Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Dulcinea

(8,099 posts)
Wed Mar 26, 2025, 07:05 AM Wednesday

BOMBSHELL: Trump texting fiasco's most shocking revelation drops during Senate hearing

(NJ.com) -snip- In a timely congressional hearing on Tuesday — roughly 24 hours after The Atlantic magazine revealed that Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, National Security Adviser Mike Waltz, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Director of Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and others exposed national security secrets and war plans to an American journalist, not to mention U.S. enemies —it was uncovered that Witkoff was in Moscow during the chat.

FBI Director Kash Patel, Ratcliffe and Gabbard were hammered by Democrats in a hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee. They face another round of attacks on Wednesday when they appear before the House Intelligence Committee.

“Did you know that the president’s Middle East adviser was in Moscow on this thread while you were as director of the CIA participating in this thread?” Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado asked Ratcliffe. “Were you aware of that? Are you aware of that today?”

“I’m not aware of that today,” Ratcliffe responded.

https://www.nj.com/politics/2025/03/trump-texting-fiasco-bombshell-drops-during-congressional-hearing.html

11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
BOMBSHELL: Trump texting fiasco's most shocking revelation drops during Senate hearing (Original Post) Dulcinea Wednesday OP
Yeah they hammered them gab13by13 Wednesday #1
Do you have a link to what he said? That'd be interesting. Thanks. TheRickles Wednesday #2
Was waiting orangecrush Wednesday #3
""They face another round of attacks.."" Phoenix61 Wednesday #4
thx phoenix61... diverdownjt Wednesday #7
Yup they caused the problems Botany Wednesday #8
They all think they have to play dumb to get away with their negligence and incompetence. MLWR Wednesday #5
They don't understand the forces they control. Turbineguy Wednesday #6
Krassenstein? NJCher Wednesday #9
and gee, connecting to the kremlin wifi definitely isn't going to end with you having some kind of malware on your phone sboatcar Wednesday #11
I believe the military got a contract with Wickr IbogaProject Wednesday #10

gab13by13

(27,322 posts)
1. Yeah they hammered them
Wed Mar 26, 2025, 07:35 AM
Wednesday

but I listened to what Denver Riggelman said yesterday. Riggelman was a military intelligence officer who understands cybersecurity.

Riggelman said that Democratic Senators should have gotten their questions from cybersecurity experts, he said that Democrats didn't ask the right questions.

Phoenix61

(18,220 posts)
4. ""They face another round of attacks..""
Wed Mar 26, 2025, 08:28 AM
Wednesday

Um, no. They face questions about their attack on our national security.

Botany

(73,682 posts)
8. Yup they caused the problems
Wed Mar 26, 2025, 09:16 AM
Wednesday

BTW it was shocking to see that Hog's Breath
really believes that half baked Russian backed propaganda gibberish that they spew on Fox. I have kinda thought they would let their guard down and stop with the charade of lies

Danes are good people. What is the matter with those idiots?

MLWR

(240 posts)
5. They all think they have to play dumb to get away with their negligence and incompetence.
Wed Mar 26, 2025, 08:39 AM
Wednesday

The thing is they don't have to "play" at it at all.

Turbineguy

(38,914 posts)
6. They don't understand the forces they control.
Wed Mar 26, 2025, 08:45 AM
Wednesday

That's the definition of a dangerous idiot.

NJCher

(39,488 posts)
9. Krassenstein?
Wed Mar 26, 2025, 09:28 AM
Wednesday

A liberal blogger on Twitter/X posted yesterday that he was in the Kremlin.

I wanted to post it here, but I declined to do so because how do we know what “the Kremlin” refers to.

Is it Putin‘s office? Is it the complex, the general vicinity?

It’s bad either way.

Subject heading is the name of the blogger, IIRC.

sboatcar

(591 posts)
11. and gee, connecting to the kremlin wifi definitely isn't going to end with you having some kind of malware on your phone
Wed Mar 26, 2025, 10:15 AM
Wednesday

Like the Russians had him clocked from the moment he landed and I'm sure they were capturing all the data sent and received from his phone. When he joined that chat, the encryption key had to be sent, and if they had that, then they could decrypt every single message from that chat.
And everyone brushing it off as no biggie, just wow

IbogaProject

(4,181 posts)
10. I believe the military got a contract with Wickr
Wed Mar 26, 2025, 09:57 AM
Wednesday

Similar platform that was best in security and became enterprise only. Our Dod switched to it early in the Ukraine conflict. It has enterprise controls on the contacts list and retention. But even that is only secure as the phone itself. Hegseth was just a lower level officer in some National Guard unit so he may have never heard of Wickr, much less any of T47's National Insecurity Clowncar.

The United States Air Force is the air service branch of the United States Armed Forces and is one of the eight uniformed services of the United States.

“Using Wickr RAM in Cloud One allows our personnel and teams to collaborate securely at the tactical edge and higher; in-garrison and deployed. Its ability to run on many different platforms and its feature set enables us to reduce security risks and operate successfully. Wickr RAM fills distinct secure mobility collaboration gaps to meet DoD compliance mandates at scale. Based on its commercial and government hosting, scalability, and federation capabilities, it is the only compliant solution that enables secure foreign partner, other government agency, and non-government agency secure collaboration for rapid response operations and ad-hoc activities. This is especially key to enable humanitarian efforts, crisis response, and other operations. Its bot system also enables automation for automatic data collection and communications.”

Todd Weiser, Chief Technology Officer – U.S. Air Force Special Operations Command


https://wickr.com/secure-communication-for-the-military/

I researched these type of apps as a consultant. Wickr was the most secure but based on usernames and password, which users dislike. Signal, Whatsapp and Telegram can use phone contacts and don't really have log ins and are much more popular.
Latest Discussions»Editorials & Other Articles»BOMBSHELL: Trump texting ...