the Biden administration did this, the GOP would be grinding their pitchforks and calling them traitors!’
A fourth comment read, “Trump took a lot of failed Republican politicians and gave them jobs. They lost elections, but Trump put them into positions of power. He wants people to have loyalty to himself, not America.”
A fifth Internet user suggested, “Strip all of them of their security clearances.”
Meanwhile, the defense secretary has denied the allegations of sharing war plans in the group chat. While speaking to reporters following the scandal, the statesman said, “Nobody’s texting war plans. I know exactly what I’m doing.”
Government officials have not responded to the lawsuit. U.S. District Judge James Boasberg has been assigned the case.