As Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard faced a second day of questioning regarding a leaked Trump administration text conversation about military strikes in Yemen, she testified that the Signal messaging app used in the chat “comes pre-installed on government devices.”
Lawmakers have raised questions about the Signal app after The Atlantic’s Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey Goldberg reported that he was inadvertently added to a text conversation among high-level Trump administration officials, in which they discussed U.S. plans to strike targets in Yemen. Throughout his initial March 24 article, Goldberg raised concerns that the top Trump administration officials had discussed sensitive operational details while appearing unaware that he had been looped into the conversation.
The National Security Council has since confirmed that the text conversations Goldberg described appeared to be authentic.
Testifying before the House Intelligence Committee on March 26, Gabbard said the National Security Council is still investigating how Goldberg came to have access to the group chat and how his presence went unnoticed for as long as it did. She reiterated that no classified information was transmitted across this text channel.
In Tuesday’s testimony, Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe—both of whom were on the leaked chat chain—testified that they were unaware of any discussions within the channel about the specific weapons and timing of the renewed U.S. strikes in Yemen.
Current classification rules published by the Department of Defense (DOD) and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) suggest that Top Secret classifications be applied to any communications that include “military plans, weapons systems, or operations,” “foreign activities of the United States,” or “information detailing damage assessment.”
When asked to justify her Tuesday testimony before the Senate with the new messages released on Wednesday, Gabbard said, “My answer yesterday was based on my recollection, or the lack thereof, on the details that were posted there.
“I did not recall the exact details of what was included there.”