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Signal failure: If you can't get a chat group right, how can you handle war?
March 29, 2025
|The Straits Times
The Pentagon knew Signal was a risk. Why didn't it heed its own advice?
Two decades ago, a job at Singapore's Ministry of Defence (Mindef) where I worked came with a huge sacrifice: You couldn't use a 3G smartphone.
The risks were numerous. Hackers could turn your phone into a mic and listen in on conversations. They could track your whereabouts via the Global Positioning System. And they could intercept phone calls.
The biggest risk? You might use the camera function to take pictures of classified documents for the convenience of future reference and a photo could wind up in the wrong hands.
Most of us young public servants grumbled but complied, despite our disbelief that such a ludicrous scenario premised on comedy-level human buffoonery was even realistic.
Then Signal-gate happened this week.
INCLUDING A JOURNALIST ON A NATIONAL SECURITY CHAT Some form of comedy-level human buffoonery is surely the answer to the question of how the heck a non-US government person was added to a high-level US national security chat group on a military assault on Yemen.
Hopefully, US investigations get to the bottom of who mucked up and recommend safeguards to prevent a recurrence of what political observers are calling "amateur-hour behaviour".
Fumbling over the contact list for a military strike operation is not a good look for the administration of US President Donald Trump, who had vowed at his inauguration on Jan 20 to reclaim America's rightful place as "the greatest, most powerful and most respected nation on earth".
هذه القصة من طبعة March 29, 2025 من The Straits Times.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من The Straits Times
The Straits Times
Ant-Man star says she has brain damage
Canadian actress Evangeline Lilly (right) posted a devastating health update where she announced she has brain damage, months after she suffered a concussion when she fainted and fell face-first into a boulder at a beach in Hawaii in May 2025.
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Zootopia 2 is China's top Hollywood film
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1 mins
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5 mins
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Jail for woman who drove without valid licence, had over 90 Kpods in vehicle
A car accident in Sentosa led to the discovery of 91 Kpods, or etomidate-laced vapes, in the vehicle, and the drugs were found to be for the driver’s own consumption.
2 mins
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Paper batteries, blackjack-playing robot: S’pore firms showcase innovations at CES
Over 30 firms from Republic among exhibitors at world’s largest tech fair in US
4 mins
January 08, 2026
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Eden luridly entertaining, Goodbye June middling melodrama
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2 mins
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Ride-hailing firms offer help to drivers affected by Autobahn car repossessions
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2 mins
January 08, 2026
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Japan blasts China's dual-use export ban; rare earth curbs loom
China's ban on exports of dual-use items to the country was “absolutely unacceptable and deeply regrettable”, amid a looming threat of broader curbs on vital rare earths in an escalating dispute between Asia’s top two economies.
2 mins
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Sandisk stock soars 25% after Nvidia CEO highlights need for storage
Sandisk shares jumped as much as 25 per cent on Jan 6, hitting a record in their best intraday performance since February, after Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang highlighted the need for memory and storage in comments at tech conference CES 2026.
1 mins
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US govt 'working feverishly' on licences for China: Nvidia CFO
The US government is “working feverishly” on licence applications for Nvidia to ship its H200 chips to China, but the company still does not know when they will be approved, Nvidia’s chief financial officer said on Jan 6.
1 min
January 08, 2026
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