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Bombardeo ruso en Ucrania deja 34 muertos y desata condenas globales de Estados Unidos y Europa

Un bombardeo ruso causó este domingo la muerte de al menos 34 personas, incluidos dos niños, y dejó 117 heridos en el centro de Sumi, ciudad del noreste ucraniano, en un ataque que provocó fuertes condenas de Estados Unidos y la Unión Europea.
“Creo que fue terrible. Y me dijeron que ellos cometieron un error. Sin embargo, creo que es algo horrible. Creo que toda la guerra es algo horrible”, expresó el presidente estadounidense Donald Trump desde el avión presidencial Air Force One.
Leé también: Mientras negocia con Trump el fin de la guerra en Ucrania, Putin llamó a reclutar a 160.000 soldados rusos
El ataque, ejecutado con misiles balísticos durante el Domingo de Ramos, en plena afluencia de personas, se convirtió en el más mortífero en meses en Ucrania, invadida por Rusia desde febrero de 2022.
También se produjo dos días después de la visita a Rusia de un emisario estadounidense, en el marco de la reanudación de los contactos bilaterales tras el regreso de Trump a la Casa Blanca.
“Rusia golpeó el centro de la ciudad con misiles balísticos. Justo cuando había mucha gente en la calle”, informaron los rescatistas ucranianos en redes sociales.
Según el último parte difundido a las 18H00 (15H00 GMT) por el servicio de emergencias ucraniano, se registraron 34 muertos, incluidos dos menores de edad, y 117 heridos, entre ellos 15 nenes. El centro de la ciudad de Sumi, destruido tras un mortal ataque de misiles rusos. (Foto: AP).
Las autoridades locales difundieron imágenes de cuerpos tendidos en las calles, vehículos en llamas y civiles heridos corriendo para refugiarse. Además, decretaron tres días de luto oficial.
“Un día en que la gente va a la iglesia: Domingo de Ramos (…). Sólo los malnacidos pueden hacer esto”, reaccionó el presidente Volodimir Zelenski, en un mensaje publicado en Telegram.
“Sin una presión realmente fuerte, sin un apoyo adecuado a Ucrania, Rusia continuará llevando a cabo esta guerra”, advirtió, acusando a su par ruso, Vladimir Putin, de haber “ignorado la propuesta estadounidense de un alto el fuego total e incondicional”.
En una entrevista posterior con la televisión estadounidense CBS, Zelenski instó a Trump a visitar Ucrania “antes de cualquier tipo de negociación” para que vea con sus propios ojos “lo que hizo” Putin con su guerra. Cuerpos de ucranianos muertos en el suelo tras un ataque de misiles rusos (Foto: Servicio de prensa del Comisario del Parlamento Ucraniano para los Derechos Humanos/AP).
Desde Bruselas, la jefa de la diplomacia europea, Kaja Kallas, calificó el bombardeo como “un ejemplo horrible de la intensificación de los ataques de Rusia mientras Ucrania aceptó una tregua”.
El secretario general de la ONU, Antonio Guterres, se mostró “profundamente alarmado y conmocionado” por el ataque.
El primer ministro británico, Keir Starmer, escribió en X que este ataque es “un recordatorio brutal del continuo baño de sangre perpetrado por Putin”.
El presidente francés, Emmanuel Macron, pidió “medidas fuertes” para imponer una tregua a Moscú, mientras que el líder conservador alemán, Friedrich Merz, sostuvo que fue “un acto pérfido (…) y un crimen de guerra grave”.
El ataque tuvo lugar tras el encuentro en San Petersburgo entre Putin y Steve Witkoff, emisario estadounidense que visitó Moscú como parte de las gestiones diplomáticas de Washington. Aunque Estados Unidos propuso en marzo una tregua de 30 días, Putin no se mostró convencido y la propuesta no se concretó.
Según Kiev y sus aliados, Rusia estaría alargando deliberadamente las negociaciones con el objetivo de ganar tiempo y aprovechar su superioridad militar en el frente.
La presión rusa no ha cedido en las últimas semanas. A inicios de abril, un ataque en Krivói Rog dejó 18 muertos, incluidos nueve niños, un hecho que conmocionó al país entero.
Sumi, ubicada cerca de la frontera rusa, ha sufrido una creciente presión militar desde que Moscú logró hacer retroceder a las fuerzas ucranianas en la región de Kursk. Aunque hasta ahora se había mantenido al margen de los combates más intensos del sur (Donetsk), las autoridades ucranianas alertan desde hace semanas sobre la posibilidad de una ofensiva rusa en la zona.
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El jueves pasado, Rusia reivindicó la toma de un pueblo en la región de Sumi, un avance poco frecuente en esta parte del noreste, de donde sus tropas se habían replegado en la primavera de 2022.
El comandante en jefe de las fuerzas armadas ucranianas, Oleksandr Sirski, aseguró el miércoles que las tropas rusas habían comenzado “hace algunos días” ofensivas en Sumi y en la vecina región de Járkov, también en el noreste del país.
bombardeo, Rusia, Ucrania
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Neither the US nor Israel will ‘succeed in replacing the Iranian regime,’ retired US general says

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A retired U.S. general predicted that «neither Israel nor the U.S. will fully succeed in replacing the Iranian regime.»
Former Lt. Gen. Mark Schwartz was quoted by the Israel Hayom newspaper as making the remark. The joint U.S. and Israeli missions against Iran, named Operation Epic Fury and Operation Roaring Lion, are in their 20th day Thursday.
«In my professional assessment, neither Israel nor the U.S. will fully succeed in replacing the Iranian regime. The main reason is that there are dozens, if not hundreds, of Iranian religious leaders who can replace the Supreme Leader, the Ayatollah, if he is eliminated,» Schwartz told Israel Hayom.
«No matter how many successors you kill one after another, there will always be another one in line. Iran’s intelligence and security apparatus, the Revolutionary Guards, and the Iranian military also have depth. They are capable of replacing the top of the organization if it is destroyed,» he reportedly added.
IRAN’S SUPREME LEADER MOJTABA KHAMENEI ‘MISFUNCTIONING,’ NOT CONTROLLING REGIME: SOURCES
Retired Lt. Gen. Mark Schwartz, left, and Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, right. (U.S. State Department; Rouhollah Vahdati/ISNA/WANA via Reuters)
Schwartz is a career Green Beret who served in the U.S. Army for 33 years, according to The National Special Forces Green Beret Memorial, where he is the chairman of the advisory board.
The organization said, «During his career, Mark served throughout the Middle East, Europe, and North Africa,» and, «He has had the opportunity to lead strategic planning and operations working with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the United Nations, the European Union, and the United States Agency for International Development.»
PENTAGON SEEKS AT LEAST $200 BILLION FROM CONGRESS FOR IRAN WAR

Recent footage shared by U.S. Central Command showed strikes against airplanes during the Iran war. (U.S. Central Command on X)
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard had warned Wednesday that if the Iranian regime survives Operation Epic Fury, «it will likely seek to begin a yearslong effort to rebuild its military, missiles and UAV forces.»
Gabbard also said the intelligence community «assesses that Operation Epic Fury is advancing fundamental change in the region that began with Hamas’s attack on Israel on October 7th, 2023, and continued with the 12-day war last year, resulting in weakening Iran and its proxies.»

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed at the beginning of Operation Epic Fury on Feb. 28, 2026. ( Office of the Supreme Leader of Iran via Getty Images)
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The campaign so far has resulted in the killing of former Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has been replaced by his son, Mojtaba Khamenei.
war with iran,iran,israel,conflicts,middle east,military,world
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Mystery drones fly near DC-area military base as Iran tensions escalate

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U.S. officials detected unidentified drones near a military installation in Washington, D.C., where top administration officials reportedly have been housed, as security concerns mount amid escalating tensions in the Middle East and with Iran.
Multiple drones were spotted in recent days near Fort Lesley J. McNair, where Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of War Pete Hegseth are living, The Washington Post reported, citing people briefed on the situation. The origin of the drones has not been determined.
The base, located in Southwest Washington, D.C., houses the National Defense University and senior military leadership. It also reportedly has been used to accommodate high-level administration officials amid elevated security concerns.
Officials with Joint Task Force–National Capital Region and the U.S. Army Military District of Washington said they are aware of the reported drone sightings.
US DIPLOMATIC FACILITY IN IRAQ STRUCK BY DRONE
«We are aware of the reported drone sightings near Fort McNair and the surrounding areas,» Heather Chairez, media chief for Joint Task Force–National Capital Region and the U.S. Army Military District of Washington, told Fox News Digital Thursday. «We are working with our law enforcement and interagency partners to monitor and investigate the reported sightings.»
«Our top priority is the safety of our service members and civilian personnel that work and live on the base,» she added. «Currently there is no credible threat to Fort McNair, but we will continue to monitor the situation and adjust force protection measures as needed.»
A growing number of top officials, including Rubio and Hegseth, have moved into military housing in the Washington area, according to multiple reports, a shift that is unusual and has few modern precedents for civilian political appointees.
Fox News has not independently confirmed Rubio and Hegseth live at McNair.
The reported sightings come as the United States has heightened security measures at military installations and diplomatic posts following ongoing U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran, raising concerns about potential retaliation and attacks on U.S. troops.
Iran increasingly has relied on drones as a central component of its military strategy, deploying unmanned systems and supporting proxy forces across the Middle East in attacks on U.S. and allied targets.
During the opening phase of Operation Epic Fury, an Iranian drone strike in Kuwait killed six U.S. service members, underscoring concerns among defense officials about the growing threat posed by unmanned systems.
Senate Democrats are planning to grind the Senate to a halt unless Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and Secretary of War Marco Rubio testify publicly on the war in Iran. (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters)
Several U.S. bases have elevated force protection levels in recent days, including Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst in New Jersey and MacDill Air Force Base in Florida, which is home to U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM).
MacDill, which serves as the headquarters for CENTCOM and oversees all U.S. military operations in the Middle East, also has experienced multiple recent security incidents that prompted temporary lockdowns, according to base officials. Officials did not detail the nature of the threat but said they «take all threats seriously and will continue to prioritize the safety and security of our installation, our mission and our people.»
The State Department also has directed diplomatic posts worldwide to review and strengthen security measures in response to an evolving threat environment.

FPV training drones are seen on a wall at the Killhouse Academy drone training center on March 4, 2026, in Kyiv, Ukraine. (Chris McGrath/Getty Images)
IRAN’S DRONE SWARMS CHALLENGE US AIR DEFENSES AS TROOPS IN MIDDLE EAST FACE RISING THREATS
U.S. officials have not publicly identified the source or intent behind the drone activity near the nation’s capital, and it remains unclear whether the incidents are connected to broader geopolitical tensions.
U.S. law enforcement agencies also have been placed on heightened alert in recent weeks following a federal warning about intercepted communications believed to be of Iranian origin that could serve as a potential trigger for sleeper assets abroad, though officials said there was no specific or imminent threat tied to the alert.
Earlier in March, an FBI advisory referenced unverified intelligence suggesting Iran had explored launching drones from offshore platforms near California, though officials stressed the information was aspirational and not tied to any imminent threat.

Plumes of smoke rise following reported explosions in Tehran, Iran, on March 2, 2026. (Sohrab/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)
Experts say that while Iran has invested heavily in drone warfare abroad, the more plausible risk inside the United States would involve small, commercially available drones rather than large military systems.
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Unauthorized drone incursions near sensitive government and military sites are typically monitored and assessed by multiple federal agencies, including the Department of War, federal law enforcement and aviation authorities.
The Pentagon and State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
army,pete hegseth,marco rubio,war with iran,drones,washington dc,pentagon,state department
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