Pentagon report slams Hegseth’s Signal app misuse
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has landed in hot water over a Pentagon report that’s raising eyebrows across the conservative sphere.
Fox News reported that a recent Inspector General (IG) investigation found that Hegseth breached War Department rules by transmitting sensitive, nonpublic details about a strike operation via the encrypted app Signal on his personal device.
This controversy kicked off when Hegseth, monitoring a coordinated strike on Houthi targets in Yemen from a secure facility at his home, decided to share what he called an unclassified summary with a Signal group chat.
Strike Details Shared Before Execution
Here’s where it gets dicey: Hegseth sent specifics about the quantity of manned U.S. aircraft and strike timelines—info mirroring a classified Central Command email—roughly two to four hours before the operation unfolded.
If that intel had slipped into the wrong hands, the IG warns, Houthi forces could have repositioned assets or countered U.S. troops, potentially derailing the mission and endangering pilots.
Thankfully, no actual harm came to pass, but the report underscores that such risky behavior could have spelled disaster for our brave men and women in uniform.
Signal Chats and Security Risks
Adding fuel to the fire, Hegseth’s Signal chat included an uncleared journalist, Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg, who was accidentally added by then-National Security Advisor Mike Waltz to a Cabinet-level group.
War Department policy is crystal clear: government business must stay off personal devices and commercial apps like Signal, especially when dealing with nonpublic Pentagon data.
Yet Hegseth, despite being the top authority on classification with the power to declassify at will, opted for an unapproved, unsecured network—hardly the disciplined move you’d expect from a leader of his stature.
Defense Team Huddle Under Scrutiny
Beyond this incident, Pentagon officials revealed Hegseth engaged in other Signal chats, including one dubbed “Defense Team Huddle,” where he allegedly shared operational tidbits and internal discussions.
Even with a special tethering setup allowing him to use his personal phone near his secure Pentagon suite, the IG couldn’t confirm if this met security standards—a bureaucratic shrug that leaves more questions than answers.
Then there’s the issue of federal record-keeping laws, which Hegseth reportedly flouted by letting auto-deleted Signal messages vanish before preserving them for government accounts within the required 20 days.
Hegseth’s Defense and Department Spin
Hegseth himself pushed back, stating, “There were no details that would endanger our troops or the mission,” in a July 25 response to the DoD IG— a claim that sounds reassuring until you dig into the IG’s stark warnings about potential compromise.
Similarly, the department’s chief spokesperson chimed in, “This Inspector General review is a TOTAL exoneration of Secretary Hegseth and proves what we knew all along — no classified information was shared,” though one might wonder if dodging a bullet equates to a clean slate when the stakes are this high.
Look, while no classified info leaked and no troops were harmed, conservatives who value strong leadership can’t help but wince at such a preventable misstep—Hegseth’s heart may be in the right place, but protocol isn’t just red tape; it’s a shield for our forces against a world that doesn’t play nice.





