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Iran-Israel ceasefire teeters as IDF accuses Tehran of violations

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Iran appeared to ignore President Donald Trump’s plea to adhere to the ceasefire he brokered between the Islamic Republic and Israel. 

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On Tuesday, Israel vowed to respond to the alleged violation, with Defense Minister Israel Katz announcing that he ordered the military to strike Tehran. Additionally, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Chief of the General Staff Maj. Gen. Eyal Zamir vowed the country would «respond with force.»

Iran’s military denied violating the ceasefire, according to reports. However, the IDF said on Tuesday that air raid sirens were sounding across the country. 

Israel accused Iran of violating a ceasefire announced by President Donald Trump, but Tehran denied Jerusalem’s claims. (Reuters)

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TRUMP BROKERS IRAN CEASEFIRE AS EXPERTS SAY REGIME’S ARSENAL IS SHATTERED BUT THREAT REMAINS

A senior Israeli official spoke with Fox News about Iran’s alleged violation of the ceasefire, saying that the country believes Tehran will attempt to fire more missiles within a matter of hours.

«Unfortunately, the Iranians have decided to continue to fire toward Israel,» a senior Israeli official told Fox News. «Two missiles were fired toward Israel, and we believe they are trying to fire more in the next couple of hours.»

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Before the ceasefire went into effect, both countries got in parting shots, as Israel carried out a series of airstrikes and Iran launched missile barrages that killed at least four people, according to the Associated Press.

Aftermath of an Iranian missile strike on Israel

A drone view shows an impacted residential site, following an early morning missile attack from Iran on Israel, in Be’er Sheva, Israel, on June 24, 2025.  (Yonatan Honig/REUTERS)

TRUMP HAILS ‘MONUMENTAL’ DAMAGE AS EXPERTS AWAIT VERDICT ON IRAN’S NUCLEAR PROGRAM

Trump expressed his frustration with the end of the ceasefire, calling on both countries to end the conflict. He posted on social media calling on Israel not to strike, which he said would constitute «a major violation» of the ceasefire. Trump demanded that the Jewish state bring its pilots back home. 

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The president also spoke about his disappointment with Israel’s response when answering questions from reporters outside the White House before heading to a NATO summit in the Netherlands. 

«I’ve got to get Israel to calm down now,» Trump told reporters on Tuesday. «I don’t like the fact that Israel went out this morning and at all and I’m gonna see if I can stop it.»

Trump speaks with reporters

President Donald Trump speaks with reporters before boarding Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House on June 24, 2025, on his way to The Hague, to join world leaders gathering in the Netherlands for a two-day NATO summit. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

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He later added that he did not believe the two countries were fighting because it’s all they have known for «so long.»

«We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don’t know what the f— they’re doing,» Trump said.

Shortly after speaking to reporters, Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social that Israel would not attack Iran and that the ceasefire was in effect.

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«ISRAEL is not going to attack Iran. All planes will turn around and head home, while doing a friendly ‘plane wave’ to Iran. Nobody will be hurt, the ceasefire is in effect!» He later posted a follow-up saying that Iran would «never rebuild [its] nuclear facilities.»


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INTERNACIONAL

Máxima tensión: Irán advirtió que responderá con fuerza a cualquier ataque contra su territorio

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Mientras se aguardan nuevas conversaciones bilaterales para este jueves, Irán alertó que responderá “con fuerza” a cualquier ataque a su territorio, aunque sea limitado. La advertencia se conoció después de que Donald Trump amenazó con lanzar una acción militar de ese tipo.

El presidente estadounidense, que presiona a Irán para alcanzar un acuerdo sobre su programa nuclear, ordenó un fuerte despliegue naval y aéreo en Oriente Medio.

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Leé también: Ola de violencia en México: hay al menos 58 muertos y 41 detenidos tras el asesinato del narco “El Mencho”

“No hay un ataque limitado. Un acto de agresión se considerará un acto de agresión. Punto final”, declaró el portavoz del Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores iraní, Esmail Baqai, en rueda de prensa en Teherán.

El vocero contestó así cuando le preguntaron por las declaraciones de Trump, quien dijo el viernes que “considera” un ataque limitado contra Irán si este país no alcanza rápidamente un acuerdo con Estados Unidos.

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“Cualquier Estado reaccionaría con fuerza a un acto de agresión en virtud de su derecho inherente a la legítima defensa, y eso es precisamente lo que haríamos”, recalcó Baqai.

Evitar una “escalada”

Por su parte, el viceministro iraní de Relaciones Exteriores, Kazem Qaribabadi, advirtió del riesgo de una “escalada” más allá de las fronteras de su país en caso de ataque. Además, llamó “a todos los países comprometidos con la paz y la justicia a tomar medidas significativas” para evitarlo.

En tanto, “por prudencia”, Estados Unidos ordenó la evacuación del personal no esencial de su embajada en Beirut, mientras que el movimiento libanés proiraní Hezbollah anunció que no permanecería neutral si Washington ataca.

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Un iraní sostiene un retrato del líder supremo, el ayatolá Alí Jamenei, entre banderas nacionales durante una manifestación en Teherán (Foto: EFE)

El jueves, el presidente estadounidense indicó que se daba un plazo de diez a quince días para decidir sobre un eventual recurso a la fuerza contra Teherán.

Estados Unidos e Irán celebraron el 17 de febrero en Suiza una segunda ronda de negociaciones indirectas, bajo mediación de Omán, sobre el programa nuclear de Teherán en un momento de gran tensión después de que Washington desplegara dos portaviones en la región.

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La próxima sesión de conversaciones tendrá lugar este jueves, confirmaron Irán, Omán y Estados Unidos.

Leé también: Escándalo en el Reino Unido: detuvieron al exembajador en EE.UU. por sus vínculos con Jeffrey Epstein

El jefe de la diplomacia iraní, Abás Araqchi, encabeza las negociaciones por parte de Teherán, mientras que Estados Unidos está representado por el emisario Steve Witkoff y el yerno del presidente estadounidense, Jared Kushner.

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El canciller iraní consideró el domingo que existían “buenas opciones de llegar a una solución diplomática en la que todos ganen”. Araqchi afirmó que esperaba entregar pronto “una primera versión” del texto al equipo estadounidense.

Las anteriores conversaciones entre ambos países se vieron interrumpidas en junio de 2025 por la guerra desencadenada por Israel contra Irán, en la que intervino Washington bombardeando instalaciones nucleares de la república islámica.

Nuevas manifestaciones

La tensión entre Estados Unidos e Irán se agravó tras la sangrienta represión de una oleada de manifestaciones por parte de las autoridades iraníes a principios de año, que llevó a Trump a prometer “ayudar” al pueblo iraní.

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Por primera vez desde enero, en los últimos días se organizaron varias concentraciones contra el poder en algunas ciudades.

El lunes, unos videos divulgados por las redes sociales y verificados por AFP mostraban a grupos de estudiantes en una universidad de Teherán quemando la bandera de la república islámica, adoptada después de la revolución de 1979 que derrocó a la monarquía.

La multitud, compuesta mayoritariamente por mujeres, gritaba “íAbajo la república islámica!” y lemas contra el guía supremo, Alí Jamenei, y contra las autoridades religiosas.

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Algunos iraníes contaron que el lunes habían recibido un SMS que decía que la residencia del líder supremo y la sede del Consejo de Seguridad Nacional habían sido “atacados”. Este lunes, las fuerzas de seguridad patrullaban en las principales intersecciones de Teherán.

Irán

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Chloe Cole Act aimed at blocking minors from undergoing life-altering transgender surgeries, GOP lawmaker says

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A Republican lawmaker is teaming up with outspoken detransitioner Chloe Cole to push federal legislation that would block gender-related medical procedures for minors, saying that children are being rushed into receiving treatments with life-altering results.

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The Chloe Cole Act is being introduced on Monday as federal legislation aimed at protecting minors from gender-related medical procedures. 

Rep. Bob Onder, R-Mo., who is behind the bill, has a medical degree and is sounding the alarm over the impact that gender-related treatments can have on minors. The congressman told Fox News Digital that his bill will not only protect minors from these treatments, but will also give children and parents the right to hold medical professionals accountable in court.

«We know that in the last 15 years, the transgender movement has convinced tens of thousands of boys and girls that they are born in the wrong body…. And then a chain of transgender clinics has exploited these kids for the ideology and for the profit and really done permanent damage to the health of those kids with wrong sex hormones, puberty blockers and even mutilating surgeries,» Onder told Fox News Digital.

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Chloe Cole speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 20, 2022. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

The congressman said the Chloe Cole Act arises from President Donald Trump’s January 2025 order titled, «Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation.» The order encouraged lawmakers to «work to draft, propose, and promote legislation to enact a private right of action for children and the parents of children whose healthy body parts have been damaged by medical professionals practicing chemical and surgical mutilation.» The order noted that statutes of limitations for these cases should be «lengthy.»

Cole, who has become a prominent detransition advocate, told Fox News Digital that the legislation is «a vital step in our mission to ensure that no minor in America ever endures the kind of lasting, irreparable damage I experienced.»

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«While we’ve made significant strides in raising awareness and enacting protections in recent years, the fight is far from over. Too many children remain at risk of irreversible harm from puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, and surgical procedures pushed on them before they can fully understand the consequences,» Cole said in a statement provided exclusively to Fox News Digital.

«We must finish what we’ve started and safeguard the next generation from these experimental and barbaric treatments,» she added.

Chloe Cole, who detransitioned after medical procedures, warns others to wait and seek family support before transitioning sharing her story with Fox News Digital.

Chloe Cole, who detransitioned after medical procedures, warns others to wait and seek family support before transitioning, shared her story with Fox News Digital. (Fox News Digital)

TRUMP-SIGNED SHUTDOWN BILL SENDS $4M TO CHILDREN’S HOSPITALS UNDER FEDERAL PROBE FOR TRANSGENDER CARE

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A recent legal judgment in New York has provided advocates like Cole some hope in holding medical providers accountable. Recently, a jury awarded 22-year-old Fox Varian $2 million in damages after she sued a plastic surgeon who performed a double mastectomy on her when she was a teenager. Varian’s lawsuit was also aimed at her psychologist. The New York Times noted that Varian claimed the 2019 double mastectomy left her disfigured. Varian, like Cole, was born female and at one point identified as a man. She is now undergoing the detransition process.

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has previously expressed support for providing minors with gender-related medical treatment.

«The AAP and other major medical organizations — including the American Medical Association, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the World Health Organization — support giving transgender adolescents access to the health care they need,» a 2023 statement from the AAP read. «The AAP opposes any laws or regulations that discriminate against transgender and gender-diverse individuals, or that interfere in the doctor-patient relationship.»

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DETRANSITIONER TOUTS $2-MILLION LANDMARK MALPRACTICE RULING AS GOOD START, BUT ‘NOT NEARLY ENOUGH’

Chloe Cole and Rep Greene

Chloe Cole, who spoke about receiving medical transitioning care as a teen, is greeted by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene during a news conference outside the U.S. Capitol on Sept. 20, 2022. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Cole celebrated the judgment, and said in a Fox News Digital op-ed: «There are so many other young people like us. We were lied to by doctors, nurses and therapists when we were vulnerable and confused children. They did irreversible harm to our bodies and minds, making a mockery of the medical profession. They should absolutely be held accountable for sacrificing us in service to radical transgender ideology.»

In her op-ed, Cole brought up a subject that Onder also touched on during his interview with Fox News Digital: the prevalence of medical professionals warning parents that their child could harm themselves or even commit suicide if they are not allowed to undergo the procedures.

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«Those parents are being lied to,» Onder said. «The words I hear quoted over and over again, by Chloe, by Luka Hein, by others, is that their parents were told, ‘Would you rather have a live son or a dead daughter?’ implying that the risk of suicide is approaching 100%, but nothing could be further from the truth. That is an utter lie,» Onder said.

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The congressman lambasted the industry behind gender-related medical procedures, wondering if children were being pushed into the surgeries because of «sick ideology» or a «desire for profit.»

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«Parents are being lied to, the transgender clinics and the transgender doctors are making off with a lot of money. It’s really a despicable development in American medicine. And as a physician, I look forward to the day where it’s in our rearview mirror and no longer are kids being exploited,» the congressman added.

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Mexico violence sees dozens of military troops, criminals dead after cartel leader ‘El Mencho’ killed

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Cartel violence that erupted across Mexico left 25 Mexican National Guard troops and more than two dozen criminal suspects among the dead following the killing of Jalisco New Generation cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, officials said Monday.

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Mexico Security Secretary Omar García Harfuch said the troops in Jalisco were killed in six separate attacks following the killing of Oseguera Cervantes during a shootout inside his home as the Mexican military attempted to capture him. He also said some 30 criminal suspects were killed in Jalisco and four others were killed in Michoacan.

García Harfuch added that a prison guard, an agent from the state prosecutor’s office and a woman whom he did not identify were also killed.

The U.S. provided intelligence support for the Mexican operation that resulted in the death of the cartel leader, who was known as «El Mencho.»

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Mexican Security and Citizen Protection Minister Omar Garcia Harfuch speaks as President Claudia Sheinbaum looks on during a news conference in Mexico City, Monday, Feb. 23, 2026, the day after the Mexican army killed cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes. (AP Photo/Ginnette Riquelme)

Mexican Defense Minister Ricardo Trevilla said Monday that intelligence leading to the military operation came from a romantic partner of the crime boss, Reuters reported.

soldier stands guard by a charred vehicle

A soldier stands guard by a charred vehicle after it was set on fire in Cointzio, Mexico, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026, after the death of «El Mencho.» (AP Photo/Armando Solis)

The cartel reacted to its leader’s death with violence across Mexico, placing roadblocks and setting vehicles on fire throughout Sunday. 

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CARTELS OUTGUN POLICE: ROCKET LAUNCHERS SEIZED IN EL MENCHO RAID SPOTLIGHT CJNG FIREPOWER

President Claudia Sheinbaum urged calm Monday, and authorities said all the more than 250 cartel roadblocks across 20 states had been cleared.

The U.S. State Department said its personnel in cities across Mexico would shelter in place Monday, urging U.S. citizens in many parts of Mexico to do the same.

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Oseguera Cervantes was the leader of one of the largest narco-terrorist cartels in the country.

man's face in wanted poster

«El Mencho» was killed during a shootout as the Mexican military attempted to capture him in an operation in Jalisco on Sunday, Feb. 22., 2026. (Drug Enforcement Administration)

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The criminal network was notorious for trafficking fentanyl, methamphetamine and cocaine to the United States, and staging brazen attacks against government officials who challenged it.

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Fox News’ Anders Hagstrom and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Death toll rises after Mexican drug cartel leader killed in US-backed operation



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