The knives are out in Washington. A Defense Secretary under fire, a president doubling down, and encrypted messages that never should have seen daylight. Careers hang in the balance. Allegations of secret war plans on Signal, “disgruntled former employees,” and a media Trumpworld calls a propaganda machine collide in a brutal showdown that could rewr… Continues…
Pete Hegseth’s defiance at the White House Easter Egg Roll was no casual aside; it was a full-throated counterattack. He framed the uproar over leaked Signal chats as a familiar playbook: anonymous sources, “disgruntled former employees,” and a press corps eager to replay the Russia-era battles. By insisting he and Donald Trump are “on the same page all the way,” Hegseth tied his fate directly to the president’s, betting that loyalty and combativeness still define survival in this White House.
The administration, for its part, moved quickly to crush any hint of internal doubt. NPR’s report that Trump was looking for a new Pentagon chief was slapped down as “total FAKE NEWS,” while official accounts branded the outlet a propaganda machine. Even as Democrats demand Hegseth’s resignation over operational details spilled in encrypted chats, Trump points to a successful strike and a scapegoat in Mike Waltz. In this version of events, outcomes matter more than errors—and the real enemy is still the leak, not the war.