Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has been found to have violated military policies after a Signal group chat leak in 2025, according to the Pentagon's inspector general. Hegseth was accused of using a non-approved messaging app to send classified information ahead of a military strike in Yemen. The report, which was released on December 4, found that Hegseth had used "nonspecific general details" about the strike and risked compromising sensitive information.
The investigation, led by Inspector General Steven Stebbins, revealed that Hegseth's actions did not comply with Department of Defense (DoD) policies. The report stated that Hegseth had used a commercially available messaging application to send nonpublic DoD information, which is against military rules.
Hegseth responded to the investigation in July, stating that he had shared "nonspecific general details" about the strike and declined interview requests. However, the report found that Hegseth's actions posed a risk of compromising sensitive information, potentially putting lives at risk.
The investigation was unable to recover all of the chat logs due to an auto-delete function on the messaging app used by the group, but it relied on reporting from The Atlantic editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg to gather some of the relevant discussions.
Armed Services Committee member Senator Mark Kelly stated that while Hegseth's actions were not explicitly illegal, they still constituted a violation of DoD regulations. "It said he was in violation of some DOD regulations... so whether that’s breaking the law, you got to figure that out," Kelly said.
The full report is available online and provides further details on the investigation and its findings.
The investigation, led by Inspector General Steven Stebbins, revealed that Hegseth's actions did not comply with Department of Defense (DoD) policies. The report stated that Hegseth had used a commercially available messaging application to send nonpublic DoD information, which is against military rules.
Hegseth responded to the investigation in July, stating that he had shared "nonspecific general details" about the strike and declined interview requests. However, the report found that Hegseth's actions posed a risk of compromising sensitive information, potentially putting lives at risk.
The investigation was unable to recover all of the chat logs due to an auto-delete function on the messaging app used by the group, but it relied on reporting from The Atlantic editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg to gather some of the relevant discussions.
Armed Services Committee member Senator Mark Kelly stated that while Hegseth's actions were not explicitly illegal, they still constituted a violation of DoD regulations. "It said he was in violation of some DOD regulations... so whether that’s breaking the law, you got to figure that out," Kelly said.
The full report is available online and provides further details on the investigation and its findings.