“In no way did I ‘doxx’ the officer,” Harp wrote in his Jan. 5 statement posted to social media. “I did not post any personally identifying information about him, such as his birthday, social security number, home address, phone number, email address, the names of his family members, or pictures of his house.”

However, the bio Harp posted to X stated the first name of the commander’s wife.

“Nothing about this should distract from the larger Issue: Delta Force, acting on President Trump’s unlawful orders… invaded Venezuela, killed scores of Venezuelans who posed no threat to the United States, and kidnapped the Venezuelan president, Nicolas Maduro, as well as his wife,” Harp added in his statement.

“The idea of a reporter ‘leaking classified intel’ is a contradiction in terms,” Harp told The Washington Post on Thursday. “The First Amendment and ironclad Supreme Court precedent permit journalists to publish classified documents. We don’t work for the government and it’s our job to expose secrets, not protect them for the convenience of high-ranking officials.”