Vice President JD Vance criticized The Atlantic for exaggerating claims about leaked White House chats, backing Taylor Budowich's assertion that the report was a misleading hoax against the American people.
US Vice President JD Vance on Wednesday criticized The Atlantic. (AP Photo)
US Vice President JD Vance on Wednesday criticized The Atlantic for overstating its claims after full chat transcripts tied to its reporting were released.
The controversy erupted after The Atlantic published excerpts of chats that were initially framed as containing sensitive discussions, only to later release the full transcripts, which some critics argue failed to support the original narrative.
Reacting to the controversy, Vance stated, “It’s very clear Goldberg oversold what he had. But one thing in particular really stands out. Remember when he was attacking Ratcliffe for blowing the cover for a CIA agent? Turns out Ratcliffe was simply naming his chief of staff.”
It’s very clear Goldberg oversold what he had. But one thing in particular really stands out.
Remember when he was attacking Ratcliffe for blowing the cover for a CIA agent? Turns out Ratcliffe was simply naming his chief of staff. https://t.co/BUGbX6gZDZ— JD Vance (@JDVance) March 26, 2025
His remarks came in response to White House Deputy Chief of Staff and Cabinet Secretary Taylor Budowich, who dismissed the revelations as a “hoax on the American people.”
Budowich took to X to criticize The Atlantic, saying, “The Atlantic has already abandoned their bullshit ‘war plans’ narrative, and in releasing the full chat, they concede they LIED to perpetuate yet ANOTHER hoax on the American people.”
The disclosure comes after two days of intense scrutiny, as Trump administration intelligence and defense leaders struggled to explain how potentially classified details ended up in an unclassified Signal chat with Atlantic Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey Goldberg.
Published By:
Aashish Vashistha
Published On:
Mar 26, 2025