Connect with us

INTERNACIONAL

US thwarted near-catastrophic prison break of 6,000 ISIS fighters in Syria

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

EXCLUSIVE: This was the kind of prison break officials say could have changed the region, and perhaps even the world, overnight.

Advertisement

Nearly 6,000 ISIS detainees, described by a senior U.S. intelligence official as «the worst of the worst,» were being held in northern Syria as clashes and instability threatened the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, the guards responsible for keeping the militants locked away and preventing a feared ISIS resurgence. U.S. officials believed that if the prisons collapsed in the chaos, the consequences would be immediate.

«If these 6,000 or so got out and returned to the battlefield, that would basically be the instant reconstitution of ISIS,» the senior intelligence official told Fox News Digital.

In an exclusive interview, the official walked Fox News Digital step by step through the behind-the-scenes operation that moved thousands of ISIS detainees out of Syria and into Iraqi custody, describing a multi-agency scramble that unfolded over weeks, with intelligence warnings, rapid diplomacy and a swift military lift.

Advertisement

US MILITARY LAUNCHES AIRSTRIKES AGAINST ISIS TARGETS IN SYRIA, OFFICIALS SAY

ISIS wives and children remain in «fragile» Syrian detention camps under Damascus control while male fighters transfer to Iraq, leaving detention crisis unresolved. ( Santiago Montag/Anadolu via Getty Image)

The risk, the official explained, had been building for months. In late October, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard began to assess that Syria’s transition could tip into disorder and create the conditions for a catastrophic jailbreak.

Advertisement

The ODNI sent the official to Syria and Iraq at that time to begin early discussions with both the SDF and the Iraqi government about how to remove what the official repeatedly described as the most dangerous detainees before events overtook them.

Those fears sharpened in early January as fighting erupted in Aleppo and began spreading eastward. Time was running out to prevent catastrophe. «We saw this severe crisis situation,» the official said.

U.S. ANNOUNCES MORE MILITARY ACTIONS AGAINST ISIS: ‘WE WILL NOT RELENT’

Advertisement
ISIS militant, Syria, U.S. military

A fighter of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) holds an ISIL flag and a weapon on a street in the city of Mosul, June 23, 2014.  (Reuters Photo)

According to the source, the ODNI oversaw daily coordination calls across agencies as the situation escalated. The official said Secretary of State Marco Rubio was «managing the day to day» on policy considerations, while the ODNI drove a working group that kept CENTCOM, diplomats and intelligence officials aligned on the urgent question: how to keep nearly 6,000 ISIS fighters from slipping into the fog of war.

The Iraqi government, the official said, understood the stakes. Baghdad had its own reasons to move quickly, fearing that if thousands of detainees escaped, they would spill across the border and revive a threat Iraq still remembers in visceral terms.

The official described Iraq’s motivation bluntly: leaders recognized that a massive breakout could force Iraq back into a «2014 ISIS is on our border situation once more.»

Advertisement

The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, the official said, played a pivotal role in smoothing the diplomatic runway for what would become a major logistical undertaking.

Then came the physical lift. The official credited CENTCOM’s surge of resources to make the plan real on the ground, saying that «moving in helicopters» and other assets enabled detainees to be removed in a compressed timeframe.

«Thanks to the efforts… moving in helicopters, moving in more resources, and then just logistically making this happen, we were able to get these nearly 6000 out in the course of just a few weeks,» the official said.

Advertisement

ISIS FIGHTERS STILL AT LARGE AFTER SYRIAN PRISON BREAK, CONTRIBUTING TO VOLATILE SECURITY SITUATION

A wide encampment of tents shelters displaced families in a remote area.

A view of Hol Camp, where families linked to the Islamic State group are being held, in Hasakah province, Syria, Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026. (Izz Aldien Alqasem/Anadolu via Getty Images)

The SDF, he said, had been securing the prisons, but its attention was strained by fighting elsewhere, fueling U.S. fears that a single breach could spiral into a mass escape. Ultimately, detainees were transported into Iraq, where they are now held at a facility near Baghdad International Airport under Iraqi authority.

The next phase, the official said, is focused on identification and accountability. FBI teams are in Iraq enrolling detainees biometrically, the official said, while U.S. and Iraqi officials examine what intelligence can be declassified and used in prosecutions.

Advertisement

«What they were asking us for, basically, is giving them as much intelligence and information that we have on these individuals,» the official said. «So right now, the priority is on biometrically identifying these individuals.»

The official said the State Department is also pushing countries of origin to take responsibility for their citizens held among the detainees.

«State Department is doing outreach right now and encouraging all these different countries to come and pick up their fighters,» he said.

Advertisement

While the transfer focused strictly on ISIS fighters, the senior intelligence official said families held in camps such as al-Hol were not part of the operation, leaving a major unresolved security and humanitarian challenge.

ISIS EXPLOITING SYRIA’S CHAOS AS US STRIKES EXPOSE GROWING THREAT

Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) fighters pose for a photo with the American flag on stage after a SDF victory ceremony announcing the defeat of ISIL in Baghouz was held at Omer Oil Field on March 23, 2019 in Baghouz, Syria. 

Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) fighters pose for a photo with the American flag on stage after a SDF victory ceremony announcing the defeat of ISIL in Baghouz was held at Omer Oil Field on March 23, 2019 in Baghouz, Syria.  (Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

The camps themselves were under separate arrangements, the official said, and responsibility shifted as control on the ground evolved. 

Advertisement

According to the official, the Syrian Democratic Forces and the Syrian government reached an understanding that Damascus would take over the al-Hol camp, which holds thousands of ISIS-affiliated women and children.

«As you can see from social media, the al-Hol camp is pretty much being emptied out,» the official said, adding that it «appears the Syrian government has decided to let them go free,» a scenario the official described as deeply troubling for regional security. «That is very concerning.»

The fate of the families has long been viewed by counterterrorism officials as one of the most complicated, unresolved elements of the ISIS detention system. Many of the children have grown up in camps after ISIS lost territorial control, and some are now approaching fighting age, raising fears about future radicalization and recruitment.

Advertisement

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Iraqi security forces pose with ISIS flag which they pulled from University of Anbar on July 26, 2015. Forces clashed with ISIS militants inside the compound.

Iraqi security forces pose with ISIS flag which they pulled from University of Anbar on July 26, 2015. Forces clashed with ISIS militants inside the compound. (Reuters)

For now, the official said, intelligence agencies are closely tracking developments after a rapid operation that, in their view, prevented thousands of experienced ISIS militants from reentering the battlefield at once and potentially reigniting the group’s fighting force. 

«This is a rare good news story coming out of Syria,» the official concluded.

Advertisement



syria,iraq,isis,national security,fbi,terrorism

Advertisement

INTERNACIONAL

DHS shutdown leaves local emergency responders on their own amid extreme weather, expert warns

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

EXCLUSIVE: The partial government shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security could have a critical impact on local disaster response without assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, a public safety expert warned.

Advertisement

In an interview with Fox News Digital, Jeffrey Halstead, the director of strategic accounts at Genasys, a communications hardware and software provider to help communities during disasters, said the DHS shutdown could impact emergency response and recovery efforts now that FEMA support has been restricted.

«Every time that the government enters into one of these shutdowns, there’s a distinctive part of the federal government that is impacted, both reviewing the grant program or distributing funds from pre-awarded grant programs. This is exactly the area of DHS as well as FEMA that affects emergency managers, emergency response and recovering different cities, counties, and regions should they face a weather and/or disaster-related event,» Halstead said.

Halstead, also a retired chief of police in Fort Worth, Texas, with more than 30 years in law enforcement, explained that government shutdowns delaying federal funds «drastically impacts» the local response to disasters.

Advertisement

ICE SHUTDOWN FIGHT MIGHT RESTRICT FEMA, COAST GUARD TO ‘LIFE-THREATENING’ EMERGENCIES

The Trump administration ordered FEMA to suspend the deployment of hundreds of aid workers to disaster-torn areas across the country during the DHS shutdown. (Al Drago/Getty Images)

«I know personally, I was in Arizona for over 21 years, in Texas as chief of police for over seven, and then I was in Nevada for a long time, and I worked directly with a few states in the Western United States,» he said.

Advertisement

«The last government shutdown pretty much ended their grant application process, meaning the grants would not be approved, not even be assigned and/or funds not released,» he continued. «This drastically impacts their ability to plan and to coordinate a lot of their planned response events. In Arizona, the central UASI region or the Urban Area Security Initiative, they have none of their grants being reviewed, which replaces outdated equipment, vehicles and funds training so that every quarter they can meet the standards and then be ready should something happen.»

This comes as the Trump administration ordered FEMA to suspend the deployment of hundreds of aid workers to disaster-torn areas across the country during the DHS shutdown.

More than 300 FEMA disaster responders were preparing for upcoming assignments, but were told to halt their travel plans. Grant systems are also not fully operational until lawmakers can reach a deal to fund the department.

Advertisement

«The biggest impact is funding, the grants being distributed and then getting all that equipment and training aligned so that they can actually have a very successful year getting ready for a disaster,» Halstead said.

DHS SHUTDOWN EXPLAINED: WHO WORKS WITHOUT PAY, WHAT HAPPENS TO AIRPORTS AND DISASTER RESPONSE

FEMA SIGN

More than 300 FEMA disaster responders were preparing for upcoming assignments, but were told to halt their travel plans. (Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)

«Should there be a traumatic weather event, critical incident or something that would require FEMA support, FEMA staff or FEMA resources, those may not be available,» he added. «This drastically impacts the city, county, state and federal collaboration efforts that literally are immediately engaged, aligned and resources deployed, sometimes within 12 hours. So this greatly inhibits their ability to plan effectively should a critical event, disaster event, or weather-related event come their way. They won’t have all these federal assets and resources that they have come to depend on, rely on, and work with in both their planning as well as training events or previous disasters where they responded and provided support.»

Advertisement

As part of the move to end FEMA deployments, staffers currently working on major recovery efforts will remain on the sites and cannot return home unless their assignment ends, but no new personnel can join or relieve them without DHS approval.

Recovery efforts are still ongoing in places like North Carolina, where Hurricane Helene devastated the region in the fall of 2024.

As Halstead noted, the recovery effort is the «final piece for the emergency management cycle to get back to normalcy for that region.»

Advertisement

«When that is dramatically impacted, you still see some areas of North Carolina a couple of years later still struggling in the recovery phase being completed,» he said. «That is directly related to all of these stalls and delays in FEMA, FEMA funding and the financial support needed to get the recovery phase completed.» 

PARTIAL GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN DRAGS ON AS DHS FUNDING TALKS STALL

FEMA computer display

FEMA staffers working on major recovery efforts will remain on the sites and cannot return home unless their assignment ends, but no new personnel can join or relieve them without DHS approval. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Asked about the importance of federal funding given recent extreme weather across the U.S. such as snow on the East Coast, flooding in California and fire disasters in the High Plains that forced evacuations, Halstead said it is «extremely critical» and that the delay in funds can impact the safety of local residents.

Advertisement

«It’s absolutely extremely critical for emergency managers, your fire departments as well as law enforcement, to utilize not just these partnerships and the resources, but the funding allocations so that they can plan effectively in responding, operational control of the disaster, and then getting into that recovery mode … Then sometimes that delay, it’s going to impact the safety and the welfare of Americans,» Halstead explained.

Republicans and Democrats in Congress have yet to reach a deal to end the partial shutdown, in large part due to Democrats’ demand for stricter oversight and reforms of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) following the fatal shootings last month of two U.S. citizens by federal agents in Minneapolis, which the GOP has thus far resisted.

President Donald Trump argued earlier this week that it is a «Democrat shutdown» and «has nothing to do with Republicans.»

Advertisement

Halstead said he would like lawmakers on Capitol Hill to negotiate in good faith to end the shutdown so that first responders will have «effective means to do our jobs safely and very, very efficiently.»

north carolinians walks along helene devastation

Recovery efforts are still ongoing in places like North Carolina, where Hurricane Helene devastated the region in the fall of 2024. (Travis Long/The News & Observer/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

«I know a lot of people are really upset because they leverage a significant political issue over a common funding agreement that should have been approved very quickly,» he said. «This has happened a lot in the last two to three years. We’ve seen shutdown after shutdown after shutdown. What a lot of citizens don’t realize is that when the government is shut down, all of this work — grant reviews, proposals, funding, disbursements — those are all delayed. Then there is a significant lag time getting back to an open government.»

Advertisement

«They’re still negotiating all these extremely politically sensitive topics that are really divisive within not just Capitol Hill, but really our country,» Halstead added. «Then all of that backlog is now taking even longer to get approved, funded and funds being dispersed. So it’s a compounding effect on all of our emergency managers and our first responders to do their jobs effectively.»

Halstead highlighted that a deal to reach the shutdown is unlikely before Trump’s State of the Union address next week, in which the president affirmed he would give the speech regardless, and that the ongoing delays in FEMA funding could last weeks.

«It may be another two weeks at least until we can get this funded and get it back open,» Halstead said. «But then we still have these significant backlogs. It will take a significant amount of time.»

Advertisement

government shutdown,homeland security,fema,disasters us,politics,weather,exclusive

Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

La trama de reuniones clandestinas con un empresario chino que provocó la destitución del presidente peruano José Jerí

Published

on


El Congreso de Perú destituyó al presidente José Jerí por haber tenido reuniones secretas con empresarios chinos

El Congreso de Perú destituyó el martes al presidente José Jerí, apenas cuatro meses después de que asumiera el cargo, tras un escándalo por reuniones no reveladas con un empresario chino. La medida prolonga la inestabilidad política que afecta al país andino desde hace años y convierte a Jerí en el tercer mandatario consecutivo removido del poder.

La votación registró 75 legisladores a favor de la destitución, 24 en contra y tres abstenciones. Con esa decisión, el Parlamento dejó vacante la jefatura del Estado y deberá elegir a un nuevo presidente del Congreso, quien asumirá automáticamente la presidencia de la República, lo que colocará a Perú ante su octavo mandatario en pocos años.

Advertisement

El escándalo que precipitó la caída, conocido como “Chifagate”, estalló cuando Jerí apareció en imágenes llegando de noche a un restaurante con capucha para reunirse con el empresario chino Zhihua Yang, propietario de tiendas y titular de una concesión energética. La cita no figuraba en la agenda oficial ni se comunicó públicamente.

Jerí había llegado al poder en octubre tras la destitución de su predecesora, Dina Boluarte, removida por el Congreso en medio de denuncias de corrupción y descontento social por el aumento de la delincuencia. Sin vicepresidente en funciones, Jerí —entonces titular del Parlamento— ocupó la presidencia por línea de sucesión.

El empresario chino Zhihua Yang
El empresario chino Zhihua Yang es propietario de tiendas y titular de una concesión energética

Ese mismo carácter interino facilitó su salida. En lugar de un juicio político, que exige una supermayoría de 87 votos en un Congreso de 130 miembros, los legisladores aprobaron una censura que lo despojó de la presidencia del Parlamento con mayoría simple, lo que automáticamente lo sacó también de la jefatura del Estado.

La congresista Ruth Luque, que respaldó la medida, sostuvo que el objetivo es iniciar una transición centrada en la ciudadanía. “Pedimos que se ponga fin a esta agonía para que podamos realmente crear la transición que la ciudadanía anhela”, afirmó. También advirtió sobre prácticas opacas en la política reciente: “No una transición con intereses ocultos, tráfico de influencias, reuniones secretas y figuras encapuchadas. No queremos ese tipo de transición”.

Advertisement

El presidente del Congreso, Fernando Rospigliosi, se negó a asumir la presidencia pese a que la Constitución lo ubica como sucesor inmediato. Por ello, el Parlamento deberá elegir a un nuevo titular el miércoles, quien quedará automáticamente al frente del Ejecutivo.

Jerí manifestó que respetará la decisión legislativa. Su salida reproduce un patrón de destituciones rápidas que, según analistas, evidencia la incapacidad del sistema político para atender demandas sociales como seguridad y lucha contra la corrupción.

El presidente del Congreso, Fernando
El presidente del Congreso, Fernando Rospigliosi, se negó a asumir la presidencia pese a que la Constitución lo ubica como sucesor inmediato

Michael Shifter, presidente del centro de estudios Diálogo Interamericano, consideró que la votación respondió también a cálculos electorales. “Me parece que no hay rastro de altruismo aquí, solo cálculos electorales”, señaló. “Muchos legisladores concluyeron que apoyar a Jerí los perjudicaría en las elecciones, así que tuvieron que actuar”.

La nueva transición se producirá a menos de dos meses de las elecciones generales previstas para el 12 de abril, en un escenario con decenas de candidatos y un electorado mayoritariamente indeciso, según encuestas recientes. La sucesión recuerda a la de 2020, cuando Francisco Sagasti asumió tras la breve presidencia de Manuel Merino y masivas protestas.

Advertisement

Pese a la turbulencia institucional, la economía peruana mostró resistencia. El país registró un crecimiento de 3,4% en 2025 y una inflación de 1,7%, cifras que reflejan estabilidad macroeconómica en un contexto político volátil, impulsada en gran parte por el sector minero.

La destitución de Jerí refuerza la percepción de un sistema político atrapado en ciclos de gobiernos breves y enfrentamientos entre poderes del Estado. Mientras el Congreso se prepara para designar a un nuevo líder, Perú encara otra transición acelerada con la incertidumbre de si el próximo mandatario logrará completar el camino hasta las elecciones.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

El cerco de Estados Unidos: en Cuba, los turistas brillan por su ausencia

Published

on


Es febrero, la temporada alta en las playas cubanas. Los turistas, sin embargo, brillan por su ausencia. El mayor recurso económico del gobierno cubano se encuentra en números rojos. Hoteles semivacíos, transportes limitados y escasez de suministros. Son las consecuencias del bloqueo estadounidense. La falta de suministros de petróleo de Venezuela y México ha agudizado la crisis energética que arrastraba la isla. Todo esto hace que las anulaciones de viajes a la isla se multipliquen, como nos explicó Barbara Perez, directora de la agencia de viajes «Cuba Unique», con sede en España.

«Evidentemente el turismo está en baja. Hay muchos menos turistas. Y también hay que tener en cuenta las aerolíneas, pues algunas ya han dicho que van a tener que cargar combustible en República Dominicana. Por el momento, no ha habido cancelaciones desde España, pero sí se han cancelado vuelos desde otros países, Canadá y Perú, por ejemplo. Hasta este mes, nosotros en España hemos podido estar garantizando el combustible. Pero a partir del mes próximo probablemente vamos a dejar de viajar a Cuba porque no sabemos cómo va a suceder con las nuevas limitaciones de combustible. En todo caso, empieza a ser más complicada la realidad y a partir de cierto momento vamos a tener que dejar de ofrecer viajes a Cuba», explica Pérez.

Advertisement

El transporte «lo ves y no lo ves»

La crisis en el turismo ha afectado a numerosos gremios en Cuba. Los daños colaterales se hacen sentir en los restaurantes, los comercios y en los transportes. Yan Manuel Carrio lleva prácticamente toda su vida trabajando como chofer en un taxi que opera desde La Habana.

«Esta situación es muy difícil sobre todo complicada para la gente de la ciudad. Para la gente que vive en los barrios el transporte es como un fantasma. Lo ves y no lo ves. Uno puede esperar tres o cuatro horas y no ves un transporte. Para los taxis se consigue gasolina, pero te la revenden por 4.000 o 4.500 pesos el litro. Normalmente el precio de eso era 600 pesos. Ahí puedes darte cuenta tú de la diferencia. Hemos tenido muchas anulaciones de turistas de Canadá, Reino Unido, Argentina. Antes hacíamos tres, cuatro viajes hasta Varadero por día. Ahora se hace uno solo. Es un poco duro porque no todo el mundo puede trabajar así», sostiene.

Advertisement

Cuba recibió en 2025 escasamente 1,8 millones de turistas, uno de los niveles más bajos en décadas. La escasez de combustible y la cancelación de vuelos internacionales abren la incógnita de cómo evolucionará el sector durante este año que ya presenta las peores cifras de todos los tiempos.

«Hay días en que paso horas sin un servicio», comentó Ramón, un taxista habanero de 52 años, quien afirmó que percibe menos clientes y tiene grandes dificultades para conseguir gasolina.

Cuba necesita importar combustibles porque carece de suficiente capacidad de producción y refinación para cubrir la demanda interna y ahora esas operaciones están casi detenidas por la orden ejecutiva firmada por el presidente de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, el pasado 29 de enero, que amenaza con aplicar aranceles a los países que comercializan petróleo con la isla.

Advertisement
Turistas viajan en un auto clásico mientras Estados Unidos bloquea el acceso de cargamentos de petróleo a la isla, Varadero, Cuba. Foto Reuters

Como consecuencia de la carencia de combustibles, varias compañías aéreas han detenido o ajustado sus operaciones, como LATAM Airlines, de Chile, y las rusas Rossiya y Nordwind, que cancelaron sus rutas, mientras Air Canada suspendió vuelos, y otras como Air France, Iberia y Air Europa mantienen conexiones, pero realizan escalas técnicas en terceros países para repostar.

De acuerdo con el economista e investigador cubano José Luis Perelló, las suspensiones impactan de forma directa en la llegada de visitantes internacionales a Cuba y resultan especialmente sensibles las cancelaciones de los vuelos desde Canadá.

«Aunque ese mercado aportó en 2025 el 42 por ciento de las llegadas internacionales, la situación actual ha llevado a operadores y agencias a cancelar paquetes hacia la isla en plena temporada alta», explicó.

Perelló señaló que la escasez energética compromete también los traslados internos y el funcionamiento de instalaciones hoteleras que dependen de grupos electrógenos para la generación de energía, por lo que varios complejos en los polos turísticos más importantes del país han cerrado temporalmente y otros han reducido servicios ante la falta de suministros.

Advertisement

Luis, turista colombiano, comentó que tuvo que ajustar su itinerario de viaje por los problemas con el combustible y, si bien quería hospedarse en un hotel en la localidad de Trinidad, en la central provincia de Sancti Spíritus, tuvo que permanecer en La Habana, luego de que le informaran que la instalación trinitaria había cerrado de manera temporal.

«Cuba goza de atractivos turísticos: cultura, historia, playas y naturaleza (y) en su mejor momento, el sector representó alrededor del 10 por ciento del Producto Interno Bruto del país y generó, por ejemplo, 3.300 millones de dólares en 2017 por concepto de pernoctaciones», explicó el profesor Perelló.

De acuerdo con el académico, en ese mismo año, más de 100.000 empleos directos y cerca de 500.000 vinculados, dependían de esa actividad, que además aportaba liquidez para importaciones e inversiones.

Advertisement

Sin embargo, aseguró, el turismo cubano arrastra un declive desde 2018 y ahora las restricciones energéticas lo acercan a un punto de quiebre.

«Si la industria se agota, será un duro golpe para la economía nacional», aseveró Perelló, quien fuera asesor del Ministerio de Turismo.

La incertidumbre también rodea la realización de la Feria Internacional de Turismo, programada para mayo en el balneario de Varadero, ubicado a unos 150 kilómetros al este de La Habana.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Tendencias