『CIA Director Ratcliffe Under Scrutiny for Controversial Signal Chat Discussing Military Plans to Strike Yemen』のカバーアート

CIA Director Ratcliffe Under Scrutiny for Controversial Signal Chat Discussing Military Plans to Strike Yemen

CIA Director Ratcliffe Under Scrutiny for Controversial Signal Chat Discussing Military Plans to Strike Yemen

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CIA Director John Ratcliffe has come under scrutiny this week following revelations about his participation in a controversial Signal group chat discussing military plans to strike Yemen. The incident came to light when Jeffrey Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, disclosed that he had been accidentally included in the encrypted messaging conversation that featured high-ranking U.S. officials discussing attacks on Houthi targets.

During a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Tuesday, March 25, Ratcliffe confirmed his participation in the chat but dismissed claims that it constituted a serious error. He defended the use of the Signal messaging service for work-related communications, despite criticism from national security professionals who questioned whether these communications violated record-keeping regulations and potentially jeopardized the safety of U.S. military personnel.

Senator Mark Warner, the committee's vice chair and a Democrat from Virginia, expressed concern during the hearing, stating, "If this information had been disclosed, it could have cost American lives."

The congressional inquiry continued into Wednesday, March 26, with Ratcliffe facing additional questioning from lawmakers. Representative Joaquin Castro from San Antonio challenged his former House colleague, arguing that Ratcliffe and other officials should have known better than to use Signal for discussing details of a pending military operation.

Ratcliffe, who previously served as Director of National Intelligence during the final months of President Trump's first term, was appointed CIA Director in January 2025, making history as the first person to have held both positions. He was confirmed by the Senate on January 23 with a vote of 74-25, becoming the second cabinet member confirmed in Trump's second administration.

Since taking office, Ratcliffe has made several significant moves at the CIA. In late January, the agency revised its assessment of COVID-19's origin from "undecided" to "low confidence" in favor of a laboratory leak in Wuhan. In early February, the CIA offered buyouts to employees seeking voluntary resignation.

The agency also complied with an executive order from President Trump requiring the CIA to send the White House an unclassified email identifying first names and last initials of all employees hired in the previous two years—a move that former CIA officials have criticized as potentially compromising the identity of agents.

Ratcliffe, a former federal prosecutor and Texas congressman who served on the House Intelligence and Judiciary committees, has previously vowed to make the CIA "more muscular" while keeping its work apolitical. During his nomination hearing in January, he promised to "never allow political or personal biases to cloud our judgment."

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