Pentagon watchdog finds Hegseth’s Signal chat violated regulations, could have endangered troops, sources say

Washington — According to CBS, the Pentagon’s internal watchdog determined Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth jeopardized sensitive military information and could have endangered American service members when he shared certain details about U.S. military operations in Yemen in a private Signal group chat earlier this year, according to a U.S. official and a person familiar with the report’s findings.
The individuals who spoke to CBS News said the report found the former Fox News host-turned-defense secretary violated Defense Department policies when he used his personal device for official business to transmit sensitive U.S. military information to other top Trump officials and the editor in chief of The Atlantic magazine. The two sources requested anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the unreleased report.
A classified version of the inspector general’s report was sent to Congress on Tuesday. An unredacted version is expected to be released on Thursday. CNN first reported the defense inspector general’s findings.
The sources said the IG report confirmed what CBS News had reported in July — that key information posted by Hegseth in the encrypted Signal chat group was derived from a classified email marked “SECRET//NOFORN.” CBS News reported that information was shared by Army Gen. Michael “Erik” Kurilla, who at the time was the commander of U.S. Central Command, the primary combatant unit overseeing U.S. military operations in the Middle East, Central Asia, and parts of South Asia.
The “SECRET” designation means that the information was classified, and the disclosure of the information without proper declassification could potentially cause serious damage to national security and jeopardize the safety of service members, according to the U.S. government.
The “NOFORN” label means the information can only be disseminated to U.S. agencies and individuals, excluding foreign nationals and even close U.S. allies.
The sources familiar with the inspector general’s investigation said the report found that if the information had been intercepted by a foreign adversary, it would have clearly endangered U.S. service members and the mission.
The report does not address the question of whether Hegseth declassified the information before it was posted in a Signal chat group that included other top Trump officials, the sources said. That group chat also inadvertently included Jeffrey Goldberg, the editor in chief of The Atlantic, who broke the story in March.
A day after the Signal chat story was published by The Atlantic, U.S. Africa Command, in coordination with the government of Somalia, conducted multiple airstrikes against affiliates of the Islamic State terrorist organization. The press release said the airstrikes occurred near the Golis Mountains in Somalia and that multiple “ISIS-Somalia operatives were killed.”
After multiple Trump administration officials claimed the information in the Signal chat group was unclassified, CBS News filed a request in March under the Freedom of Information Act to U.S. Africa Command to see if similar information deemed unclassified by Hegseth from the Yemen airstrike could be released regarding the March 25 airstrike on the ISIS operatives in Somalia.
CBS News requested information about the airstrike that was similar to the information appearing in the Signal chat group about the strikes and that Trump intelligence officials had said was unclassified.
In early September, CBS News received a response from U.S. Africa Command, which arrived at the same conclusion as the Pentagon inspector general about the Somalia airstrike — that the material if released could jeopardize national security.
“[The] information that is currently and properly classified pursuant to Executive Order 13526…In this case, I have determined that the release of the documents would foreseeably harm national security,” wrote Marine Maj. Gen. Matthew Trollinger, the chief of staff to Air Force Gen. Dagvin R.M. Anderson, the commander of U.S. Africa Command, in his letter to CBS News.
Hegseth has not publicly commented yet on the IG report. Last month, Hegseth joked about the Signalgate scandal while speaking at Fox Nation’s Patriot Awards after spotting United Nations Ambassador Mike Waltz in the audience.
“I see Mike Waltz — Mike, I’ll hit you up on Signal later.”