The Worst Part of Pete Hegseth’s Group Chat Debacle
And why the
careless secretary of defense should resign.
March 25, 2025
By David French
There are so many ways in which sharing war plans is among the most egregious forms of security breach. It’s hard to think of a form of security breach that is worse than this. But aside from that, there is now public insight into conversations that were meant to be private.
You have
the vice president questioning the judgment of the president. You have the vice
president laying into our allies. I know that’s something that they do
publicly, as well, but there’s a difference between public communication and
private communication. The private communication was never intended for the
allies. So all of these things are damaging diplomatically. They’re damaging
politically. They’re damaging militarily, and in the worst scenario, they could
be catastrophically dangerous for American lives.
It should be obvious to people that sharing plans for an attack hours before the attack could create problems, but let’s get a little bit more specific: The Houthis could move some of their weapons away from targeted locations. They could move senior officials away from targeted locations so that the strikes are less effective. They could choose to, for example, launch missiles themselves to attack before they are attacked, an action that could be incredibly costly in lives and in ships. They could move their senior leaders.
The
administration is saying now that there was nothing classified in the chat and
they weren’t really war plans, in many ways, casting aspersions on Goldberg’s
integrity. In fact, when Pete Hegseth, the secretary of defense, was confronted
with these facts, he attacked Goldberg and did not acknowledge his own
wrongdoing. But there is not an officer alive whose career would survive a
security breach like this.
From the
very first weeks that you’re a member of the military, you start learning about
operational security. This is drilled into officers. And those consequences
would be instant relief from command.
I have seen
this with my own eyes. I have been a part of this process. You would have a
relief from command followed by a comprehensive investigation, and potentially
criminal charges. In the military, you would be advising an officer to seek
counsel, to get a lawyer instantly, because the criminal investigation would be
equally instant.
In the
civilian context, and Pete Hegseth is a civilian, there should be an immediate
Department of Justice investigation into how this happened. Why were they using
the Signal app, which the Pentagon has warned members of the military against
using for Department of Defense business? Who was on the chat? Were they
posting in it directly? Were they posting through subordinates? How often is
sensitive business being conducted on Signal?
There are
so many questions that arise that the Department of Justice should be
answering.
And I
mentioned 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 and it is delivered to anyone in violation of
trust or is 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 mistake, a security breach this
significant requires thorough investigation. I can assure you that a Signal
chat is not the right place to share sensitive information about upcoming
American strikes.
The White
House’s spin is laughable. It’s weak. They have claimed that there were no
actual war plans shared.
Audio
clip of President Trump: The attack was totally successful. It was, I guess, from
what I understand, took place during. And it wasn’t classified information. So
this was not classified.
Hegseth has attacked Goldberg, who has behaved incredibly
responsibly in all of this. He did not share the national security information
that came into his possession. He still has not shared it. This is a very
responsible thing for a journalist to do, but he’s been attacked mercilessly.
And then they minimize the information. They say it wasn’t
real war plans. Well, if this is no big deal, if these weren’t real war plans,
they could release what was on the chat so that Americans could see for
themselves. But so far, they’re not doing that.
The way to handle a security breach like this is to
immediately, especially in the case of Hegseth, suspend him from his duties
pending investigation. And I would say the same with the national security
adviser, who inadvertently brought Goldberg into the chat.
The only thing that bars me from saying “Suspend everyone
who’s on that chat” is, you would be hollowing out the administration in a time
of real crisis globally.
Nothing destroys a leader’s credibility with soldiers more
thoroughly than hypocrisy or double standards. When leaders break the rules
that they impose on soldiers, they break the bond of trust between soldiers and
commanders. The best commanders I knew did not ask a soldier to comply with a
rule that they didn’t also follow. The best commanders led by example. So what
example has Hegseth set? That he’s politically loyal, but also that he’s
careless? And when you’re careless in the military, people can die. And that’s
why I say, if he has any honor at all, he will resign.
Finally, the implications for national security are grave.
The reason I say that is I would urge listeners not to look at this incident in
isolation. This incident is occurring in a larger context. If the present
course of action holds, which is the administration tries to brush it off and
holds no one to account, then what you’ve had is a further reaffirmation that
the American military is becoming a political military.
So you had the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, leading
attorneys in the military, the JAG officers, JAG generals in the military,
relieved for political reasons. Then you have the secretary of defense retained
in spite of the fact that he violated every standard of operational security in
a way that would lead any other soldier to face dramatic consequences. He’s
still in office, and as of the moment of this recording, there seems to be no
indication that he’s either going to step down or be fired.
So what does that say? It says that we’re replacing
standards of professionalism with standards of political loyalty. I have seen
far greater consequences applied to service members for far lesser security
breaches than the kind of hand waving that we’re seeing now from the
administration, where it’s minimizing what occurred, denying that it’s
significant. This is not the way any other soldier would be treated under
similar circumstances, but the rule is there’s one standard for MAGA,
especially the MAGA loyalists, and there are other standards for everybody
else.
And if you make the American military more political than
professional — then you make the American military more like the Russian
military. You make the American military more like the military of totalitarian
states. And as fearsome as many of those militaries can look on paper, I
guarantee you political militaries, pound for pound, are much less effective
than professional militaries.
The stakes are, what are we doing to the very culture of the United States military? Are we telling it that the days of professionalism are over and the days for political loyalty have begun?
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