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NATO allies clash after Russian jets breach airspace, testing alliance resolve

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EXCLUSIVE: Recent Russian incursions into NATO airspace have sharpened divisions inside the alliance over how to respond, exposing both the strength and the limits of collective defense.
Secretary General Mark Rutte clashed with Estonian Prime Minister Kristen Michal last week after Estonia invoked NATO’s Article 4 clause, which triggers consultations when a member feels its security is threatened.
According to three European officials granted anonymity to speak freely, Rutte argued that repeated invocations risked diluting the treaty’s force. One source said he even raised his voice at Michal, warning that NATO must be cautious about how often it signals alarm.
Rutte argued that if Article 4 were invoked every time Russia violated sovereignty — through drone incursions, fighter jets, cyberattacks and more — it would quickly lose impact, according to the officials.
DENMARK CONSIDERS TRIGGERING NATO ARTICLE 4 AFTER DRONES FLY OVER AIRPORTS
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte in front of NATO and Ukraine flags (Thomas Peter/Reuters)
A NATO spokesperson confirmed Rutte and Michal spoke Friday and said the secretary general «has supported Estonia throughout the process.»
Rasmus Ruuda, director of the Government Communication Office of Estonia, told Fox News Digital Rutte «expressed support for Estonia and the Prime Minister thanked NATO for its actions.»
«Article 4 is just a signal that we’re taking note of what happened,» said Giedrimas Jeglinskas, a Lithuanian member of parliament and former NATO assistant secretary general. «We can be invoking Article 4 every week, and I think that only weakens us, because we’re unable to truly respond to that aggression that Russia is sort of throwing at us.»
The tension comes after a series of provocative moves by Moscow. Last month, missile-carrying Russian MiG-29s flew into Estonian territory, following an earlier breach of Polish airspace by 19 drones and repeated incursions over Romania. In Poland, jets scrambled to intercept the drones, shooting some of them down. It marked the first time since World War II that Polish armed forces mobilized to engage an airborne threat over their homeland.
The Russian jets in Estonia were eventually escorted out of its territory by Italian F-35s. Estonia’s Article 4 request followed Poland’s own invocation days earlier, prompting another round of consultations in Brussels.

MiG-29 jet fighters perform during a Victory Day parade in Red Square in Moscow on June 24, 2020. (Sefa Karacan/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
Since its creation in 1949, Article 4 has been triggered only nine times. NATO’s warning to Russia after the Estonian request was blunt: any further breaches would be met with «all means» of defense. Estonia’s defense minister said his nation was prepared to shoot down Russian planes violating airspace «if there is a need.»
But Jeglinskas said signaling without consequence risks leaving the alliance trapped.
«We’re happy to do Article 4 every other day, but so what? What’s next?» he said. «The real question is what happens when the jets actually enter our airspace.»
The debate cuts to a deeper question: what constitutes a «need» to shoot down Russian jets? How can Russia be deterred without stumbling into direct war?
«The last thing we want is to have NATO get drawn into a war with Russia,» a senior State Department official told Fox News Digital. «God knows how that ends.»
«Almost all wars … they don’t necessarily start with a big bang,» the official went on. «They start with an escalation, and then somebody feels they need to respond to this, and then you just get in a toxic spiral.»
‘PUTIN IS PUSHING THE LIMITS’: EASTERN ALLIES WARN TRUMP NOT TO PULL US TROOPS
The United States has promised to defend «every inch» of NATO while pressing Europe to bear more of its own defense burden. Washington’s mixed signals have only complicated matters.
Trump administration officials long favored reducing the U.S. troop presence in Europe. But President Donald Trump recently delivered one of the starkest warnings to Moscow, declaring that NATO states should shoot Russian aircraft down if they incur on their territory.
Jeglinskas said the statement resonated across the Baltic States. «What was really helpful was that President Trump was very clear,» he said. «That gives us confidence we’re on the right track, and we really appreciate the support.»
Still, allies remain divided on whether to escalate. Some warn that Eastern Europe cannot credibly threaten retaliation without an American security guarantee. Others argue that deterrence depends on showing Russia its incursions carry a cost.
«If we really want to send a proper message of deterrence to Russia, we need to be prepared to use kinetic force,» Jeglinskas said. «That means neutralizing those jets — shooting them down or finding other ways to impose consequences — so Russia actually feels the cost of its incursions. That hasn’t happened yet, and it leaves us vulnerable.»

Estonia’s Prime Minister Kristen Michal led his country in invoking Article 4 after Russian jet incursions. (Piroschka van de Wouw/Reuters)
The airspace disputes now extend beyond fighter jets. European Union members are meeting in Copenhagen this week to discuss shoring up air defenses after a wave of drone sightings. Denmark briefly shut down its airspace following mysterious drone activity, while Lithuania’s Vilnius airport and Norway’s Oslo airport also reported disruptions. Drones have even been spotted over Germany’s northern state of Schleswig-Holstein.
«We are not at war, but we are no longer at peace either. We must do much more for our own security,» German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said in Düsseldorf.
NATO jets scrambled to intercept drones over Poland, but the response underscored a growing mismatch: deploying multi-million dollar fighters to counter small, unmanned aircraft is neither efficient nor sustainable.
RUSSIA SHIFTS FROM TALK TO ACTION, TARGETING NATO HOMELAND AMID FEARS OF GLOBAL WAR
«NATO remains the most crucial element of our security equation,» Jeglinskas said. «It’s the backbone through which our security is viewed. There’s really no doubt about NATO’s political will and its capability to defend its territory, but warfare is changing — and the question now is, has NATO adapted to the new way of war that is seeping through the borders of Ukraine?»
Jeglinskas warned that neither NATO nor the Baltic States have done enough. «The Polish incursion signified that NATO is not fully ready to counter these threats,» he said. «Scrambling jets is a tremendous economic mismatch. If these kinds of attacks become swarms, it’s not sustainable.»

A French Rafale fighter jet is seen after landing following a joint mission with Polish F16s at an air base in Minsk Mazowiecki on September 17, 2025, as part of the Eastern Sentry mission (THIBAUD MORITZ/AFP via Getty Images)
To address mounting threats, NATO last month launched Operation Eastern Sentry, reinforcing its presence on Europe’s eastern flank. Jeglinskas welcomed the move but said gaps remain.
«Jets are very important, but more jets don’t mean we’re more secure from low-altitude drones,» he said. «The question is: do we have sensors that can detect what’s happening from the ground up to a kilometer into our airspace? We don’t see that. It’s like a dead space.»
Jeglinskas called for stronger short- and medium-range radar, as well as layered defenses akin to Israel’s Iron Dome, capable of intercepting drones with both kinetic and electronic means.
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«NATO’s response is commendable,» he said, «but it’s not enough. You need technical know-how, the right capabilities, and systems that are truly integrated if you want to make this work.»
For now, NATO remains caught between signaling resolve and acting on it. As Russia continues to test the alliance’s borders, Jeglinskas and other Eastern European officials warn that credibility is at stake. The next incursion, they argue, may demand more than words.
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INTERNACIONAL
La Navidad adelantada de Nicolás Maduro en Venezuela comenzó con shows musicales y un mensaje a Estados Unidos: «Nadie podrá arrebatarnos la paz»

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Navidad,Venezuela,Nicolás Maduro,Estados Unidos,Últimas Noticias
INTERNACIONAL
Here’s what Trump wants to do to reshape the federal government during the shutdown

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The federal government partially shut down early Wednesday after Democrats and Republicans failed to reach an agreement on a funding package.
In the lead-up to the midnight deadline to pass a budget package, President Donald Trump warned the administration could make «irreversible» changes to the federal workforce, most notably through a new wave of fresh layoffs. The president has underscored that he and his allies did not want the government to shut down, but that it opened the door for some «good» that could come from it.
Senate lawmakers failed to reach a spending agreement in time for the end of fiscal year 2025 Tuesday, after a short-term extension of fiscal year 2025 funding, aimed at keeping the government open through Nov. 21, passed the House mainly along party lines earlier in September.
GOVERNMENT SHUTS DOWN AFTER CONGRESS DEADLOCKS ON SPENDING DEAL
The federal government partially shut down Oct. 1, 2025, after Democrats and Republicans failed to reach an agreement on a funding package. (@realDonaldTrump via Truth Social)
Democrats expressed frustration at being shut out of spending negotiations and over the GOP bill’s exclusion of enhanced Obamacare subsidies that were first enacted in 2021 under President Joe Biden. Those subsidies, a COVID-19-era measure, are set to lapse at the end of 2025 unless Congress takes action, Fox News Digital has reported.
Republicans have since pinned the shutdown blame on Democrats, arguing they refused to fund the budget as an attempt to reinstate taxpayer-funded medical benefits for illegal immigrants through Democrat lawmakers’ continuing resolution, which would include extending the expiring Obamacare tax credits.
Democrat leadership have balked at the claims, throwing their own jabs at Trump and Republican lawmakers as the culprits behind the shutdown and squashing claims they want to provide healthcare to illegal immigrants.
TRUMP’S WHITE HOUSE DEMANDS AGENCIES MAP OUT MASS LAYOFFS AHEAD OF POTENTIAL SHUTDOWN
«They say that undocumented people are going to get these credits,» Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Tuesday. «That is absolutely false. That is one of the big lies that they tell.»

President Donald Trump said the government shutdown that took effect Oct. 1, 2025, will likely include mass layoffs and program cuts. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
Trump warns layoffs on the horizon
Trump said during various public remarks Tuesday, as the countdown to the midnight deadline dwindled, that though he did not want a shutdown, it presents him with the opportunity for the administration to carry out layoffs as part of a continued mission to slim down the federal government and snuff out overspending and fraud.
«We don’t want it to shut down because we have the greatest period of time ever,» Trump said from the Oval Office Tuesday. «I tell you, we have $17 trillion being invested. So the last person that wants it shut down is us.»
«Now, with that being said, we can do things during the shutdown that are irreversible, that are bad for them and irreversible by them, like cutting vast numbers of people out, cutting things that they like, cutting programs that they like,» he continued.
A shutdown does not hand a president new powers, but instead concentrates discretion to the White House and Office of Management and Budget over what the executive branch continues operating or ending.
SPEAKER JOHNSON FLIPS SCRIPT ON DEM LEADERS WITH STAUNCH WARNING AGAINST GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN
Under the Antideficiency Act, a federal law that guides the government through shutdowns, federal agencies are not permitted to spend funds, the Government Accountability Office outlines, except for a limited set of missions, such as performing constitutional duties. The executive branch is charged with interpreting those exceptions.
Office of Management and Budget Director «Russell Vought become very popular recently because he can trim the budget to a level that you couldn’t do any other way,» Trump continued Tuesday. «So they’re taking a risk by having a shutdown because, because of the shutdown, we can do things medically and other ways, including benefits. We can cut large numbers of people.»

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., speaks alongside Russell Vought, Office of Management and Budget director, from left, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Vice President JD Vance, as they address members of the media in Washington, Sept. 29, 2025. (Evan Vucci/AP Photo )
Later that day, Trump again said that he did not want a shutdown to unfold, but that «a lot of good» could come from it in order to weed out government overspending, noting «we’d be laying off a lot of people that are going to be very affected.»
«A lot of good can come down from shutdowns,» he said. «We can get rid of a lot of things that we didn’t want, and they’d be Democrat things. But they want open borders. They want men playing in women’s sports. They want transgender for everybody. They never stop. They don’t learn. We won an election in a landslide.»
SHUTDOWN EXPLAINED: WHO WORKS, WHO DOESN’T AND HOW MUCH IT COSTS
Vought declared an imminent government shutdown Tuesday evening ahead of the deadline, pinning blame on «Democrats’ insane policy demands, which include $1 trillion in new spending.»
«It is unclear how long Democrats will maintain their untenable posture, making the duration of the shutdown difficult to predict,» he wrote in a memo Tuesday. «Regardless, employees should report to work for their next regularly scheduled tour of duty to undertake orderly shutdown activities.»

President Donald Trump speaks to a gathering of top U.S. military commanders at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia, Sept. 30, 2025. (Evan Vucci/The Associated Press )
Vice President JD Vance joined the White House press briefing Wednesday and predicted that it wasn’t «going to be that long of a shutdown,» but that people will need to be laid off.
«We’re going to have to make things work,» he said. «And that means that we’re going to have to triage some certain things, that means certain people are going to have to get laid off. And we’re going to try to make sure that the American people suffer as little as possible from the shutdown.»
Vance added that the administration was «not targeting federal agencies based on politics» for layoffs.
«We’re in a shutdown, that causes some problems,» he said. «The troops aren’t getting paid. There’s nothing that we can do about that while the government is shut down. But there are essential services that we want to make sure as, as much as possible, they still continue to function. That is the principle that’s driving us forward during the shutdown.»
DOGE and vows to slim government
Anticipated layoffs and program cuts amid the shutdown follow Trump’s ongoing mission to gut the federal government of fraud, corruption and overspending, which first hit the nation’s radar in the early days of the administration when Trump launched the Department of Government Efficiency, as well as previous mass layoffs initiatives.
Back in January, the administration offered federal employees voluntary buyouts to leave their posts before rolling out reduction in force initiatives across various agencies to slim down the government.
«We have hundreds of thousands of federal workers who have not been showing up to work,» Trump said during his joint address to Congress in March. «My administration will reclaim power from this unaccountable bureaucracy, and we will restore true democracy to America again.»
SHUTDOWN FIGHT CASTS A SHADOW OVER JOBS AS TRUMP PREPARES FOR LARGEST FEDERAL RESIGNATION IN US HISTORY
«And any federal bureaucrat who resists this change will be removed from office immediately, because we are draining the swamp,» he added. «It’s very simple. And the days of rule by unelected bureaucrats are over.»
Simultaneous to reduction in force efforts and buyouts, tech billionaire Elon Musk was charged with leading DOGE as investigators scrutinized federal agencies in an effort to curb government overspending and stamp out fraud. DOGE’s work became a lightning rod for criticism among Democratic lawmakers and government employees, who filed a number of lawsuits attempting to end the investigations and audits.
Trump repeatedly has celebrated DOGE’s work during his first few months in office, including frequently listing off the various «flagrant scams» that the government was funding before DOGE’s investigations.
«Twenty-five million dollars to promote biodiversity conservation and socially responsible behavior in Colombia. This is Colombia, South America, not Columbia University. Of course, that might be worse,» Trump said in February during CPAC, rattling off different examples. «Forty million to improve the social and economic inclusion of sedentary migrants.»
«Forty-two million for social and behavior change in Uganda,» Trump continued. «Ten million for Mozambique medical male circumcisions. Why are we going to Mozambique to do circumcisions?»
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Fox News Digital reached out to the White House Wednesday morning for additional comment on the shutdown and Trump’s plans but did not immediately receive a reply.
Fox News Digital’s Elizabeth Elkind, Alex Miller and Deirdre Heavey contributed to this report.
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INTERNACIONAL
Fue testigo del brutal crimen de sus padres y 35 años después decidió presenciar la ejecución del asesino

Irene Fisher, quien fue testigo del asesinato de sus padres hace 35 años, asistió a la Prisión Estatal de Florida para presenciar la ejecución de Víctor Tony Jones, el hombre condenado por el doble homicidio que marcó su vida.
El martes 30 de septiembre de 2025, Fisher, acompañada por sus hijas y otros familiares, presenció la muerte por inyección letal de Jones, y, según reveló, cerró así un capítulo que comenzó en diciembre de 1990 con un crimen que conmocionó a la comunidad de Miami-Dade, según reportó Univision.
Durante la ejecución, Fisher manifestó una mezcla de emociones. Según relató a Fox, nunca antes había presenciado la muerte de una persona, y aunque la situación le resultó impactante, expresó alivio por el cierre que representó el acto. Fisher compartió que, a pesar de la brutalidad con la que sus padres murieron, eligió perdonar a Jones: “Lo perdono porque es importante para mí perdonarlo. No lo olvidaré”, declaró. Asistió a la ejecución junto a sus dos hijas adultas y otros tres familiares, buscando justicia y un sentido de conclusión tras décadas de espera.

El crimen que desencadenó este proceso judicial ocurrió menos de una semana antes de Navidad de 1990. Víctor Tony Jones, entonces un empleado reciente en el negocio de los Nestor, atacó primero a Dolly Nestor, la apuñaló en el cuello cuando ella se negó a pagarle por un trabajo inconcluso. Posteriormente, localizó a Jack Nestor y lo apuñaló en el pecho. Antes de morir, el esposo logró dispararle en la frente con un arma calibre 22, según detalló Univision.
La policía halló a Jones herido en el lugar, con dinero y pertenencias de las víctimas en sus bolsillos. Ambos medios coinciden en que Dolly murió instantáneamente en el baño, mientras que Jack luchó por su vida durante aproximadamente 20 minutos antes de fallecer. Irene presenció todo.

Las consecuencias del crimen se extendieron por más de tres décadas. Jones fue condenado en 1993 por dos cargos de asesinato en primer grado y robo a mano armada, recibiendo la pena de muerte. Durante los años siguientes, la defensapresentó múltiples recursos, argumentando discapacidad intelectual y alegando abusos sufridos en su adolescencia en un reformatorio estatal, según informó Univision.
Sin embargo, los tribunales rechazaron estos argumentos, señalando que la cuestión de la discapacidad ya había sido litigada y que las denuncias de abuso no se presentaron durante el juicio original. La Corte Suprema de Florida y, posteriormente, la Corte Suprema de Estados Unidos, desestimaron los recursos, allanando el camino para la ejecución.

El procedimiento de la ejecución se desarrolló conforme a los protocolos del estado. La cortina de la sala de observación se abrió puntualmente a las 18:00, y Jones, de 64 años, no pronunció palabras finales. Su última comida consistió en pollo frito y té dulce. Tras la negativa del acusado a hablar, los fármacos comenzaron a administrarse.
El recluso mostró movimientos en el pecho durante algunos minutos antes de quedar inmóvil. Un médico ingresó a la cámara y lo declaró muerto a las 18:13, sin que se reportaran complicaciones en el proceso. Univision añadió que la inyección letal utilizada en Florida combina tres sustancias: un sedante, un paralizante y un agente que detiene el corazón.

La ejecución de Jones marcó la decimotercera realizada en Florida en 2025, superando el récord anual anterior de ocho ejecuciones registrado en 2014, según datos de Univision. El estado lidera el número de ejecuciones en Estados Unidos este año, seguido por Texas, que ha realizado cinco.
A nivel nacional, 34 hombres han sido ejecutados en lo que va de 2025 y Florida tiene previstas dos ejecuciones más en los próximos meses.
Al finalizar la jornada, Fisher expresó que, tras presenciar la ejecución, lamentó que sus padres no hubieran tenido la oportunidad de morir de manera pacífica, “simplemente cerrando los ojos y partiendo”, en contraste con la violencia que sufrieron hace 35 años.
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