
CIA Director Ratcliffe Under Fire for Controversial Signal Chat
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During his testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Tuesday, Ratcliffe defended the use of the encrypted messaging service Signal for work-related communications. This came just a day after Jeffrey Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, revealed he had been unintentionally added to a group chat featuring high-ranking U.S. officials discussing attacks on Houthi targets in Yemen.
The revelation prompted immediate concern from national security experts. Senator Mark Warner, the committee's Democratic vice chair from Virginia, expressed during the hearing that "if this information had been disclosed, it could have cost American lives."
Ratcliffe faced a second day of questioning on Capitol Hill Wednesday as lawmakers continued to press him about the security implications of the chat. Representative Joaquin Castro from Texas was particularly critical, stating that Ratcliffe "should have known better than to use Signal to discuss details of a pending military strike in Yemen."
This incident marks a significant challenge for Ratcliffe, who has been serving as CIA Director since January 23, 2025, when he was confirmed by the Senate in a bipartisan vote of 74-25. Ratcliffe made history as the first person to have held both the positions of CIA Director and Director of National Intelligence, having previously served in the latter role during Trump's first administration from May 2020 to January 2021.
Ratcliffe's tenure has already seen several notable developments. Shortly after taking office, the CIA revised its previous assessment of COVID-19's origin from "undecided" to indicating "low confidence" in favor of a laboratory leak theory from Wuhan.
In early February, Ratcliffe oversaw the CIA's compliance with an Executive Order requiring the agency to send the White House an unclassified email identifying the first names and last initials of all employees hired in the previous two years. This action has been criticized by former CIA officials as potentially compromising the identity of agents.
Before his intelligence career, Ratcliffe represented Texas's 4th Congressional District from 2015 to 2020 and was known as a strong ally of President Trump during his first impeachment trial. His path to becoming DNI in 2020 was not without obstacles—his initial nomination in 2019 faced such strong opposition that it was withdrawn, though Trump later renominated him successfully.
As the controversy over the Signal chat continues to unfold, Ratcliffe maintains that his communications were lawful and did not include classified information, despite growing scrutiny from members of Congress.