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Benjamin Netanyahu ordenó una operación intensiva en Cisjordania tras la explosión de los buses cerca de Tel Aviv

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El primer ministro de Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, ordenó este viernes una «operación intensiva contra los centros del terrorismo» en Cisjordania, después de varias explosiones en autobuses en los suburbios de Tel Aviv que no dejaron heridos.

La policía israelí informó el jueves de estallidos en tres buses en la ciudad de Bat Yam que investiga como un «posible atentado terrorista«. Sus agentes también hicieron detonar otros dos artefactos.

Netanyahu convocó a su gabinete para analizar el incidente y, al término de la reunión, «ordenó a las fuerzas de defensa israelíes realizar una operación intensiva contra los centros del terrorismo» en Cisjordania, dijo su oficina.

También instó a la Policía y a los servicios de inteligencia interior a «incrementar la actividad de prevención» ante este tipo de ataques.

Antes de la reunión, su ministro de Defensa, Israel Katz, había acusado a «organizaciones terroristas palestinas» de estar detrás de las explosiones.

También ordenó a su ejército intensificar «las operaciones destinadas a frustrar el terrorismo» en los campos de refugiados de Cisjordania, donde suelen operar grupos armados palestinos.

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Israel: hubo tres explosiones en buses en los suburbios de Tel Aviv y la policía sospecha que se trata de un “atentado”

El comandante de la policía en el centro de Israel, Haim Sargarof, dijo a la prensa que los explosivos encontrados eran similares a los hallados normalmente en este territorio palestino ocupado desde 1967 por Israel.

Después de los estallidos, la policía desplegó un número importante de efectivos para encontrar a posibles sospechosos y buscar si había más artefactos explosivos.

Imágenes difundidas por cadenas israelíes mostraron un autobús completamente calcinado y otro en llamas. La prensa local asegura que los vehículos estaban estacionados y vacíos en el momento de las detonaciones.

Estos medios también apuntaron que las autoridades ordenaron a todos los conductores de autobuses del país frenar sus vehículos e inspeccionarlos por si también había explosivos.

Desde hace varias semanas, el ejército israelí realiza operaciones casi diarias en Cisjordania, donde la violencia se ha intensificado desde el inicio de la guerra entra Israel y Hamás en Gaza en octubre de 2023.

Al menos 897 palestinos, incluidos combatientes, han muerto a manos de fuerzas israelíes o colonos en Cisjordania desde el inicio del conflicto, según un recuento basado en datos facilitados por el ministerio palestino de Salud.

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Y en el mismo periodo, al menos 32 israelíes, incluidos soldados, han fallecido en ataques o enfrentamientos con palestinos durante operaciones en Cisjordania, según datos oficiales de Israel.

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Economy, immigration, Elon Musk at center of German election; conservative candidate favored to win

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Germans go to the polls Sunday as the conservative Christian Democrats, led by Friedrich Merz, are expected to oust current Chancellor Olaf Scholz. But the potential incoming chancellor has already signaled he will not rule with Germany’s right-wing populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

Germany’s election has also caught the attention of Vice President JD Vance and Elon Musk. Musk has championed the AfD as the best political party to fix Germany’s economic woes. Musk’s comments drew the ire of German politicians, and Chancellor Scholz accused the billionaire of interfering in Germany’s elections. 

Following a stabbing in Munich on Friday, Musk once again tweeted his support for AfD on X stating, «Only AfD can save Germany.»

Vance met with the leader of the AfD, Alice Weidel, at the Munich Security Conference and criticized the German government’s «firewall» policy of not cooperating with the AfD.

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Olaf Scholz, German Chancellor of the Social Democratic Party, left, and Friedrich Merz, right, leader of the Christian Democratic Union, at a TV studio ahead of a debate in Berlin, Germany, Feb. 19, 2025.  (Fabrizio Bensch/Pool Photo via AP)

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«The main political parties governing Germany have established a ‘firewall’ between themselves and the AfD, which essentially means they refuse to endorse, collaborate with or support far-right parties like the AfD,» Anna Hardage, fellow in European Studies at the American Foreign Policy Council, told Fox News Digital.

The AfD expects to have its best performance in an election, doubling its vote count from 2021, and could become Germany’s second-biggest political party.

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If Merz and his Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party refuse to work with the AfD, Germany may end up with a coalition of parties that have fewer shared priorities, except a shared desire to avoid partnering with the AfD.

Hardage noted that while the AfD will most likely be shut out of any governing coalition, the party’s success in mobilizing public opinion means its positions will shape public debates around the biggest issues facing Germany. 

Alice Weidel, AfD

Alice Weidel, AfD candidate for chancellor and leader of the AfD parliamentary group, talks to presenter Dunja Hayali in an interview on the ZDF morning show «moma vor der Wahl» Feb. 21, 2025, in Berlin. (Kay Nietfeld/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images)

AfD has been able to capitalize on the German public’s fears over migration after a spate of violent incidents involving migrants. The party champions stricter immigration laws as the number of migrants across Germany and the EU has soared in recent years from various global conflicts.

The economy, security and immigration are the biggest issues, and they are successful because many voters attribute these big issues to the missteps of past leaders. Rafael Loss, a policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, told Fox News Digital Merz has moved the CDU to the right on these issues to win back AfD-curious voters.

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Germany Christmas Market

Emergency crews respond to a suspected terror attack at a Christmas market in Magdeburg, Germany Dec. 20, 2024. (Heiko Rebsch/dpa via AP)

AfD might find common ground with President Donald Trump’s desire to end the war in Ukraine. The party has called for an end to security assistance to Ukraine and the lifting of sanctions on Russia. Loss said, however, that transatlanticism is at the core of the CDU’s identity, and Merz is convinced that Russia is an existential threat to German and European security, and it remains a priority for Ukraine to emerge victorious.

The sentiment is shared by Merz’s European counterparts.

Anti-Israel protest in Germany

Anti-Israel protest in Berlin, Germany, Nov. 18, 2023. (Fabian Sommer/picture alliance via Getty Images)

«Conversations between European leaders of the past weeks, many of whom have also been consulting with Merz, suggest that German and European support for Ukraine will further increase rather than decrease,» Loss said.

Merz’s party has led in the polls for at least three years, with most polls showing a consistent lead for the CDU of around 30%. The election comes after Chancellor Scholz’s «traffic light» coalition fell apart in November over disagreements on fiscal issues. 

Economic issues have also led to a deterioration of Scholz’s popularity, and his government struggled to combat the post-pandemic rise in inflation and stagnating growth.

Friedrich Merz election poster in Germany

An election poster of Friedrich Merz, the CDU top candidate for chancellor, as the sun rises in Bad Homburg near Frankfurt, Germany, Thursday, Feb. 20, 2025.  (Photo/Michael Probst)

The AfD has faced a barrage of criticism and controversy and was placed under surveillance by Germany’s domestic intelligence agency in 2021 and labeled a suspected right-wing extremist group because some members have reported ties to neo-Nazi groups. The party appealed the designation but was unsuccessful. Björn Höcke, the co-leader of the AfD in the state of Thuringia, and the party’s most prominent member of its extreme right wing, has been convicted several times for using Nazi rhetoric and symbols.

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Loss noted that, at the state level, of the 16 AfD state-level organizations, three are being considered as confirmed extremist groups, six are under surveillance as suspected extremist groups and another one is under investigation.

Germany’s Constitutional Court has only banned two political parties since 1949 — the Socialist Reich Party in 1952 and the Communist Party of Germany in 1956.


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