By Mark Antonio Wright
Monday, March 24, 2025
One of the most profound indictments of Joe Biden’s
tenure as president of the United States was that he never fired anyone of note
who worked for him, no matter the embarrassment, the failure, or the
catastrophe.
When the Biden Department of Education botched the
rollout of its new FAFSA student-aid application, causing confusion and delays
for millions of American families, Education Secretary Miguel Cardona stayed at
his post. When the southern border descended into lawlessness and chaos,
Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas kept his job. When Defense
Secretary Lloyd Austin failed to disclose his cancer diagnosis and
hospitalization to Biden and his White House, Austin returned to run the
Pentagon. The Afghanistan withdrawal was a complete and utter debacle. But no
senior national security official lost his job for it, ever.
Firing a top official doesn’t always fix an
organization’s underlying problems, of course. But when a president cashiers
one of his own appointees, it’s an unmistakable acknowledgement that someone
has failed, and it’s a hard-boiled message that there will be accountability.
Because Biden repeatedly declined to send that message, he begat further
failures by reinforcing the sense that the embarrassments, incompetence, and
outright failures of his administration would be tolerated by the barely-there
occupant of the Oval Office.
And that’s why it’s so important for Donald Trump to
publicly defenestrate at least one of his high-profile appointees who are
involved in the jaw-dropping scandal of the Houthi bombing-campaign leak, in
which a who’s-who of America’s top national-security officials decided to
discuss the coordination of a no-kidding shooting war over a Signal chat,
despite having inadvertently invited Atlantic magazine editor Jeffrey
Goldberg to listen in.
The whole story is a tale so clownish, so stunning, so
outlandish that it would seem to better fit into a gonzo satire of government
ineptitude such as Burn After Reading or Veep.
But, instead, the real-life national security adviser,
Mike Waltz, decided to debate the merits of bombing the terrorist group that
runs a foreign country, Yemen, and is an ally of the Islamic Republic of Iran
in conversation with the real-life secretary of state (Marco Rubio), defense
secretary (Pete Hegseth), CIA director (John Ratcliffe), White House chief of
staff (Susie Wiles), treasury secretary (Scott Bessent), director of national
intelligence (Tulsi Gabbard), and JD Vance, the vice president of the United
States, among others, over an unsecured system in open view of a prominent
American journalist!
These U.S. officials chewed over highly sensitive topics
such as the merits of U.S. military action against the Houthis, our interests
in doing so vis-à-vis our European allies, and then, hours before American
servicemen would go into action, operational details about the plan of
attack.
They then made sure to dab each other up with
embarrassing attaboy emojis.
From Goldberg’s write-up in The Atlantic:
It was the next morning,
Saturday, March 15, when this story became truly bizarre.
At 11:44 a.m., the account
labeled “Pete Hegseth” posted in Signal a “TEAM UPDATE.” I will not quote from
this update, or from certain other subsequent texts. The information contained
in them, if they had been read by an adversary of the United States, could
conceivably have been used to harm American military and intelligence
personnel, particularly in the broader Middle East, Central Command’s area of
responsibility. What I will say, in order to illustrate the shocking
recklessness of this Signal conversation, is that the Hegseth post contained
operational details of forthcoming strikes on Yemen, including information
about targets, weapons the U.S. would be deploying, and attack sequencing.
The only person to reply to the
update from Hegseth was the person identified as the vice president. “I will
say a prayer for victory,” Vance wrote. (Two other users subsequently added
prayer emoji.)
According to the lengthy Hegseth
text, the first detonations in Yemen would be felt two hours hence, at 1:45
p.m. eastern time. So I waited in my car in a supermarket parking lot. If this
Signal chat was real, I reasoned, Houthi targets would soon be bombed. At about
1:55, I checked X and searched Yemen. Explosions were then being heard
across Sanaa, the capital city.
There are people out there defending these Trump
administration officials even now, by claiming that a several-hour
heads-up to the Houthis about a coming operation, if leaked, wouldn’t have
mattered, or that this was 7D chess to set up Jeffrey Goldberg, or that this is all
actually Goldberg’s fault because he’s a radical leftist or
something.
But all that is — and I don’t put this lightly — complete
BS. The fact that these conversations happened outside of official government
communications channels at all is a scandal in itself. It’s a total
breach of protocol and operational security (despite the fact that Hegseth made
sure to brag in the chat that “we are currently clean on OPSEC.”)
It goes without saying that Trump won’t fire everyone
involved in this debacle, which would include most of his senior
national-security staff. (And Trump can’t, of course, fire Vice President
Vance.)
I doubt many of these officials will even get disciplined
— even though every last one of them is complicit in this scandal. At a
minimum, not a single one of these officials objected to the fact that the
conversation was happening over Signal at all, despite all of them having an
affirmative duty to object to that medium of conversation. Not one of them
protested the sharing of sensitive military-operations information or
intervened to say, “Hey, let’s talk about this later over the appropriate
secure channels.”
But Trump should hold someone accountable. It’s
likely that federal law was broken in this incident. At the absolute very
least, these officials conducted themselves extraordinarily foolishly and in a
manner that is unbecoming of their offices. They have lost the credibility to
criticize the past, present, and future mishandling of sensitive American
national-security information (such as Hillary Clinton’s home-brew email
server, and Joe Biden and Donald Trump’s stashing of documents in their garages
and bathrooms).
In my view, the most egregious behavior was Defense
Secretary Pete Hegseth’s. (The stupidest was National Security Adviser Mike
Waltz’s adding of Goldberg to the conversation in the first place.)
Pete Hegseth — the top civilian in the Department of the
Defense and a man who has command authority over U.S. military operations
worldwide — texted information, over an unsecured channel, that “contained
operational details of forthcoming strikes on Yemen, including information
about targets, weapons the U.S. would be deploying, and attack sequencing.”
That’s shocking, egregious, and totally outrageous.
President Trump should demand Pete Hegseth’s resignation.
Today.
A question now hangs over this administration: Will there
be accountability under Trump — or does the buck stop nowhere, as it did for
the previous four years?
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