The ‘Signalgate’ fallout continues
If one thing is clear to me after this week’s “Signalgate” revelations, it’s that the “Houthi Small Group PC” was not the first — and far from the only — revealing group chat between top national security officials in the Trump administration.
Otherwise, it sure seems like some of the participants would have objected to the kind of sensitive information, opinions and operational military details shared so freely on the chain. But not a single person did.
And this is important because every single Signal conversation where sensitive information was shared — whether it was about a military operation, a diplomatic negotiation or even just brainstorming between high-level White House officials — has the potential to provide information to our adversaries and enemies.
In order to monitor and evaluate what types of information is being shared, the intelligence community would typically do a damage assessment. But damage assessments are likely impossible for Signal chains that may have been deleted. Did M-A-R — Signal shorthand for Secretary of State Marco Antonio Rubio — archive all of his posts? Did S.M., otherwise known as Stephen Miller, ensure that there was a saved copy for the national archives? I think we all know the answer.
Without these logs, we may never know the full consequences of this carelessness. After all, the only reason we even know about the “Houthi Small Group PC” is because they accidentally included a reporter.
A person you should know: Tufts Ph.D. student Rumeysa Ozturk
On Tuesday night, masked federal agents in plain clothes stopped Rumeysa Ozturk — an international doctoral student and Fulbright scholar at Tufts University — on a city sidewalk, detaining her, confiscating her phone and backpack, and forcing her into an unmarked vehicle. By Wednesday, she was nearly 2,000 miles away, locked inside the South Louisiana ICE Processing Center, unable to even notify her family of her whereabouts.
Her crime? As far as we know right now, writing an op-ed.
At a recent press conference, the secretary of state failed to provide any justification for Ozturk’s detainment other than her criticism of Tufts University’s stance on Israel, dismissing concerns by saying, “If you come into the U.S. as a visitor and create a ruckus for us, we don’t want it.”
Let’s be clear: There is no carve-out in the Constitution for visa holders. Due process and free speech protections apply to all “persons” within the United States, not just citizens, as the Supreme Court has made abundantly clear for decades. And that’s likely why DHS agents moved Ozturk out of Massachusetts almost immediately, before a judge’s inevitable ruling that Ozturk couldn’t be taken out of state.
This isn’t just an attack on one person — it’s a preview of what’s to come.
Rubio, at the same press conference, said, “It might be more than 300 at this point. We do it every day. Every time I find one of these lunatics, I take away their visas.” Meaning, Rubio has every intention this policy will continue.
Just like with Donald Trump’s deportations of Venezuelan migrants — where some alleged “gang tattoos” have turned out to be soccer club logos, autism awareness symbols and even Michael Jordan’s jersey number — Trump’s crackdown on free speech will be sloppy. Officials won’t hold hearings before forcing students into unmarked vehicles. People will be wrongly targeted. Some perhaps intentionally, some by accident. And when that happens, the administration likely won’t backtrack — it’ll double down. Because admitting a mistake would be more embarrassing than ruining someone’s life.









