Archive April 21, 2025

US’s Hegseth shared military plans in second Signal chat, reports say

United States Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth shared details about planned bombing raids on Yemen in a second Signal group chat that included his wife, brother and personal lawyer, US media has reported.

The reports come after Hegseth attracted scrutiny last month when the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic magazine revealed that the defence chief had shared details about upcoming air strikes on Houthi rebels in a Signal group chat that the journalist had been mistakenly added to.

Hegseth’s discussions in the second group chat similarly involved planned strikes on Houthi targets in Yemen, The New York Times and CNN reported on Sunday, citing multiple unnamed sources.

The information shared by Hegseth in the second chat included “flight schedules for the F/A-18 Hornets targeting the Houthis in Yemen,” The Times reported, citing “people with knowledge of the chat”.

Hegseth set up the second group chat before his confirmation as defence secretary to coordinate with members of his personal and professional inner circle, the outlets said.

Hegseth’s brother, Phil, and his personal lawyer, Tim Parlatore, are both employed at the Defense Department, but his wife, Jennifer, a former Fox News producer, is not.

In response to an inquiry from Al Jazeera, Chief Pentagon Spokesman Sean Parnell called the reports an “old story – back from the dead”.

“The Trump-hating media continues to be obsessed with destroying anyone committed to President [Donald] Trump’s agenda,” Parnell said in a statement.

“This time, the New York Times – and all other Fake News that repeat their garbage – are enthusiastically taking the grievances of disgruntled former employees as the sole sources for their article. They relied only on the words of people who were fired this week and appear to have a motive to sabotage the Secretary and the President’s agenda. ”

Parnell said no classified information had been shared in any Signal chat.

“What is true is that the Office of the Secretary of Defense is continuing to become stronger and more efficient in executing President Trump’s agenda. We’ve already achieved so much for the American warfighter, and will never back down,” he said.

The disclosure of military information in the first Signal group chat – which included Hegseth, US Vice President JD Vance and National Security Advisor Michael Waltz, among other top officials in Trump’s administration – is currently being investigated by the Pentagon’s acting inspector general.

The latest controversy involving Hegseth’s leadership follows a week of personnel upheaval at the Pentagon.

Four members of Hegseth’s inner circle, including his former press secretary John Ullyot, have been removed over the last week amid a widening probe into leaks of information.

On Sunday, Ullyot said that the Pentagon was in “disarray” and “total chaos” under the defence chief’s leadership.

“The dysfunction is now a major distraction for the president — who deserves better from his senior leadership,” Ullyot wrote in an opinion piece published by Politico Magazine.

Ullyot announced his resignation on Wednesday, following the departures of Colin Carroll, chief of staff to Deputy Defense Secretary Stephen Feinberg; Darin Selnick, Hegseth’s deputy chief of staff; and Dan Caldwell, one of Hegseth’s aides.

In a statement on Sunday, Carroll, Selnick and Caldwell said they had been slandered and subjected to “baseless attacks” ahead of their dismissal.

“All three of us served our country honorably in uniform – for two of us, this included deployments to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. And, based on our collective service, we understand the importance of information security and worked every day to protect it,” the three men said in the statement.

Verstappen says ‘people can’t handle the full truth’ after Saudi penalty

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Max Verstappen refused to discuss his unhappiness with a penalty he was given in the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix because he was concerned about retribution from Formula 1’s governing body the FIA.

The four-time champion’s five-second penalty for leaving the track and gaining an advantage in a first-corner battle with McLaren’s Oscar Piastri potentially cost him the race win to the Australian.

Verstappen said: “You can’t share your opinion because it’s not appreciated apparently, or people can’t handle the full truth. Honestly, it’s better if I don’t say too much.

“It’s honestly just how everything is becoming. Everyone is super-sensitive about everything. And what we have (in the rules) currently, we cannot be critical anyway. So less talking – even better for me. “

Verstappen’s comments are a reference to a change in the FIA’s rule book over the winter that codified a series of penalties for drivers who either repeatedly swear or criticise the governing body.

These were introduced at the behest of FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem and can lead to a one-month ban plus deduction of championship points.

The changes were introduced after drivers’ swearing in news conferences last year led to controversial penalties.

Verstappen said in the official news conference in Jeddah on Sunday: “I cannot swear in here, but at the same time, you also can’t be critical in any form that might ‘harm’ or ‘danger’… Let me get the sheet out. There’s a lot of lines, you know?

“So that’s why it’s better not to talk about it – you can put yourself in trouble, and I don’t think anyone wants that. “

When it was put to him that being less expansive than previously had seemed to be a trend from him already this season, he said: “It has to do with social media in general, and how the world is. I prefer not to talk a lot because sometimes your words can be twisted or people interpret it in a different way. It’s honestly better not to say too much. “

Red Bull's Max Verstappen and McLaren's Oscar Piastri side by side going into the first corner of the Saudi Arabian Grand PrixReuters

Verstappen’s radio messages during the race clearly indicated he did not approve of the penalty he was given, but he was warned to keep his thoughts to himself.

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said he felt the penalty was “very harsh” and asked rhetorically: “Whatever happened to ‘let them race on the first lap? ‘ That just seems to have been abandoned. “

The stewards’ verdict contained an answer to that – it said that the normal penalty for leaving the track and gaining a lasting advantage was 10 seconds, but they reduced it to five because it was the first lap.

Verstappen was penalised for cutting the chicane after the start and keeping the lead.

Piastri had got fully alongside him on the inside on the entry to the first corner. Despite this, Verstappen cut the second part of the chicane and retained the lead.

F1’s driving standards guidelines effectively say that the corner was Piastri’s in that situation.

They say that for a driver overtaking on the inside to be “entitled to be given room (his car) must have its front axle at least alongside the mirror of the other car prior to and at the apex, be driven in a fully controlled manner particularly from entry to apex and not have ‘dived in”; and in the stewards’ estimation have taken a reasonable racing line and been able to complete the move while remaining within track limits. “

Piastri comfortably complied with all these criteria.

He said: “The stewards had to get involved, but I thought I was plenty far enough up (alongside) and in the end that’s what got me the race.

“I knew that I had enough of my car alongside to take the corner. We obviously both braked extremely late. For me, I braked as late as I could while staying on the track. And I think how it unfolded is how it should have been dealt with. “

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella said: “Oscar, thanks to a very good launch off the grid, and thanks to positioning the car on the inside, [was] slightly ahead of Max, managing to keep the car within the track limits, then he gained the rights (to the corner), and obviously in that situation you can’t overtake off track.

“This is a clear case. It shouldn’t create any polemic, really. “

Verstappen led until the first pit stops, when he served the penalty and dropped behind Piastri, who controlled the race from there to take his third win in five grands prix this season.

It included a bold move around the outside of Lewis Hamilton’s Ferrari on the approach to the high-speed Turns 22 and 23 at a critical point of the race, to minimise his time loss on the lap Verstappen stopped.

Verstappen had shown strong pace in the first stint, tracked closely by the McLaren, and was pulling away slightly by the time Piastri made his stop on lap 19.

The win put him into the lead of the championship for the first time in his short career – Piastri made his debut only in 2023. He is 10 points ahead of team-mate Lando Norris, with Verstappen a further two adrift.

The 24-year-old’s performance has impressed Verstappen.

“He’s very solid,” Verstappen said. “He’s very calm in his approach, and I like that. It shows on track. He delivers when he has to, barely makes mistakes – and that’s what you need when you want to fight for a championship. “

The Dutchman also had praise for the influence of Piastri’s manager, the former F1 driver Mark Webber.

“With Mark by his side, he’s helping him a lot,” Verstappen said. “It’s great.

Norris ‘needs to chill out a little bit’

Lando Norris walking with his eyes to the floor after the Saudi Arabian Grand PrixGetty Images

Piastri was overshadowed by Norris in 2024, but has been the more impressive of the McLaren drivers since the start of this season.

Norris, who fought back from 10th on the grid after a crash in qualifying to finish fourth, just nine seconds behind Piastri, admitted after the race that he needs to “chill out a little bit” and that he was “not surprised” he had lost the championship lead.

His crash in qualifying was his biggest mistake of the season but it comes after a series of small errors, usually in qualifying, that have harmed his chances in races since he won the season-opening grand prix in Australia from pole position.

“I have been very confident in my race, it’s my qualifying, my Saturdays, which are not good enough at the minute,” Norris said.

“That’s because I am struggling a little bit with the car. Yesterday was not the car, it was just me trying to take too many risks.

“So I just have to peg it back. I’ve got the pace. It’s all in there. It’s just sometimes I ask for a bit too much and sometimes I get a bit too ‘ego’ probably and try to put the perfect lap together. I just need to chill out a little bit.

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Hojlund looks like a damaged player – Shearer

Ex-England captain Alan Shearer says Manchester United striker Rasmus Hojlund looks like “a damaged player” and is suffering a crisis of confidence this season, after the Dane failed to score once again in their 1-0 home defeat by Wolves.

READ MORE: ‘If we don’t score, nothing matters’ – ‘damaged’ Hojlund ‘not ready’

Watch MOTD2 on BBC iPlayer

Hojlund looks like a damaged player – Shearer

Ex-England captain Alan Shearer says Manchester United striker Rasmus Hojlund looks like “a damaged player” and is suffering a crisis of confidence this season, after the Dane failed to score once again in their 1-0 home defeat by Wolves.

READ MORE: ‘If we don’t score, nothing matters’ – ‘damaged’ Hojlund ‘not ready’

Watch MOTD2 on BBC iPlayer

‘Man Utd must be hungrier to score’

Ex-Wales international Ashley Williams says Manchester United’s players “must be hungrier” and “go with a bit of meaning” in front of goal, following their 1-0 defeat at Old Trafford against Wolverhampton Wanderers.

READ MORE: ‘If we don’t score, nothing matters’ – ‘damaged’ Hojlund ‘not ready’

Watch MOTD2 on BBC iPlayer

Williams shows enduring class to edge past Wu

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Halo World Championship

Venue: Crucible Theatre, Sheffield Dates: 19 April to 5 May

Three-time winner Mark Williams showed his enduring class to edge past China’s up-and-coming star Wu Yize 10-8 and reach the second round of the World Snooker Championship.

Having led 5-4 overnight, the Welshman compiled breaks of 101 and 69 to lead 7-6 but struggled to shake off his opponent in a nip-and-tuck encounter at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield.

Williams, 50, then fell 8-7 behind but played a wonderful snooker on the final red to gain the advantage in the 16th frame as he levelled the contest.

A valuable break of 58, which included several stunning shots, moved him within a frame of victory and he sealed his win with a composed run of 75.

The world number six will face Hossein Vafaei, who came through a final-frame decider to beat Barry Hawkins 10-9, while Chris Wakelin held off a stirring fightback from 2010 champion Neil Robertson to progress 10-8.

It was a superb performance from Williams in his 70th match at the sport’s most famous venue. Booked in for surgery in June, he has been dogged by eyesight issues in the build-up to the tournament and has been dismissive of his own prospects.

At varying stages he was outplayed by Wu, who scored 1,022 points to his 838 – but found an answer whenever he appeared to be in difficulty.

“It was a tough game all the way through. I think I was 3-0 up and then I didn’t pot a ball for three or four frames. Some of the balls he potted were incredible,” Williams told BBC Sport.

Vafaei lets ‘animal come out’ as more seeds depart

With reigning champion Kyren Wilson sent home on the first day by Lei Peifan, Wakelin and Vafaei’s successes on Sunday evening came at the expense of two more seeds.

The 33-year-old Englishman, who had never previously won a match at the Crucible, arrived with a 7-2 lead but spent the best part of five frames in his chair as Australia’s Robertson levelled the match at 7-7.

Wakelin responded with a 90 of his own and claimed two of the next three frames in a tense finale.

Iran’s Vafaei trailed throughout his match against Hawkins but grew stronger as the contest went on and enjoyed runs of 104, 107 and 110 as he repeatedly drew level.

However, he was also guilty of screaming out several times before securing the final frame as his emotions overcame him.

“In that moment my mind went negative. I had to let something go and let my animal come out again,” Vafaei told BBC Sport.

“That was a little trick to my mind. I told Barry it was nothing to do with him. I just couldn’t handle it. I was under lots of pressure. I was always down. I had to show some emotion to the fans they could feel the pressure. “

In the afternoon, world number eight Mark Allen was 3-0 behind against Fan Zhengyi of China but took five of the following six frames to hold a 5-4 lead into Monday’s second session.

Zhao leaves Jones on brink of early exit

Jak Jones is in danger of an early exit as China’s Zhao Xintong produced a sensational scoring display to lead 7-2 in their first-round match.

Jones, 31, made a surprise run to last year’s final, losing to Wilson.

The 16th seed from Wales knocked in a 99 break to take the third frame but was punished by the 2021 UK Championship winner for costly early misses.

Zhao made a 142 clearance in frame five – the highest break of the tournament so far – and six half-centuries in the first session.

Jones took the last frame with a break of 70, but Zhao will need just three more frames for victory when they resume on Monday.

Jak Jones stands behind Zhao XintongPA Media

Zhao, 28, is competing as an amateur but breezed through qualifying and is among the favourites to lift the trophy on 5 May.

He was one of 10 players banned in 2023 following an investigation into match-fixing.

He did not directly throw a match but was initially suspended for two and a half years, reduced to 20 months after his early admissions and guilty plea – he accepted charges of being a party to another player fixing two matches and betting on matches himself.

Zhao completed his suspension earlier this season and his performances on the Q Tour have earned him a spot back among the professional ranks for 2025-26.

Schedule: Monday, 21 April

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14:30

19:00

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