×
×
homepage logo
LOGIN
SUBSCRIBE

Greater Nashua

The White House says nothing classified was shared on Signal. Democrats say that strains credulity

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration struggled Wednesday to stem the fallout from revelations that top national security officials discussed sensitive attack plans over a messaging app and mistakenly added a journalist to the chain. The White House said the information shared through the publicly available Signal app with Jeffrey Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Atlantic magazine, was not classified, an assertion that Democrats said strains credulity considering that it detailed plans for an upcoming attack on Yemen's Houthis. President Donald Trump during an Oval Office appearance to announce new tariffs on imported vehicles seemed frustrated as reporters repeatedly questioned him about the matter. "I think it's all a witch hunt," Trump said. The decision on determining whether the information is classified ultimately lies with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who in ...

New England

more New England

International

more International

Business & Tech

more Business & Tech

Local Sports

more Local Sports

Obituaries

more Obituaries

Community News

more Community News

Arts and Entertainment

more Arts and Entertainment

National

more National

National Sports

more National Sports

more