Military Generals Convene After Comey Indictment As Signals of Treason Stir In The Shadows

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• The meeting of generals announced by Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth could be interpreted as a dual-purpose event: preparing for potential instability while simultaneously vetting the generals' allegiance to the current Commander in Chief.

Briefing Notes

  • Pete Hegseth’s generals’ meeting followed Comey’s indictment by less than 24 hours
  • Comey’s cryptic “my heart is broken” video fuels speculation of covert messaging to allies
  • Fallout expected inside the DOJ, with indictments likely to widen in the weeks ahead

WASHINGTON, DC – Mainstream media outlets rushed to spin Pete Hegseth’s sudden announcement of a mass meeting with America’s top generals as a routine leadership and warrior ethos gathering, while many remain unconvinced.

When James Comey was indicted on September 25, 2025, and Hegseth announced his generals’ meeting on the same day, the connection was obvious. Add to that Comey’s cryptic video the following day — and the pattern becomes impossible to ignore.

Evidence, Records, and The Paper Trail

  1. Trump’s Accusations of Spying
    Donald Trump has repeatedly accused the Obama administration, James Comey, Hillary Clinton, and John Brennan of spying on his campaign and committing unlawful surveillance.
  2. Comey Indicted
    On 25, 2025, Comey was indicted in the Eastern District of Virginia for false statements and obstruction. The charges landed just before the statute of limitations expired.
  3. Pete Hegseth’s Generals Meeting
    That same day, Hegseth announced that he would be having a closed-door meeting with top military leaders from stations all around the world. The timing is too exact to dismiss as mere coincidence.
  4. Comey’s Video Performance
    The next day, Comey posted a self-shot video attempting to portray himself as a victim of political persecution. His words — including the phrase “my heart is broken” — may appear emotional on the surface, but in intelligence circles such phrasing often functions as a signal: a cryptic stand-in for loss, compromise, or the need for help.

Comey, a trained operator, knows better than to rely on phones or email while under indictment. This kind of coded messaging may have been aimed at allies still embedded within federal agencies.

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