INTERNACIONAL
Ecuador: Noboa se impuso con 12 puntos de ventaja a la candidata correísta y logró la reelección hasta 2029

Bajo un manto de gran incertidumbre y la amenaza de un estallido de violencia impulsado por el crimen organizado, los ecuatorianos fueron a las urnas este domingo y en segunda vuelta Daniel Noboa se impuso con el 56% ante la candidata de la Revolución Ciudadana, Luisa González. Así, el actual mandatario será presidente hasta 2029.
Leé también: Ecuador azotado por el crimen organizado: amenazas a periodistas y la tasa de asesinatos más alta de la región
Las elecciones se realizaron sin grandes contratiempos, con denuncias aisladas y el arresto de 634 personas por distintos delitos u órdenes de captura vigente, según dijo el general Henry Tapia, comandante de la zona 9 de la Policía Nacional.
No es la primera vez que Noboa enfrentó a González. Fue el cuarto enfrentamiento electoral entre ambos. Los dos primeros en las elecciones de 2023 (salió segundo en el primer turno y le ganó en el balotaje) y el tercero ocurrió el 9 de febrero, cuando la derrotó con una escasísima diferencia de 16.746 votos (44,17% a 44%).
TN recorrió varios centros electorales en distintos puntos de Quito, donde se vio una gran afluencia de votantes, en un clima de tranquilidad.
“Voto Correa”, dijo una mujer que atendía un local de comida al paso alrededor de un centro electoral en la parroquia de Pifo, en la zona rural de Quito. Varios seguidores del expresidente simplemente mencionaron su nombre para señalar su voto a Luisa González, heredera política del exmandatario exiliado en Bruselas. Expectativas por el balotaje en Ecuador entre Daniel Noboa y Luisa González. (Foto: TN/Marcelo Izquierdo)
Pero el voto a Noboa también estuvo presente en esa humilde parroquia quiteña. María, una vecina de la zona, dijo que había votado por el empresario para darle una nueva oportunidad y para que no vuelva “la corrupción” al país.
En otras zonas de clase media, el apoyo a Noboa era más claro, aunque la paridad que manejan los sondeos es absoluta. Desde ambos lados se difundieron encuestas en las que se atribuían el triunfo por dos a cuatro puntos.
Daniel Noboa va por la reelección
Daniel Noboa es considerado aún un outsider de la política ecuatoriana. Era un candidato del montón hasta pocas semanas antes de las elecciones de agosto de 2023 luego de la renuncia de Guillermo Lasso. Pero con un sprint final clave y un discurso antigrieta en un país sumamente polarizado, llegó segundo de González y ganó el balotaje dos meses después. Noboa va por la reelección. (Foto: REUTERS)
La irrupción de Noboa en la política fue sorpresiva. Llegó a la presidencia contra todo pronóstico y aglutinó el apoyo anticorreísta en el balotaje en el que derrotó a González de 2023. Su estilo entremezcla una imagen de “rambo” con un joven descontracturado. Así, se lo ve tanto trepado a un tanque de guerra con chaleco y casco antibalas para amenazar al crimen organizado, como vestido con ropa deportiva y cantando, guitarra acústica en mano, alguna canción de los Goo Goo Dolls.
Este domingo buscará ser reelecto por otros cuatro años. “Nada se resuelve en un año”, afirmó en campaña y aseguró: “Los narcos nunca se imaginaron que yo tenía los huevos para declararles la guerra”.
Luisa González, la heredera de Rafael Correa
El mayor capital de Luisa González es, como un paradójico oxímoron político, su más evidente debilidad. Es considerada la heredera de Rafael Correa, exiliado en Bélgica y condenado a ocho años por corrupción en 2020. Por un lado, este padrinazgo atrae un fuerte respaldo popular dentro de la llamada Revolución Ciudadana, pero al mismo tiempo la aleja de las clases medias y altas que miran con desconfianza a la izquierda y a un regreso al “populismo”. La candidata presidencial ecuatoriana Luisa González. del partido Revolución Ciudadana, habla durante su mitin de campaña (Foto: Reuters)
En los últimos meses, la candidata intentó desmarcarse de la figura de Correa, con un discurso más independiente que mira hacia el futuro. Pero sus detractores intentan mostrarla como una mujer títere del expresidente.
Noticia que está siendo actualizada.-
Ecuador, Daniel Noboa, Luisa González
INTERNACIONAL
El cuestionado servicio anti inmigrantes de EE.UU. se encargará de la seguridad durante el Mundial de Fútbol: temen arrestos y deportaciones de fans

Preocupación
INTERNACIONAL
Western Hemisphere defense chiefs convene after border drone scare prompts airspace closure

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Top U.S. military leaders are hosting more than 30 nations in Washington as the Trump administration moves to deepen security cooperation across the Western Hemisphere, prioritizing border control, drug trafficking and regional threats from global adversaries.
«To put America First, we must put the Americas First,» War Secretary Pete Hegseth said, according to remarks shared by Joseph Humire, U.S. Acting Assistant Secretary of War for Homeland Defense and the Americas.
NORAD AIRCRAFT TO ARRIVE IN GREENLAND FOR ROUTINE EXERCISES
«We must work together to prevent any adversary or criminal actor from exploiting your territory or using your infrastructure to threaten what a great former American president, Teddy Roosevelt, once called ‘permanent peace in this hemisphere.’»
The meeting, convened by Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine, comes amid a broader national security strategy that places heightened emphasis on threats closer to home: from fentanyl pipelines and transnational criminal networks to Arctic competition and instability in Venezuela.
The conference also coincides with U.S. action against Mexican cartel drones that breached American airspace near El Paso, Texas.
An administration official told Fox News that «Mexican cartel drones breached U.S. airspace. The Department of War took action to disable the drones. The FAA and DOW have determined there is no threat to commercial travel.»
Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is hosting a meeting for the Western Hemisphere defense chiefs in Washington. (Alex Brandon/AP)
The Federal Aviation Administration temporarily restricted flights in and out of El Paso International Airport for what it described as «special security reasons.» Federal officials have not released operational details, but the administration official said the action was directly tied to counter-drone measures along the southern border.
The incident underscores the growing use of unmanned systems by cartel networks and the increasing overlap between traditional criminal activity and homeland defense concerns — a theme expected to surface in discussions among defense leaders gathered in Washington.
Top military leaders from Denmark, Britain and France, nations that have territory in the western hemisphere, have also been invited, according to The New York Times.
FAA WARNS ABOUT FLYING IN CENTRAL, SOUTH AMERICA AND EASTERN PACIFIC, CITING POSSIBLE ‘MILITARY ACTIVITIES’
Gen. Francis Donovan, the new chief of Southern Command, which oversees Latin American and Caribbean operations, is expected to press regional counterparts to intensify cooperation against drug-trafficking organizations and transnational criminal groups that operate across borders and increasingly leverage advanced technology. U.S. officials have warned that cartel networks are using drones, encrypted communications and sophisticated smuggling routes to move narcotics and personnel.

Video shows a kinetic strike on a narco-terror vessel in international waters from Wednesday, Dec. 31. The strikes come amid broader military pressure in the region following high-profile security actions. (U.S. Southern Command via X)
Gen. Gregory M. Guillot, the head of U.S. Northern Command, which leads homeland and north of the U.S. defense including Greenland, is reportedly expected to talk about border controls and integration of advanced sensors across air, land, sea and space domains.
Arctic security also us likely to feature prominently in discussions. The administration has pointed to increased Russian and Chinese activity in the Arctic as a long-term strategic concern and has emphasized the importance of Greenland’s geographic position for missile warning, maritime access and critical mineral resources.

Former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, who was captured by U.S. forces in January in a high-stakes operation and is now facing federal drug-trafficking charges in the United States. The capture has reshaped U.S. security discussions in the Western Hemisphere. (Leonardo Fernandez Viloria/Reuters)
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
The summit comes on the heels of the dramatic U.S. military capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro in early January after months of counternarcotics boat strikes.
As the hemisphere’s security landscape continues shifting, defense officials and regional allies alike will be watching to see how other governments with hostile policies toward the U.S. respond to Washington’s increasingly assertive posture.
latin america,pentagon,conflicts defense,drugs,border security,location mexico,joint chiefs of staff,homeland security
INTERNACIONAL
Russia agrees to abide by expired New START nuclear arms limits — as long as US does the same

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Russia has reportedly agreed to abide by the limits of a nuclear arms pact it reached with the U.S. years ago after the agreement expired last week — as long as Washington does the same.
The New START Treaty’s expiration, which occurred on Feb. 5, leaves the nations with the two largest atomic arsenals with no restrictions for the first time in more than a half-century, The Associated Press reported. The expiration has fueled fears of a possible unconstrained nuclear arms race.
In September, President Vladimir Putin said Russia would abide by the nuclear arms deal for another year after its expiration date as long as the U.S. followed suit, the AP reported. However, President Donald Trump has said he wanted China to be part of a new pact, something that Beijing has rejected, according to the AP.
«Rather than extend ‘NEW START’ (A badly negotiated deal by the United States that, aside from everything else, is being grossly violated), we should have our Nuclear Experts work on a new, improved, and modernized Treaty that can last long into the future,» Trump wrote on Truth Social upon the treaty’s expiration.
WORLD ENTERS UNCHARTED ERA AS US-RUSSIA NUCLEAR TREATY EXPIRES, OPENING DOOR TO FASTEST ARMS RACE IN DECADES
President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin meet in Anchorage, Alaska. (Reuters/Kevin Lamarque)
In response to Fox News Digital’s request for comment on the now-expired treaty, the White House pointed to the president’s Truth Social post.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov spoke to lawmakers about the treaty, saying Moscow would «act in a responsible and balanced way on the basis of analysis of the U.S. military policies,» the AP reported.
Lavrov added that «we have reason to believe that the United States is in no hurry to abandon these limits and that they will be observed for the foreseeable future.»

A rocket is launched as part of a ground-based intercontinental ballistic missile test at the Plesetsk facility in Russia on Dec. 9, 2020. (Russian Defense Ministry Press Service via AP, File)
«We will closely monitor how things are actually unfolding,» Lavrov said. «If our American colleagues’ intention to maintain some kind of cooperation on this is confirmed, we will work actively on a new agreement and consider the issues that have remained outside strategic stability agreements.»
TRUMP CALLS FOR NUCLEAR EXPERTS TO WORK ON ‘NEW, IMPROVED, AND MODERNIZED TREATY’
The New START Treaty was signed in 2010 by President Barack Obama and his Russian counterpart, Dmitry Medvedev, and was entered into force on Feb. 5, 2011.
The treaty gave the U.S. and Russia until Feb. 5, 2018, to meet the central limits on strategic offensive arms. The treaty caps each side at 700 deployed ICBMs, SLBMs and nuclear-capable heavy bombers; 1,550 deployed warheads; and 800 deployed and non-deployed launchers and bombers. The parties were then obligated to maintain the limits as long as the treaty remained in force, which it did until last week.

President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin shake hands during a press conference following their meeting on Ukraine, in Anchorage, Alaska,, Aug. 15, 2025. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
The expiration of the treaty comes just after a meeting involving U.S. and Russian officials in Abu Dhabi. Axios previously reported that the two nations were closing in on a deal to observe the treaty for at least six months after its expiration. The outlet added that during the six-month period there would be negotiations for a new deal.
The State Department did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
world,russia,nuclear proliferation,donald trump,vladimir putin
POLITICA1 día agoAcuartelamiento policial en Santa Fe: reclamo salarial y temor a un conflicto nacional de seguridad
POLITICA1 día agoLa advertencia de ATE a los gobernadores que apoyan la reforma laboral: “Firmarán su sentencia de muerte”
ECONOMIA1 día agoCuánto le cuesta a la clase media llenar el changuito y cómo varían los precios de los alimentos entre provincias




















