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Man, I mean, that might've been the only time I've really faced myself.
I'm Jesse Thorne on Bullseye, George Lopez on the time that he swung a bat at a pinata
of George Lopez.
You know, like I wasn't supposed to hit it that many times that hard.
Getting very real with George Lopez on Bullseye from MaximumFun.org and NPR.
Live from NPR News, I'm Lakshmi Singh. President Trump is
standing by National Security Advisor Mike Waltz after the Atlantic's editor-in-chief
Jeffrey Goldberg reported he was inadvertently added to a senior-level group chat about U.S.
military plans in Yemen earlier this month. Goldberg says classified material was shared. President
Trump says not so, but Trump noted risks in using technology like the signal message app.
Sometimes somebody can get onto those things. That's one of the prices you pay when you're
not sitting in the situation room with no phones on, which is always the best.
At a meeting with Trump today, Waltz accused the media of making up lies.
This one in particular I've never met, don't know, never communicated with, and we are
looking into and reviewing how the heck he got into this room.
Congressional Democrats are calling it a serious security failure.
They said as much as they questioned top members of the president's intelligence team who
are on Capitol Hill today to discuss world threat assessments. NPR has seen a Pentagon memo warning against use of the Signal messaging
app. NPR's Quill Lawrence reports Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth shared the plans on
the encrypted app about a U.S. military strike on Yemen in mid-March.
In a group chat that inadvertently included journalist Jeffrey Goldberg, the Trump administration's
top intelligence officials discussed sensitive attack plans over the Signal app.
But NPR has seen an internal memo sent only last week to the entire Department of Defense
that reads,
A vulnerability has been identified in the Signal messenger application.
In the military, sending classified data over insecure channels is called slippage when
it's considered minor,
but even that can be a career ender for a military officer.
There's almost no precedent for the heads of defense, state, and national security to
be sharing such sensitive military intelligence in a forum that was known to be unsecure.
Quill Lawrence, NPR News.
NPR CEO Catherine Maher is chair of the board of the Signal Foundation, the nonprofit
that supports the Signal Message app. The White House says they have come to some agreements
aimed at ending the war between Russia and Ukraine and Piers Depechevaram reports on
talks held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia this week. The White House says it's agreed to help restore
Russian access to agricultural and fertilizer exports, lower maritime security costs,
and open up access to ports and payment systems for those transactions. The White House also says
it's secured an agreement with both Russia and Ukraine on the Black Sea to ensure safe navigation,
eliminate the use of force, and prevent the use of commercial vessels for military purposes.
The U.S. has agreed to help Ukraine with the return of children, civilians, and prisoners of war and says there will be
continued negotiations to bring an end to the conflict.
Deepa Sivaram, NPR News, The White House. U.S. stocks have ended the day slightly
higher, the Dow closing up four points. From Washington, this is NPR News. Vice President JD Vance says he will also visit Greenland this week.
Vance will join Second Lady Usha Vance, who had announced a cultural visit to the Danish
territory earlier in the week, sparking consternation from political leaders in Greenland and Denmark
who are concerned about the Trump administration's interest in acquiring the territory. An appeals
court has ruled that the Trump administration may temporarily halt new refugee entries while
legal proceedings continue over the president's executive order that suspended the nation's
refugee admissions program. The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision requires
that refugees who receive conditional approval before President Trump took office must still be processed. Consumer confidence in the
U.S. fell in March for the fourth month in a row and Pierre Scott Horstley
reports expectations for future economic conditions dropped to their lowest level
in 12 years. Consumer confidence has been hovering in a fairly narrow range for
more than two years but it dipped below that level this month while survey
respondents still feel good about the current job market, their assessment of current
business conditions, and their outlook for the future worsened. The confidence index
is compiled by the Conference Board, a non-profit think tank. People who answered the survey
say inflation is still a big concern, and many expect prices to climb even faster as
a result of tariffs imposed by the Trump administration. More people say they're planning to buy big ticket items such as
appliances and electronics, but rather than a vote of confidence in the
economic outlook, that scene is a largely defensive move to try to beat the looming
import taxes. Scott Horsley, NPR News, Washington.
US stocks higher today than as that closed up 83 points. It's NPR.
Oh, hey there. I'm Brittany Luce and I don't know maybe this is a little out of I hear today the NASDAQ closed up 83 points. It's NPR.