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Appeals court lets Trump resume White House ballroom construction, seeks lower court clarity

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A federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., on Saturday cleared the way for President Donald Trump to temporarily resume construction of his planned White House ballroom, granting a near-term win to the administration as it pushes forward with the nearly $400 million project. 

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The case stems from a lawsuit filed late last year by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which sought to block the construction. The group argued that the project violates multiple federal laws, including the Administrative Procedure Act and the National Environmental Policy Act, and charged that the plans amounted to executive overreach without required approval from Congress and federal planning bodies.

A lower court judge last month put the project on hold, triggering the administration’s appeal.

TRUMP ADMIN FIGHTS IN COURT TO KEEP WHITE HOUSE EAST WING DEMOLITION, $300M BALLROOM BUILD ON TRACK

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White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt shows a rendering of the ballroom to reporters. (Eric Lee/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

U.S. District Judge Richard Leon, a George W. Bush appointee, in March issued a preliminary injunction blocking construction of the ballroom, finding the Trump administration likely lacked the legal authority to proceed without congressional approval. He said the government had not shown it had clear authorization to replace parts of the East Wing with a privately funded structure.

Leon’s order paused most construction work on the ballroom, though he allowed activity tied to White House security concerns, and briefly delayed enforcement of his ruling until mid-April, to give the administration time to appeal the case to a higher court.

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The Trump administration quickly asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit to intervene, arguing that the project is critical to the safety and security of the «president, his family, and White House staff.»

The 2-1 ruling from the circuit court did not immediately side with the Trump administration, but gave it temporary relief.

A majority of judges on the panel said the court needed more explanation from Leon before deciding whether construction should remain blocked. 

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Specifically, the judges asked Leon to clarify whether stopping the project would harm national security, as the Trump administration claims.

US APPEALS COURT HALTS TRUMP CONTEMPT PROBE ORDERED BY BOASBERG, FOR NOW

President Donald Trump gesturing as he speaks

President Donald Trump answers questions from reporters after signing an executive order in the Oval Office of the White House. (Alex Brandon/AP)

The appeals court also paused Leon’s order through April 17, giving the Trump administration time to ask the Supreme Court for emergency intervention if it chooses.

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For now, the case will return to the district court for further explanation.

Trump first announced plans for the 90,000-square-foot ballroom in July, initially estimating the cost at around $200 million. He has said the project would be funded «100% by me and some friends of mine.»

Lawyers for the administration have pushed back on the lawsuit, arguing the president has authority over White House construction decisions and that Congress does not need to approve the project.

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TRUMP ADMINISTRATION ASKS SUPREME COURT TO REVIEW EL SALVADOR DEPORTATION FLIGHT CASE

White House demolition for new ballroom

The White House demolition process of the East Wing. (The Associated Press)

«No taxpayer dollars are being used for the funding of this beautiful, desperately needed, and completely secure… ballroom,» Justice Department lawyers said in court filings.

They added that past White House expansions, including the East and West Wings, did not require congressional involvement in their design or construction.

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The National Trust, meanwhile, maintains the project cannot move forward without complying with federal law and proper review processes.

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The Justice Department declined to comment on the ongoing litigation or whether it plans to seek Supreme Court intervention.

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Sherpa missing for a week on Everest found crawling toward base camp after his family begins funeral rites

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A Sherpa guide whose family had already begun funeral rituals after he vanished on Mount Everest was found alive and crawling toward base camp nearly a week later, surviving alone on the world’s highest peak without food, water or supplemental oxygen in what rescuers called «nothing short of a miracle.»

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Dawa Sherpa, 52, disappeared around May 29 while descending Everest after turning back short of the summit with a Polish climber he was guiding. The client made it safely to base camp, but Dawa had not, triggering fears that he had died on the mountain.

A cleanup crew from the Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee found him Thursday morning crawling through the treacherous Khumbu Icefall, one of the most dangerous sections of Everest, just above base camp, Pemba Sherpa of 8K Expeditions told The Associated Press.

Rescuers carried him to safety, gave him food and water, and flew him by helicopter to a hospital in Kathmandu, where his wife and daughter were waiting.

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LONE SURVIVOR RESCUED AFTER FATAL FALL KILLS THREE CLIMBERS ON MOUNT MCKINLEY

Medics take Dawa Sherpa, a mountain guide who had been missing for several days in the Everest region, for treatment after he arrived at HAMS Hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal, on June 4, 2026. (Niranjan Shrestha/AP)

By that point, his family had already lost hope.

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His teenage daughter, Mendo Lhamu Sherpa, told the outlet that relatives were in the middle of funeral rites when news of the rescue broke.

«When we first heard about it (the rescue), we could not be sure if that person was indeed our father,» she said. «So to be certain we asked for photos to be sent and then only we were sure and very happy.»

Medics carrying Dawa Sherpa on a stretcher at HAMS Hospital in Kathmandu

Medics take Dawa Sherpa, a mountain guide who had been missing for several days in the Everest region, for treatment after he arrived at HAMS Hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal, on June 4, 2026. (Niranjan Shrestha/AP)

His wife, Damu Sherpa, added that the family learned he was alive through local news reports and phone calls from friends.

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«We first heard that he was still alive on the local news and from a person we know who called with the news that … he is being brought down,» she said.

RESCUERS FREE CLIMBER TRAPPED BENEATH 16,000-POUND BOULDER ON OREGON’S MOUNT HOOD IN COMPLEX OPERATION

Dawa was still wearing his climbing jacket when rescuers found him. His family said he is being treated for frostbite and other complications but is conscious and able to speak.

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«He recognized me … is good and speaks,» his daughter told Reuters. «We are happy.»

The Nepal Mount Everest hiking company called his survival extraordinary.

«Dawa survived alone for nearly a week without food, water, or supplemental oxygen navigating the treacherous Khumbu Icefall (even after the fixed ladders were removed for the season),» the company said in a social media post. «This is nothing short of a miracle.»

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Tents set up at Everest Base Camp in Solukhumbu district Nepal

Tents are set up at Everest Base Camp in the Solukhumbu district, also known as the Everest region, Nepal, on April 13, 2026. (Purnima Shrestha/Reuters)

It was unclear how Dawa became separated from his client during the descent or why there was a delay in launching a search team when he went missing last week. Helicopters were eventually dispatched but failed to locate him.

His rescue came at the end of a record-breaking Everest climbing season. More than 1,000 climbers and guides reached the summit this year after Nepal issued a record 494 permits.

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Officials have said five climbers and guides died on Everest during the season, according to Reuters.

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.



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Secret Signal chats reveal how anti-ICE agitators coordinated Newark riots

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At 11:30 a.m. on June 3, an activation signal went out on social media calling protesters and agitators to swarm Delaney Hall, the Newark, N.J. ICE detention facility that has become one of the nation’s most contentious immigration battlegrounds.

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«CURFEW IS OVER. BACK TO DELANEY,» read an Instagram post, promoted by a fiery collection of anti-Israel, Marxist and Democratic organizations — from «Palestine Solidarity Working Group» and Al-Awda to Indivisible and 50501 — that have joined tumultuous against the ICE, Newark police and New Jersey state troopers over the past couple of weeks.

Within minutes, the call to action spread through secret groups on Signal, an encrypted messaging platform, activating hundreds of anti-ICE activists with secret monikers like «framed.unrest» and «Wicked Something,» collaborating on transportation, logistics and supplies, like goggles, protections against pepper spray, respirators and protective knee pads.

A Fox News Digital investigation, gathering information on the ground in Newark, in secret chat groups on Signal and from scores of tax filings, strategy documents and social media posts, reveals the protests outside Delaney Hall are no organic outpouring of spontaneous rage. They are the result of years of strategic planning by a network of well-funded, well-organized groups that have once again exploited a local controversy to wage a wider attack on federal immigration policies and the U.S. in general.

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The activities of this network have motivated a group of tech sleuths on the X — @DataRepublican, @Astrarce, @bitchuneedsoap and @gunshymartyr — to penetrate these groups, their Signal chats and their operations like a digital Avengers squad.

BLUE STATE ICE FACILITY RAMPS UP SECURITY WITH NEW BARRICADES AMID CLASHES WITH PROTESTERS

State police officers arrest a person outside Delaney Hall detention center during a protest against detainee transfers and federal immigration policies in Newark, N.J., on May 29, 2026. (Andres Kudacki/AP)

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According to Fox News Digital’s analysis, the network behind the Delaney Hall protests includes about 100 groups, some of them big names like the ACLU, Indivisible and Democratic Socialists of America. Together, these organizations report collective annual revenues of about $850 million, approximately equal to the annual budget of Newark. The groups didn’t respond to requests for comment.

About 70 of the groups have received special designations as charities by the IRS, have status as regular 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(4) nonprofits, as well as labor union 501(c)(5) and 501(c)(6) nonprofits, enjoying tax-deductible donations and certain tax-free benefits. In recent months, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and lawmakers on the House Ways and Means Committee, the House Judiciary Committee and the House Oversight Committee have launched investigations into the alleged abuse of nonprofit laws to instigate conflict, sow discord and even inspire political violence.

The Delaneny network — which one expert calls the «Delaney Hall 100» — message around shared language assembled in a strategic communications document, called the «Delaney Hall Creator Brief,» which Fox News Digital obtained from X user @b—-uneedsoap. The strategy document directs content creators to call the detention center a «concentration camp» and label detainees «imprisoned prisoners» and «captives.» It tells activists to eschew saying detainees were arrested, but rather assert they were «kidnapped/abducted/taken.»

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Protestors outside Mikie Sherrill's office at State House in Trenton

Protestors gathered outside Gov. Mikie Sherrill’s office at the State House in Trenton, N.J., on June 1, 2026, demanding she take action and speak to the group about the Delaney Hall ICE facility. (Rashid Umar Abbasi for Fox News Digital)

Their tactics mirror the system deployed in Minneapolis earlier this year to protest ICE actions, and military experts say the operations resemble the tactics of an insurgency.

«We should be very concerned about the Delaney Hall 100,» said Chuck Flint, a nonprofit expert and former U.S. Senate chief of staff. «Protests like the kind we’re seeing outside Delaney Hall are not organic protests. These are manufactured strategic, calculated endeavors by an army of nonprofits meant to push subversive activity. These groups generate annual revenues greater than many of the cities in which they protest. They act like military battalions with the ability to overwhelm a city’s public safety resources.»

«It’s David vs. Goliath,» said Flint, who is also a former state prosecutor.

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FOX NEWS DIGITAL ANALYSIS: HOW MINNEAPOLIS AGITATOR NETWORKS USE INSURGENCY TACTICS TO HINDER ICE

Hasan Piker speaking with an interviewer at a protest in New Jersey

Hasan Piker speaks with an interviewer during a protest in New Jersey. (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital)

Last weekend, Fox News Digital spotlighted a series of far-left groups that self-identify as socialist, Marxist and communist blending in with immigrant groups. They included Democratic Socialists of America, the U.S. Revolutionary Communist Party, Speak Out Socialist, Refuse Fascism, Freedom Road Socialists Organization, Freedom Socialist Party and the Black Panthers.

Fox News Digital observed tents stocked with respirators, goggles, protective pads, decontamination supplies and other protest-support equipment.

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Late last Saturday, controversial Marxist influencer Hasan Piker arrived at the protests for a quick walk-through, wearing a pink gas mask. He told Fox News Digital that he was there to advocate for the demands of the detainees inside, remaining on the scene for less than 30 minutes before driving off.

Later, he responded to Fox News Digital’s images of the tents filled with riot-gear provisions and called the supplies «mutual aid.»

The preparations for protests Wednesday night offer a window into how the organizations motivate, coordinate, mobilize, focus and discipline their foot soldiers.

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By 1:17 p.m., a user, «Pete InDC,» shared a video outside the detention facility, with a car honking nonstop and «ICE OUT» drawn in chalk on Doremus Avenue.

«Come on down!» wrote «Pete InDC.»

AGITATORS OUTSIDE DELANEY HALL SET UP ORGANIZED LOGISTICS OPERATION BEFORE NEWARK PROTESTS BEGAN

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At 1:29 p.m., «yarrow» asked, «any car pools from nyc today? or any medics coming from nyc?»

By 1:46 p.m., others asked if one of the main protest organizers, Cosesha, approved the protest, and yet others started organizing logistics, starting with the ordinary: food, drinks, bike racks, transportation, parking and tents, as if they were headed to a concert.

«Tamale» asked «so if we do go should we be bringing supplies or only rallying? do ppl need water.»

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By 2:11 p.m., when «Durga» asked for others to «like» the message if they were on Doremus Avenue, another user — «tiny» — admonished «Durga,» warning «please don’t self id in the chat,» adding «or ask others to.»

Often these organizations speak their own language, for example, compiling «otg» — or «on the ground» — intelligence.

At 3:08 p.m., «Jay D» asked, «Is anyone otg and can give a report?»

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FEDERAL AGENTS IN NEW JERSEY BEAT BACK ANTI-ICE AGITATORS IN CHAOS OUTSIDE DELANEY HALL DETENTION FACILITY

Protestors, politicians and ICE agents gathered outside Delaney Hall immigration facility in Newark, N.J.

Protestors, politicians and ICE agents gather outside Delaney Hall, an immigration facility in Newark, N.J., on May 27, 2026. (Rashid Umar Abbasi for Fox News Digital)

Quickly, the communications moved into a very serious preparation for a showdown with law enforcement authorities.

By 4:07 p.m., «Mason D» offered to bring «sudecon wipes for help with pepper spray/tear gas attacks, multiple sets of protective pads for elbows/knees, electrolytes» and «non-ventilated goggles.» Sudecon wipes are specialized decontamination towelettes designed to neutralize and remove chemical defense sprays like pepper spray and tear gas.

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Behind the scenes, months, or even years, of coordination precede these events. This past weekend’s violent mobilization came after about a year of quieter activism by local groups.

In late May, hundreds of detainees launched a hunger and labor strike, igniting a wider network of advocacy organizations, legal groups, faith leaders, community organizers, elected officials and national nonprofits that quickly mobilized around the facility.

Within days, congressional delegations were demanding access, rapid-response networks were coordinating demonstrations across New Jersey, and the issue had become a national political story.

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Fox News Digital found that many of the organizations active today had spent years building coalitions, communications networks, funding relationships and rapid-response infrastructure before the current protests began.

BLUE STATE POLITICAL BATTLE INTENSIFIES AFTER DEM MAYOR’S ARREST AT ICE FACILITY: ‘OUTRAGED’

The origins of the Delaney Hall 100 can be traced to February 2025 when GEO Group Inc., a federal contractor, said that it would reopen Delaney Hall in Newark as a federal immigration detention facility under a long-term contract with ICE. The facility, near Newark Liberty International Airport, had previously housed immigration detainees before closing in 2017.

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In April 2025, the City of Newark filed legal challenges against the reopening, arguing that the facility had begun operations without required permits and inspections. Democratic Mayor Ras Baraka publicly opposed the project and made Delaney Hall a central issue in his ongoing dispute with federal immigration authorities and private detention contractors.

Around then, a small group of local activists began gathering outside the facility. According to accounts from participants, one activist started visiting Delaney Hall alone in the days before detainees arrived, distributing flyers to employees and raising concerns about immigration detention. Within days, two additional activists joined. What began as an informal vigil evolved into a regular presence outside the facility.

DAVID MARCUS: DEMOCRATS OWN THE CHAOS AND RACISM AT NEW JERSEY ANTI-ICE RIOTS

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Those early gatherings became the foundation for what would later be known as «Eyes on ICE NJ.»

Throughout the spring and summer of 2025, the coalition expanded. Members of «NJ Peace Action,» «Pax Christi New Jersey,» «Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace,» «First Friends of New Jersey and New York» and other faith and activist organizations began participating in regular vigils and support activities.

The first major direct-action protest occurred on May 14, 2025, when clergy associated with Faith in New Jersey and several Unitarian Universalist congregations blocked the facility’s main entrance.

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By the fall of 2025, multiple organizations had established an ongoing presence around the detention center.

The movement surrounding Delaney Hall largely operates through three overlapping coalitions.

The first, «Eyes on ICE NJ,» grew from the daily vigils outside the facility. Its members focus on monitoring activity at the detention center, supporting visiting families, documenting conditions and maintaining a public presence outside the gates, engaging in narrative warfare, sharing family stories with the media, putting family members in front of microphones and giving lawmakers the constituent case studies to bolster their arguments with federal officials.

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The second, «ICE Out of NJ,» functions as a broader mobilization and legislative campaign. It brings together immigrant-rights organizations, rapid-response networks, labor-aligned groups and direct-action activists to oppose detention expansion and immigration enforcement policies.

The third, New Jersey Alliance for Immigrant Justice, functions as a coalition umbrella linking about 59 member organizations across the state. Its membership includes legal advocacy organizations, labor allies, immigrant-rights groups, faith-based organizations and community organizing networks.

The result is a division of labor: one coalition specializes in observation, media outreach, community support and personal narratives, while the other concentrates on mobilization, political pressure and statewide organizing, and the other focuses on the immigration issue.

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Understanding the power of the Delaney Hall network requires following the nonprofit funding streams that sustain many of its major participants, including big Democratic donors like Open Society Foundations and NEO Philanthropies, that act as a source of support for some of the network’s influential participants.

SENATOR CALLS OUT ‘GRASSROOTS’ ANTI-ICE GROUPS, URGES DOJ INVESTIGATION INTO ‘COORDINATED NATIONAL OPERATION’

people wearing protective gear

People are wearing hard hats, goggles and respirators near a protest site outside Delaney Hall in Newark, New Jersey, on Saturday, May 30, 2026. (Fox News Digital / Michael Dorgan)

During the Delaney Hall controversy, elected officials including Democratic Sen. Andy Kim, Sen. Cory Booker, New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill, Rep. LaMonica McIver, Rep. Rob Menendez and others have become highly visible participants in the debate. But the protesters have also turned on them, with Indivisible organizing a protest at Sherrill’s office on Monday and Democratic Socialists of America demonstrating outside the offices of New Jersey Attorney General Jennifer Davenport on Tuesday.

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While Fox News Digital has been able to compile the list of organizations that make up the Delaney Hall 100, most of the network’s work remains secretive.

«Most everything is concealed from the ground up to their identities in Signal chat rooms, their funding and names of the people on the streets and their leaders,» said Flint, the nonprofit expert. «They know what they are doing is wrong. They don’t want you to know who is in charge. They have masks on. They don’t want you to know anything about their organizations, their people. They are flipping the rules. They shout to the ICE agents: ‘You all are wearing masks.’ Meanwhile, they are wearing masks.»

«They use nonprofit status as a sword and a shield,» said Flint. «They use it to take advantage of all the rules and then when they get in trouble they use it to protect themselves.»

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That tension has emerged in recent days as the protests have turned violent with more radical elements of the Delaney Hall 100 emerging with makeshift shields and swords.

By 4:31 p.m., an anonymous Signal user, using the «sqeek» moniker, shared a «MEDIC DONATIONS» list that experts said resembled one that would be prepared for a military operation, often identified by the manufacturer and brand type, including: «3M 8246 respirators,» six «Gas mask filters,» «3M 60923,» «Goggles — shatterproof, without vents or foam edges (ANSI 87.1 or MIL-PREF 32432).»

«Sqeek» punctuated the message with the emoji of a muscular flexed arm.

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On cue, agitators, many of them far-left white protesters clad in the black-and-white checkered Palestinian scarf called a keffiyeh, started trickling onto Doremus Avenue in front of Delaney Hall around 8 p.m. last night, sharing their commuting and parking woes in their Signal chat.

At 9:42 p.m., one agitator, behind barriers, shouted, «This is what counterinsurgency looks like!»

And then, at 9:47 p.m., as if reading off the communications strategy script, directing the groups to call Delaney Hall a «concentration camp,» another protester yelled at the mostly minority Newark police officers and the other law enforcement authorities, her voice breaking: «You work for a concentration camp! You work for a concentration camp! Quit your job!»

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«Kill yourself!» a man added, as the group broke into a chant, «Quit your job! Quit your job!»

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Irán afirmó que mantiene abierto el diálogo con Estados Unidos, pero que no hay avances hacia un acuerdo final

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En medio de una nueva escalada militar y verbal en Medio Oriente, Irán confirmó este miércoles que los canales de diálogo con Estados Unidos siguen abiertos, pero advirtió que no hay avances concretos hacia un acuerdo que permita bajar la tensión en la región.

El mensaje llegó de la mano del ministro de Relaciones Exteriores, Abbas Araghchi, quien habló en medio de los últimos enfrentamientos entre fuerzas estadounidenses e iraníes y mientras continúan los esfuerzos diplomáticos para evitar un conflicto mayor.

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Según declaraciones difundidas por la agencia iraní Tasnim, Araghchi sostuvo que “las comunicaciones con los estadounidenses no se interrumpieron”, aunque aclaró que esos contactos no arrojaron resultados visibles. “No se logró ningún progreso tangible en el proceso de negociación”, remarcó el canciller.

Irán pone condiciones para volver a negociar y exige frenar la guerra en Líbano

Durante la entrevista, Araghchi explicó que en los intercambios con Washington se transmitieron mensajes sobre la necesidad de detener las operaciones militares de Israel contra Beirut y reducir la escalada regional.

Sin embargo, dejó en claro que Teherán considera que todavía no existen condiciones suficientes para retomar plenamente las conversaciones políticas.

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El canciller iraní, Abbas Araghchi, dijo que siguen las conversaciones con Washington, aunque sin avances. (Foto: Arash Khamooshi/The New York Times).

Volver a la mesa de negociaciones está condicionado a garantizar los derechos del pueblo iraní, poner fin a la guerra en el Líbano y detener las tensiones en la región”, declaró el jefe de la diplomacia iraní.

Las afirmaciones de Araghchi se conocieron después de varios días de versiones cruzadas sobre el estado de los contactos entre Washington y Teherán.

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Amenazas y advertencias: Irán endurece el tono contra Washington

Las declaraciones del canciller coincidieron con una nueva escalada de amenazas entre ambos países. Horas antes, Araghchi publicó un mensaje en la red social X en el que justificó las acciones de las fuerzas armadas iraníes y aseguró que sus operaciones tienen un carácter defensivo.

Nuestras Fuerzas Armadas están llevando a cabo ataques de autodefensa contra sitios que Estados Unidos tiene permitido utilizar para atacar el transporte marítimo civil y violar el alto el fuego”, escribió.

El ministro también lanzó una advertencia directa a Washington: “Cualquier acto hostil recibirá una respuesta inmediata y decisiva”. A

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demás, sostuvo que las campañas de presión y sanciones aplicadas durante años contra la República Islámica no lograron modificar la posición de Teherán. “Lo que las sanciones y la guerra no lograron conseguir no se obtendrá con más guerra”, agregó.

Estados Unidos responde y crecen las acusaciones cruzadas

Las tensiones aumentaron luego de que el Comando Central de Estados Unidos (CENTCOM) informara sobre operaciones militares contra instalaciones iraníes y anunciara la interceptación de misiles y drones lanzados desde territorio iraní.

El CENTCOM también rechazó una versión iraní sobre los daños registrados en el aeropuerto internacional de Kuwait. Según el comando militar estadounidense, “Irán atacó el aeropuerto civil con drones en un ataque deliberado, calculado e injustificado”, desmintiendo que el impacto fuera consecuencia de la caída de un interceptor estadounidense, como habían sugerido autoridades iraníes.

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El Parlamento iraní se suma a las advertencias y promete represalias

Las amenazas del régimen también fueron compartidas por Mohamad Baqer Qalibaf, presidente del Parlamento iraní y uno de los principales representantes en las negociaciones sobre el conflicto.

Hoy, la nación iraní, en su lucha contra Estados Unidos y el régimen sionista, demostró que la era de las amenazas sin coste contra Irán llegó a su fin”, afirmó Qalibaf, según la agencia ISNA.

El funcionario advirtió que “cualquier agresión recibirá una respuesta decisiva, contundente y proporcionada”.

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