By Stacy M. Brown | The Washington Informer | Word In Black

This post was originally published on The Washington Informer

People on social media and private rooms alike are questioning whether former Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin (left) would have still had his job had he leaked war plans over Signal โ€” as was the case in a group chat with current Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (right), Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other officials. (Courtesy photos)
People on social media and private rooms alike are questioning whether former Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin (left) would have still had his job had he leaked war plans over Signal โ€” as was the case in a group chat with current Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (right), Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other officials. (Courtesy photos)

(WIB) – The question being asked all over social media, in homes, offices, and even behind closed doors in Washington: If former Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin had leaked war plans over Signal, would Republicans already be demanding his resignation?

โ€œImagine the uproar if Lloyd Austin had been discussing war plans over Signal and inadvertently added a journalist,โ€ said political strategist Chris D. Jackson. โ€œWeโ€™d be hearing calls for impeachment by now. The double standards are astounding.โ€

Jackson, who is white, didnโ€™t mince words. Austin, a Black four-star general and career military leader, was fired by Donald Trump and labeled a โ€œDEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) hire.โ€ Now, Trumpโ€™s national security team is under scrutinyโ€” and the silence from many corners is deafening.

According to The Atlantic, editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg was accidentally added to an 18-member Signal group chat that included Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, and others. The group, created by Trump national security adviser Mike Waltz, was discussing a pending U.S. military strike against Houthi rebels in Yemen.

The White House confirmed the Signal messages reported by The Atlantic appear authentic. The leak may have violated multiple Pentagon security protocols. Defense Department rules prohibit using messaging apps like Signal to transmit, process, or access non-public DoD information.

Vice President Vance, in the chat, questioned the political risk of launching the strike. He worried about โ€œa moderate to severe spike in oil pricesโ€ and whether the operationโ€™s timing was a โ€œmistake.โ€ 

He went further: โ€œI just hate bailing Europe out again.โ€ 

Hegseth responded to the vice president, supporting his position completely.

โ€œI fully share your loathing of European free-loading,โ€ Hegseth said. โ€œItโ€™s PATHETIC. I think we should go.โ€

Goldberg said he received Waltzโ€™s Signal invite and immediately notified officials. 

Hegsethโ€™s response wasnโ€™t to explain how such a breach occurred but to attack Goldberg, calling him โ€œa deceitful, discredited so-called journalist.โ€

That attack drew even more criticism.

โ€œThis is one of the most stunning breaches of military intelligence I have read about in a very, very long time,โ€ Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said on the Senate floor.

House and Senate Leaders Weigh In: โ€˜American Lives Are On the Lineโ€™ 

Schumer was not the only leader to weigh in on the officials using Signal to communicate and accidentally adding Goldberg to the group chat.

Senator Jack Reed of Rhode Island, chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee, called the incident โ€œan egregious failure of operational security and common sense.โ€

โ€œAmerican lives are on the line,โ€ Reed said. โ€œThe carelessness shown by Trumpโ€™s Cabinet is stunning and dangerous. I will be seeking answers from the Administration immediately.โ€โ€™

Congressman Jim Himes of Connecticut, ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said if a lower-level official had done whatโ€™s being reported, โ€œthey would likely lose their clearance and be subject to criminal investigation. The American people deserve answers.โ€

Republicans have also voiced concern.

Republican chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi, told reporters: โ€œWeโ€™re very concerned about it, and weโ€™ll be looking into it on a bipartisan basis.โ€

Senate Majority Whip John Thune (R-SD) added, โ€œWeโ€™ve got to run it to the ground, figure out what went on there.โ€

The National Security Council is investigating how Goldbergโ€™s number ended up in the Signal group. Under the Biden administration, officials were allowed to download Signal on government-issued phones but instructed never to use it for classified conversations.

Signal is end-to-end encrypted and considered safer than regular texting, but it isnโ€™t secure for national security discussions. Pentagon regulations prohibit it for classified or sensitive content. Googleโ€™s threat intelligence team has also warned that Russiaโ€™s intelligence services have ramped up attempts to target Signal users in government and military circles.

Gun violence survivor and elected official Brandon Wolf said the response would look very different if the officials involved werenโ€™t white and connected to Trump.

โ€œIf it were Lloyd Austin, Jake Sullivan, and Kamala Harris in a sloppy Signal chat,โ€ he said, โ€œ[Trump] would be first in line demanding their resignations.โ€

The post With War Plans Leak, Citizens Note Former Gen. Lloyd Austin Would Be Fired appeared first on The Washington Informer.