Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth lashed out at the media and ādisgruntled former employeesā on Monday as the media doubled down on the Signal controversy.Hegseth stood firm in statements to reporters at the White House for the traditional Easter Egg Roll. He refuted recent reports of a second Signal app discussion in which he disclosed intelligence about Yemen attacks. He assured reporters that he and President Donald Trump are in complete agreement.
āWhat a big surprise that a few leakers get fired and suddenly a bunch of hit pieces come out from the same media that peddled the Russia hoax,ā Hegseth said, responding to new reporting from The New York Times.āThis is what the media does. They take anonymous sources from disgruntled former employees, and then they try to slash and burn people and ruin their reputations,ā Hegseth continued. āNot going to work with me, because weāre changing the Defense Department, putting the Pentagon back in the hands of war-fighters. And anonymous smears from disgruntled former employees on old news doesnāt matter. So Iām happy to be here at the Easter Egg Roll with my dad and my kids.ā
Asked if he had spoken to the president, Hegseth said he had.āAnd we are going to continue fighting. On the same page all the way,ā Hegseth said.White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt denied a report from NPR that Trump is looking to replace Hegseth as Secretary of Defense.The White House has been embroiled in a dispute about information security when The Atlanticās editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, seemed to be inadvertently added to a group chat with multiple key Trump officials planning a strike on the Houthis on Signal.In April, a similar scandal occurred when Hegseth, according to the New York Times, allegedly discussed specifics of a March military operation against Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen in another Signal messaging conversation with his wife and brother.On Monday, NPR reported that despite these concerns, āThe White House has begun the process of looking for a new secretary of defense, according to a U.S. official who was not authorized to speak publicly.āThe NPR story was revised to reflect that Leavitt had called it āfake news.ā
āThis @NPR story is total FAKE NEWS based on one anonymous source who clearly has no idea what they are talking about,ā the White House spokeswoman wrote. āAs the President said this morning, he stands strongly behind @SecDef.āThe White Houseās official āRapid Responseā account on X shared a post slamming the report as well, claiming, āLies from NPR ā which, as we all know, is a Fake News propaganda machine.āThis is the second time recently that Trump has clarified that heās standing by Hegseth, as some Democrats have called for him to resign because of a leaked Signal chat that containedĀ information about a military strike in Yemen.Last month, the president discussed the controversy following Hegsethās accidental transmission of details about the strike to members of the administration in a Signal chat, which also included Jeffrey Goldberg, the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic. Goldberg published the full messages.
After several Democrats in Congress called for Hegseth to step down because of the scandal, reporters asked Trump if he thought Hegseth might want to resign.āHegseth is doing a great job, he had nothing to do with this. Hegseth. How do you bring Hegseth into this?ā Trump replied.Trump also acknowledged that his White House national security advisor, Mike Waltz, took responsibility for mistakenly adding Goldberg to the Signal chat.āMike Waltz ⦠he claimed responsibility, I would imagine. It had nothing to do with anyone else. It was Mike, I guess, I donāt know, I was told it was Mike,ā Trump said when asked about the investigation.
Trump again played down the controversy over whether or not Hegseth shared secret information that could have put the operation at risk by focusing on the missionās success.āThere was no harm done because the attack was unbelievably successful that night,ā Trump said.
