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I think they already know. This morning, I've been watching clips of Republicans, including the Speaker of the US House, saying, "Ooopsie. Everybody makes mistakes!". Hegseth acted like a 6 year old caught with his hand in the cookie jar, blaming the journalist....And eventually, Trump's sedition with Russia will be known, and he will be stained idelibly for it. Maybe not the full details, but eventually someone will talk. There are always people who know. And it isn't possible for Putin and Trump to speak in Russian, so there are witnesses.
David French, as usual, writes in a NY Times editorial what any rational American should be saying:
Opinion: If Pete Hegseth had any honor, he would resign
Opinion: If Pete Hegseth had any honor, he would resign
Opinion: If Pete Hegseth had any honor, he would resign
There is not an officer alive whose career would survive a security breach like the one that just happened at the fingertips of the secretary of defense.
I don’t know how Pete Hegseth can look service members in the eye. He’s just blown his credibility as a military leader...
This would be a stunning breach of security. I’m a former Army JAG officer (an Army lawyer). I’ve helped investigate numerous allegations of classified information spillages, and I’ve never even heard of anything this egregious — a secretary of defense intentionally using a civilian messaging app to share sensitive war plans without even apparently noticing a journalist was in the chat.
There is not an officer alive whose career would survive a security breach like that. It would normally result in instant consequences (relief from command, for example) followed by a comprehensive investigation and, potentially, criminal charges.
Federal law makes it a crime when a person — through gross negligence — removes information “relating to the national defense” from “its proper place of custody or delivered to anyone in violation of his trust, or to be lost, stolen, abstracted or destroyed.”
It’s way too soon to say whether Hegseth’s incompetence is also criminal, but I raise the possibility to demonstrate the sheer magnitude of the reported mistake. A security breach that significant requires a thorough investigation.





























