WASHINGTON | Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said Wednesday it was a “mistake” for national security officials to discuss sensitive military plans on a group text chain that also included a journalist — a leak that has roiled President Donald Trump’s national security leadership.
Speaking before the House Intelligence Committee, Gabbard said the conversation included “candid and sensitive” information about military strikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen. But as she told senators during testimony on Tuesday, she said the texts did not contain any classified information.
“It was a mistake that a reporter was inadvertently added,” Gabbard said.
Wednesday’s hearing was called to discuss an updated report on national security threats facing the U.S. Instead, much of the focus was on the text chain, which included Gabbard, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Vice President JD Vance and other top officials.
Jeffrey Goldberg, the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, was also added, and on Wednesday his publication released more details from the chats, showing the level of detail they offered about the strikes.
Democrats have demanded an investigation into the sloppy communication, saying it may have exposed sensitive military information that could have jeopardized the mission or put U.S. service members at risk.
The National Security Council has said it will investigate the matter, which Trump on Tuesday downplayed as a “glitch.” Goldberg said he received the Signal invitation from Mike Waltz, Trump’s national security adviser, who was in the group chat and has taken responsibility for the lapse.
Even though the texts contained detailed information on military actions, Gabbard, Ratcliffe and the White House have all said none of the information was classified — an assertion Democrats flatly rejected on Wednesday.
“You all know that’s a lie,” Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas, told Ratcliffe and Gabbard, who said that any decisions to classify or declassify military information falls to the secretary of defense.
Colorado Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet went further. He grilled Gabbard and others the previous day during a Senate hearing, essentially shouting down Ratcliffe at one point during the tense hearing.
“In an open Intelligence Committee hearing yesterday, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said that Trump administration officials did not discuss any classified information — or information on weapons packages, targets, or timing — in their Signal group chat coordinating U.S. strikes on Yemen,” Bennet said in a social media post Wednesday. “As the chat’s transcript makes clear, this is plainly false, meaning that Gabbard lied to Congress and committed perjury. She must resign immediately.”
Aurora Democratic Rep. Jason Crow during the House hearing drew questions from Trump security and defense officials in an effort to insist that components of the scrutinized text-chain were sensitive “classified” secrets, and that the group chat put soldiers at risk.
Crow cited security protocols and regulations revealing that details about imminent military attacks are state “classified” secrets.
“I deployed three times to combat in service to this nation,” Crow told the committee. “I learned in that time of service that responsibility is core to leadership. You accept responsibility when things go wrong, you admit mistakes, you set the standard from the very top.”
Crow said the ability of Trump officials to admit the gravity of the Signal chain-text episode and take responsibility warrants action from the president.
“It is completely outrageous to me….that administration officials come before us today with impunity, no acceptance or responsibility, excuse after excuse after excuse,” Crow told the committee. “We send our men and women down range to do incredibly difficult, incredibly dangerous things on our behalf, and yet nobody is willing to come to us and say, this was wrong. This was a breach of security, and we won’t do it again.”
Crow said a lack of accountability by the administration cannot be dismissed.
“It is outrageous, and it is a leadership failure, and that’s why Secretary Hegseth, who undoubtedly transmitted classified, sensitive operational information via this chain, resign.”
Several Democrats on the panel said Hegseth should resign because of the leak.
“This is classified information. It’s a weapon system, as well as a sequence of strikes, as well as details of the operations,” said Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, a Democrat from Illinois. “He needs to resign immediately.”
Ratcliffe defended his use of Signal as “appropriate” and said questions over the Signal leak have overshadowed the military operation targeting the Houthis.
“What is most important is that the mission was a remarkable success,” he told lawmakers. “That’s what did happen, not what possibly could have happened.”
The discussion at times grew heated as Ratcliffe and Democratic lawmakers spoke over one another. At one point, Rep. Jimmy Gomez, an Illinois Democrat, asked whether he knew whether Hegseth was drinking alcohol when he participated in the chat.
“I think that’s an offensive line of questioning,” Ratcliffe angrily replied. “The answer is no.”
Ratcliffe and Gomez then began shouting over each other as Gomez sought to ask a follow-up question. “We want to know if his performance is compromised,” Gomez said.
Wednesday’s hearing was called to discuss the intelligence community’s annual report on threats to American national security. The report lists China, Russia, Iran and North Korea as strategic adversaries, and notes that drug cartels and transnational criminal organizations pose other threats to Americans.
The presentations from top Trump appointees reflect Trump’s foreign policy priorities, including a focus on combating the flow of fentanyl, illegal immigration and human trafficking, and are taking place as Trump attempts to work out a ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine three years after Russia’s invasion.
— Sentinel Colorado added to this report.




