The full Yemen -War plans in a group chat between top officials from Trump administration about coded chat service signal have been released by the Atlantic.
On Monday, the editor -in -chief of the Atlantic Ocean Jeffrey Goldberg revealed that he was added to a non -classified group chat involving several of Trump's most important cabinet members about the war plans of Yemen.
Remembering their previous reports were reports about specific timing, weapons or other plans.
But after President Donald Trump and several administrative officials in the Signal Group Chat were refused that classified information was discussed about the application, the publication decided that it was necessary to publish screenshots that would otherwise claim.
In particular, Minister of Defense Pete Hegseeth, who went so far this week to deny that this chat was legitimate, explained timelines, specific fighter jets and drone attacks, as well as other weapon systems that bombs drop on Yemen.
Hegseeth, the morning of March 15, provided a team update in the chat, where he confirmed Central Command (CentCom) 'an attempt for missionary' and noted that the use of F-18s and MQ-9 drone is launching to be used in the 'Target terrorist'.
Centcom is the warrior command of the army for the middle -east.
He then gave a timeline of launches for the bomb attacks and specific weapons used in the attacks, a full 31 minutes before the first American war aircraft were launched and two hours before a Houthi 'Target terrorists' was expected that it was killed by the bombs of this aircraft.
“Godspeed to our warriors,” he wrote in one message in the chat that Goldberg wrongly included.

Many of the new messages that Goldberg shared in his follow -up article include Minister of Defense Pete Hegseeth (photo) with details about the weapon systems and timings of the strikes before they were performed earlier this month

DNI Tulsi Gabbard and CIA director John Ratcliffe belonged to those in the Signal Group Chat-Ze appeared on Tuesday before the Senate Ininning Committee for an appropriate hearing on global threats
Goldberg claims in his follow-up report: “If this text was received by someone who has been hostile to the American interests or someone who is only indiscreet and with access to social media, the Houthis had time to prepare for what was intended as a surprise attack on their strongholds.”
“The consequences for American pilots could have been catastrophic.”
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and director of Central Intelligence Agency John Ratcliffe, who were both in the already notorious signal chat, were part of a senate hearing about global threats on Tuesday.
The timing of the public interrogation was immediately after the first Atlantic report that revealed the use of a communication app to discuss specific plans to bomb Yemen.
Gabbard and Ratcliffe – in addition to FBI director Kash Patel – were asked for the chat during the hearing and repeatedly denied that classified information was discussed.
“There was no classified material that was shared in that signal group,” Gabbard told members of the Senate Influence Committee.
The chat was initiated by national security adviser Michael Waltz and accidentally included Goldberg, who only published a story about the chat after the attack in Yemen was implemented.