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Reckless Messaging Breach Alarms Oversight Group

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By Stacy M. Brown
BlackPressUSA.com Senior National Correspondent

Chioma Chukwu, executive director of American Oversight, issued a sharp rebuke of the current administration’s handling of sensitive national security matters following recent reports that high-level officials used encrypted messaging apps to discuss active military operations. “If what is reported is true, it certainly suggests they are engaged in outright, recklessly irresponsible behaviors,” Chukwu said in a telephone interview with BlackPressUSA.com. “This could be a direct threat to our national security.” American Oversight, a nonpartisan, nonprofit watchdog dedicated to transparency and accountability, is monitoring the situation closely. Chukwu expressed serious concern over the administration’s apparent lack of oversight and protocols in protecting classified information, particularly the use of encrypted messaging apps like Signal to communicate sensitive war plans. “This should never have happened in the first instance,” Chukwu said. “They’re using encrypted messaging apps in a way to conceal information from the public, and the only reason we even know about it is because they accidentally included a journalist—who thankfully did the right thing by informing the public.”

Earlier, Democratic U.S. Rep. Gregory Meeks of New York told BlackPressUSA.com’s April Ryan that he too was appalled over the leak.

Chukwu noted that as many as 18 senior officials were reportedly involved in these discussions, which she described as “incredibly unusual, highly unusual, unprecedented.” She warned that the misuse of encrypted platforms for high-level national security conversations creates a vulnerability that foreign actors could exploit. “There have been state-backed hackers who are trying to access information,” Chukwu explained. “If a single bad actor is able to get access, that certainly compromises our national security. Their secrecy does nothing to protect our country—it endangers us by keeping critical and sensitive decisions off the record and out of reach from oversight.” Chukwu also criticized what she called a broader erosion of oversight mechanisms. “We have a Congress that refuses to act. We have an administration that has done everything in its power to gut all oversight mechanisms,” she said. “That’s why organizations like American Oversight are more important than ever. Without transparency, there can be no accountability.”

She connected the current administration’s behavior to previous failures related to national security, referencing the ongoing legal battle over access to Special Counsel Jack Smith’s report on President Donald Trump’s handling of classified documents during his first term. “Right now, American Oversight has a lawsuit seeking records related to Volume Two of the Jack Smith special counsel report,” Chukwu said. “We’ve been blocked from accessing those records because Judge Aileen Cannon refuses to lift her order. The Trump-era DOJ has made it clear that they never wanted that report to see the light of day.” She said that transparency in that report could help illuminate a pattern of disregard for national security protocols, both past and present.

Finally, Chukwu addressed a lingering question sparked by the most recent breach: If a journalist can be accidentally looped into discussions about war planning, can the public trust this administration to safeguard national security? “That is a question Americans should be very concerned about,” Chukwu said. “The reckless disregard and the lack of concern that was shown by adding a journalist to a message chain containing highly sensitive, potentially classified information suggest that Americans should not trust this administration with highly classified information.”

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