The denial came with a snarl. In front of Easter decorations and cameras, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth went to war — not with foreign enemies, but with the media, anonymous leakers, and a narrative that he’d lost Trump’s trust. Accusations of secret Yemen intel on Signal. NPR walk-backs. Democrats demanding his resignation. Trump doubling down, then doub… Continues…
Under the pastel calm of the Easter Egg Roll, Hegseth framed the controversy as a knife fight over power inside the Pentagon. He cast himself as the target of “disgruntled former employees” and a media machine still obsessed with anonymous sources and Trump-era scandals. To his supporters, the Signal uproar is a recycled “Russia hoax”–style smear; to his critics, it’s a flashing red warning about carelessness with war plans and lives on the line.
Trump’s public backing — twice now — has turned this into a loyalty test as much as a security debate. The White House slams NPR as “fake news,” while Democrats insist leaking operational details to a private family chat is disqualifying. For the moment, Hegseth survives, shielded by a president who prizes loyalty and victory over process. The mission in Yemen was “unbelievably successful.” The political fallout is still unfolding.