Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Trump insiders react with defiance as Signalgate puts admin's incompetence on display, but their arrogance could fade if saturation coverage lingers on cable news

 

The Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg on CNN (YouTube)

In a stunning show of arrogance, brought on by a stunning display of incompetence, Trump administration insiders are convinced the Signalgate war-plan leak scandal will "blow over" with no major repercussions. That's from a report at Axios under the headline "White House defiant after messaging fiasco with The Atlantic." Marc Caputo reports:

Trump administration true believers are closing ranks to try to protect top national security officials from being pushed out over Monday's Signal scandal, insiders tell Axios.

  • Why it matters: Democrats and critics of President Trump want him to fire National Security Advisor Mike Waltz. That's a major reason he could survive. So far, insiders are defiant.

Four top administration officials tell Axios they expect the controversy to die down and Waltz to remain. Four outside advisers concurred.

  • "We don't care what the media says," a Trump adviser said. "We can easily handle what would kill any other administration. This will blow over."
  • A senior White House official added: "Trump certainly wasn't pleased with this. But all this talk you see about Waltz not lasting is just way premature. There's a Washington feeding frenzy. And we all know that you don't give the mob what it wants."

All, however, is not sanguine inside the Trump operation, Caputo writes:

Still, there's a debate in Trumpworld over whether Waltz will ultimately get sacked after accidentally adding Jeffrey Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, to an 18-member Signal group chat, "Houthi PC small group" (for Principals Committee, the National Security Council's top officials).

  • Goldberg reports he was mistakenly sent messages that contained "war plans" for strikes on Houthi militants in Yemen: "The plan included precise information about weapons packages, targets, and timing."

The group chat, on the commercial messaging app Signal, included more than a dozen top Trump officials.

  • Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth posted "operational details of forthcoming strikes on Yemen, including information about targets, weapons the U.S. would be deploying, and attack sequencing," Goldberg writes.

What we're hearing: "The main thing Mike [Waltz] is definitely gonna get sh*t about is that it was The Atlantic. Man, the boss hates The Atlantic," an outside adviser told Axios, laughing.

  • "But seriously, this was horrible. Just really embarrassing."

"Waltz is utterly humiliated by the whole thing. He probably wants to die," said a longtime ally of Trump and Waltz, a former Florida congressman.

  • "I wouldn't be surprised if Mike offered his resignation and if Trump refused it."
  • However, a ninth top Trump adviser told us Tuesday morning that they were "unsure" about Waltz's fate.

Between the lines: Administration officials concede the episode was deeply embarrassing, and put top Trump Cabinet members in the blast radius of a humiliating story about a sloppy security failure.

Waltz still might not be safe, Caputo reports, partly because he has enemies in and outside the ranks, and they could try to get Trump to change his mind:

  • Waltz now has a bunch of top officials, and their teams, who are annoyed at him for drawing bad publicity.

Reality check: No one can say for sure how Trump will feel going forward. Trump could sour on Waltz if coverage of the blunder continues to saturate cable TV — especially if a small faction of outside advisers who dislike Waltz can get to the president.

  • But Trump instinctively resists giving adversaries a win.

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