INTERNACIONAL
Seis impactos de la bomba GBU-75: así quedo Fordow tras el bombardeo de Estados unidos

Imágenes satelitales tomadas el domingo revelan daños significativos en la ladera de la montaña que alberga las instalaciones nucleares subterráneas de Irán en Fordow, tras los ataques aéreos estadounidenses que marcaron la entrada directa de Estados Unidos en el conflicto con la república islámica.
Las imágenes, capturadas por Planet Labs y analizadas por The Associated Press, muestran que la montaña, antes de color marrón, tiene ahora partes que se tornaron grises y sus contornos aparecen ligeramente diferentes a los de imágenes previas, lo que sugiere que una explosión dispersó escombros alrededor del sitio. Esto indica el uso de bombas antibúnker especializadas estadounidenses en la instalación. También se observa humo gris claro flotando en el aire.

Irán aún no ha ofrecido una evaluación de los daños en el sitio, mientras que otras imágenes satelitales sugieren que antes del ataque, Irán selló las entradas de túneles en Fordow.
El ataque de Estados Unidos a tres recintos en Irán durante la madrugada del domingo insertó al país en la guerra de Israel destinada a destruir el programa nuclear iraní, en una arriesgada apuesta para debilitar a un antiguo enemigo que provocó temores a un conflicto regional más amplio. Teherán acusó a Washington de iniciar “una guerra peligrosa”.
El presidente Donald Trump afirmó que los principales complejos nucleares de Irán fueron “completa y totalmente destruidos” en un discurso a la nación desde la Casa Blanca.

Sin embargo, horas después, el ministro iraní de Exteriores, Abbas Araghchi, declaró que el tiempo para la diplomacia había pasado y que su país tenía el derecho a defenderse, afirmando que Estados Unidos había “cruzado una línea roja muy grande”.
“El gobierno belicista y sin ley en Washington es única y totalmente responsable de las peligrosas consecuencias y las implicaciones de largo alcance de su acto de agresión”, dijo Araghchi a los periodistas en Turquía, en las primeras declaraciones de un alto funcionario iraní desde los ataques.
La Organización de Energía Atómica de Irán confirmó que se produjeron ataques en sus instalaciones de Fordow, Isfahan y Natanz, pero insistió en que su programa nuclear no será detenido. Tanto Irán como el organismo de control nuclear de la ONU dijeron que no había señales inmediatas de contaminación radiactiva en los tres lugares tras los ataques.
El complejo de Fordow, excavado en el corazón de una montaña a unos 90 kilómetros al sur de Teherán, ha sido durante mucho tiempo uno de los sitios nucleares más protegidos de Irán.

El ejército israelí dijo el domingo que estaba comprobando los resultados del bombardeo y añadió que era “demasiado pronto” para saber si se habían destruido reservas de uranio enriquecido.
A la pregunta de si Irán había retirado uranio enriquecido de Fordow o si había quedado enterrado bajo los escombros, el portavoz del ejército Effie Defrin dijo a los periodistas: “Comprobamos constantemente la situación. Es demasiado pronto para determinarlo. Supongo que lo sabremos más adelante”.
Agregó que el ejército israelí tenía “otros objetivos” en Irán y que pretendía continuar su ofensiva militar.
En cambio, no estaba claro si Estados Unidos continuaría atacando a Irán junto a su aliado Israel, que ha librado una guerra con Irán durante nueve días. Países de todo el mundo pedían diplomacia y precaución. Trump actuó sin autorización del Congreso y advirtió que habría ataques adicionales si Teherán tomaba represalias contra las fuerzas estadounidenses.
“Habrá paz o habrá tragedia para Irán”, declaró el presidente estadounidense.

Irán, que es un aliado cercano de Rusia y ha apoyado activamente a este país en su guerra en Ucrania suministrándole drones de ataque, respondió con fuerza. Araghchi anunció que volaría inmediatamente a Moscú para reunirse con el presidente Vladimir Putin “y coordinar nuestras posiciones”.
El Ministerio iraní de Exteriores dijo que Washington había “traicionado la diplomacia” con los ataques militares en apoyo a Israel, y afirmó que ahora “Estados Unidos ha iniciado una guerra peligrosa contra Irán”.
Horas después de los ataques estadounidenses, la Guardia Revolucionaria paramilitar de Irán lanzó una andanada de 40 misiles contra Israel, incluyendo su proyectil Khorramshahr-4, que puede llevar varias ojivas. Las autoridades israelíes informaron que más de 80 personas sufrieron heridas, en su mayoría leves, aunque un edificio de varios pisos en Tel Aviv sufrió daños importantes, con toda su fachada arrancada para exponer los apartamentos en su interior.
Tras el bombardeo iraní, el ejército israelí dijo que había “neutralizado rápidamente” los lanzadores de misiles iraníes que habían disparado, y que había comenzado una serie de ataques hacia objetivos militares en el oeste de Irán, intensificando aún más el ciclo de violencia en la región.
Middle East,Military Conflicts,Qom
INTERNACIONAL
Trump and Putin’s relationship turns sour as president pushes for resolution with Ukraine

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While President Donald Trump previously refrained from speaking ill of Russian President Vladimir Putin, those days are over.
The ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine has changed the nature of their dynamic. Although the two appeared to get along, at least publicly, during Trump’s first administration, their relationship has unraveled as the more recent conflict persists.
In recent weeks, Trump has refused to mince his words when asked about Putin. Trump said during a Cabinet meeting July 8 he was fed up with Putin and said he was eyeing potentially imposing new sanctions on Russia.
«We get a lot of bulls— thrown at us by Putin, if you want to know the truth,» Trump said. «He’s very nice all the time, but it turns out to be meaningless.»
TRUMP MOVES NUCLEAR SUBMARINES WEEKS AFTER PRAISING SUB’S POWER IN IRAN STRIKES
While President Donald Trump previously refrained from speaking ill of Russian President Vladimir Putin, those days are over. (Kremlin Press Office / Handout/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
John Hardie, Russia program deputy director at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said Russia started to attract ire from Trump dating back to March after Ukraine agreed to a 30-day ceasefire. But Russia has failed to get on board with a ceasefire.
«Really, since then, I think Trump has come to view the Russians as the main impediment to a deal,» Hardie told Fox News Digital Thursday.
Additionally, Hardie said that Trump has also grown frustrated that Russia will launch drone and missile attacks against Ukraine, even after directly speaking with Putin.
«What he’s sort of latched on to are these Russian drone and missile barrages,» Hardie said. «That really seems to resonate with him.»
Tensions only have continued to escalate between the U.S. and Russia since the July Cabinet meeting.
Trump announced July 14 that he would sign off on «severe tariffs» against Russia if Moscow failed to agree to a peace deal within 50 days. He then dramatically reduced the deadline to only 10–12 days — which ends Friday.
The decision to reduce the timeline prompted former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to caution that «each new ultimatum is a threat and a step towards war.»
TRUMP LIFTS VEIL ON US SUBMARINES IN WARNING SHOT TO KREMLIN IN ‘CLEVER’ REPOSITIONING MOVE

The decision to reduce the timeline prompted former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to caution that «each new ultimatum is a threat and a step towards war.» (Sputnik/Yekaterina Shtukina/Pool via Reuters/File Photo)
In addition to economic sanctions, Trump responded to Medvedev and issued a rare statement disclosing that two U.S. Navy submarines would be moved in response to escalating threats from Russia.
«I have ordered two Nuclear Submarines to be positioned in the appropriate regions, just in case these foolish and inflammatory statements are more than just that,» Trump said Aug. 1.
Trump’s disclosure of the submarine presence puts additional pressure on Russia to come to the negotiating table, according to Bryan Clark, a retired submarine officer and director of the Hudson Institute think tank’s Center for Defense Concepts and Technology.
«We have used very sparingly submarines to try to influence adversary behavior before, but this is pretty unusual, to do it against a nuclear-powered adversary like Russia in response to a nuclear threat by Russia,» Clark told Fox News Digital Monday. «So I think this is trying to essentially push back on Russia’s frequent and long-standing threats to use nuclear weapons in part of the Ukraine conflict.»

President Donald Trump’s disclosure of the submarine presence puts additional pressure on Russia to come to the negotiating table, according to Bryan Clark, a retired submarine officer.
Momentum is picking up on negotiations though, and U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff met with Putin Wednesday.
Trump said in a post on Truth Social afterward that «great progress» was made during the meeting. And now, Trump and Putin are expected to meet face to face imminently in an attempt to finally advance negotiations to end the war between Russia and Ukraine.
Still, Hardie said he is skeptical that the meeting between Putin and Trump will result in meaningful progress.
«I don’t expect a summit to produce much,» Hardie said. «And I think Putin could try to use the summit to placate Trump and kind of buy more time continues assault on Ukraine, but I think his goal is he’d love to be able to enlist Trump in his effort to impose these harsh terms on Ukraine.»
Russia has pushed for concessions in a peace deal that include barring Ukraine from joining NATO, preventing foreign peacekeeper troops from deploying to Ukraine after the conflict, and adjusting some of the borders that previously were Ukraine’s.

It’s unclear if Trump plans to announce any additional economic burdens upon Russia Aug. 8, 2025, in accordance with the deadline that he imposed demanding that Russia signal willingness to end the conflict. (Jorge Silva/Reuters)
It’s unclear if Trump plans to announce any additional economic burdens upon Russia Friday in accordance with the deadline that he imposed demanding that Russia signal willingness to end the conflict. But according to Trump, the ball is in Putin’s court.
«It’s going to be up to him,» Trump told reporters Thursday. «We’re going to see what he has to say. It’s going to be up to him. Very disappointed.»
The White House did not disclose any details regarding potential Friday sanctions, but said that Trump wants to meet with Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Putin to resolve the conflict.
«The Russians expressed their desire to meet with President Trump, and the President is open to this meeting,» White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement to Fox News Digital. «President Trump would like to meet with both President Putin and President Zelensky because he wants this brutal war to end. The White House is working through the details of these potential meetings and details will be provided at the appropriate time.»
white house,russia,ukraine,donald trump,vladimir putin
INTERNACIONAL
Trump to host Armenia, Azerbaijan leaders ahead of peace pledge as White House eyes Nobel Peace Prize

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President Donald Trump will host the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan on Friday as he looks to secure one more peace deal under his belt following fighting that reignited in 2020.
«I look forward to hosting the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, and the Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan, at the White House tomorrow for a Historic Peace Summit,» Trump said in a Thursday night social media post.
«President Aliyev AND Prime Minister Pashinyan will join me at the White House for an official Peace Signing Ceremony,» he added. «The United States will also sign Bilateral Agreements with both Countries to pursue Economic opportunities together, so we can fully unlock the potential of the South Caucasus Region.»
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, right, and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan meet in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates, on July 10, 2025. (Azerbaijani Presidency/Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images)
ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN MOVE TOWARD NORMALIZED RELATIONS AS THE FIRST BORDER MARKER IS PLACED
Despite the president’s comments, experts familiar with the ongoing negotiations have told Fox News Digital that the leaders are not expected to sign a formalized peace agreement, but rather a letter of intent following more than a year of negotiations.
However, even as an official peace agreement is not expected to be signed, the meeting is still viewed as a major win for not only regional stability, but for Trump as well.
«I believe they’ve had a significant position in this whole process,» Matias Perttula, director of Save Armenia, told Fox News Digital. «We just returned from Armenia over the last week [where] we had several government meetings, including with the national security advisor, the president of Armenia and a couple other ministries, and from what we can tell the engagement from the Trump administration has been a lot more robust than the Biden administration.»

An Azeri serviceman stands near trenches at a former Armenian separatists military position in the village of Mukhtar (Muxtar) retaken recently by Azeri troops, during an Azeri government-organized media trip, in Azerbaijan’s controlled region of Nagorno-Karabakh, on Oct. 3, 2023. ( EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP via Getty Images)
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan are each expected to meet with Trump prior to signing a pledge for peace between the two nations, which have been embroiled in, at times, brutal conflict since the late 1980s.
The conflict largely centered around the status of the Nagorno-Karabakh region, a mountainous area in Azerbaijan with a majority-Armenian population, but which declared independence in 1991.
While Armenia, along with the international community, never formally recognized the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic as an independent state, it became its chief financial and military backer.
The territory assumed a de facto role in Armenia until Azerbaijani forces overwhelmed the republic in a swift campaign in September 2023, prompting mass evacuations of ethnic Armenians before it was then dissolved on Jan. 1, 2024.
This region is expected to remain a major issue in the ongoing negotiations.

A protester wearing the Armenian national flag stands in front of Russian peacekeepers blocking the road outside Stepanakert, capital of the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan, on Dec. 24, 2022. (Photo by DAVIT GHAHRAMANYAN/AFP via Getty Images)
ARMENIA’S PRIME MINISTER URGES SWIFT BORDER AGREEMENT TO AVOID CONFLICT WITH AZERBAIJAN
Though both nations announced in March that they had reached a consensus on finalizing a peace deal, several factors surrounding the mountainous area have prevented a finalized agreement from being reached, as witnessed in the July meeting between the leaders when they met in the UAE but failed to find a resolution.
Chief among Azerbaijan’s demands is that Armenia should amend its constitution and remove all references to the Nagorno-Karabakh territory. Though this demand is not a simple request that just Pashinyan can agree to as it would require a national referendum.
«There’s no legal consequence whatsoever,» Perttula told Fox News Digital, explaining that both Armenian and American legal experts have refuted the demand as inconsequential, and therefore should not serve as a precursor to reaching a formalized peace deal.
«There needs to be a real consideration for the right of return for the 120,000 Armenian Christians that were forced off the lands of Nagorno-Karabakh that has been their ancestral homeland for centuries,» Perttula added. «I think that needs to be a key point in terms of formalizing this whole peace agreement.»
«We want peace at the end of the day,» he added. «We want peace and normalization.»

Citizens visit their loved ones at Yerablur Military Cemetery who were killed recently during September in Nagorno-Karabakh. (ANTHONY PIZZOFERRATO/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)
NETANYAHU SURPRISES TRUMP WITH FORMAL NOBEL PEACE PRIZE NOMINATION DURING HISTORIC WHITE HOUSE MEETING
Trump, while on the campaign trail, highlighted the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict and accused then-Vice President Kamala Harris of doing «NOTHING as 120,000 Armenian Christians were horrifically persecuted and forcibly displaced.»
Trump said he would «work to stop the violence and ethnic cleansing, and we will restore PEACE between Armenia and Azerbaijan.»
Trump has repeatedly championed his push to end conflict across the globe and in June celebrated a peace agreement that the U.S. helped broker between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda with an Oval Office signing.
«In a few short months, we’ve now achieved peace between India and Pakistan, India and Iran, and the DRC and Rwanda, and a couple of others, also,» Trump said during the event.

President Donald Trump holds up a signed document to present to Congo’s Foreign Minister Therese Kayikwamba Wagner, right, as Rwanda’s Foreign Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe, from left, Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio watch on Friday, June 27, 2025 in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
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The president – who has been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, as well as leaders from Pakistan and Cambodia – has on several occasions argued his credentials should be recognized under the international award that has been granted to four other U.S. presidents.
In a February meeting with Netanyahu, Trump said, «They will never give me a Nobel Peace Prize. It’s too bad. I deserve it, but they will never give it to me.»
The White House last week lobbied for the president to win the award come December when White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said, «It’s well past time that President Trump was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.»
donald trump,asia world regions,world,conflicts
INTERNACIONAL
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