INTERNACIONAL
Israel y Líbano retoman en Washington el segundo día de negociaciones para poner fin a la guerra y avanzar en el desarme de Hezbollah

Israel y Líbano mantuvieron discusiones “positivas” en Washington durante el primer día de las negociaciones para poner fin a la guerra y avanzar en el desarme del grupo terrorista Hezbollah, a pocos días de que concluya la tregua vigente. Este viernes se reúnen nuevamente en busca de un acuerdo que satisfaga las exigencias de ambos estados.
Representantes libaneses e israelíes volverán a verse las caras en unas conversaciones directas a desarrollarse en el Departamento de Estado, Washington.
“Hemos tenido una jornada completa de conversaciones productivas y positivas que se prolongaron de las 09:00 a las 17:00. Esperamos seguir mañana y confiamos en poder decir más en ese momento”, señaló un alto funcionario de la cartera liderada por el secretario de Estado, Marcos Rubio, sobre el último encuentro entre las delegaciones.
Desde el inicio de la tregua, el 17 de abril, el conflicto provocó miles de muertes, principalmente en el Líbano, donde las autoridades contabilizan más de 2.800 fallecidos, entre ellos al menos 200 niños.
Representantes libaneses e israelíes se habían reunido por última vez el 23 de abril en la Casa Blanca, donde el presidente estadounidense anunció una prórroga de tres semanas del alto el fuego y expresó optimismo sobre la posibilidad de alcanzar un acuerdo histórico entre Beirut y Tel Aviv.
En esa ocasión, Donald Trump sostuvo que recibiría en Washington al primer ministro israelí, Benjamin Netanyahu, y al presidente libanés, Joseph Aoun, para una cumbre entre ambas naciones, que no mantienen relaciones diplomáticas. Sin embargo, el mandatario estadounidense declaró que, antes de realizar un encuentro de ese nivel, era necesario alcanzar un acuerdo de seguridad y el fin de los ataques israelíes.
Por su parte, el mandatario libanés reiteró que no accederá a una cumbre directa con el jefe de Gobierno israelí hasta que se logren garantías de seguridad y el retiro de tropas israelíes.
A diferencia de la sesión anterior, ni el secretario de Estado Marco Rubio ni el presidente Donald Trump estuvieron presentes en las conversaciones, ya que ambos se encuentran en visita oficial en China. Trump fue recibido con gran pompa por el presidente Xi Jinping, en el marco de gestiones para que Beijing contribuya a resolver la crisis con Irán, pese a que el gigante asiático es uno de los principales socios de Teherán junto a Rusia.
“Dijo que no suministraría material militar… Lo afirmó con fuerza”, declaró Trump a Fox News después de su encuentro con Xi. El inquilino de la Casa Blanca también afirmó que Xi expresó su voluntad de colaborar en la reapertura del estrecho de Ormuz. “Él dijo: ‘si puedo ser de alguna ayuda, estaré encantado de ayudar’”, aseguró Trump, aunque ninguna fuente oficial china confirmó estas declaraciones.
Según la Casa Blanca, Beijing y Washington acordaron durante la cumbre que el estrecho de Ormuz debía permanecer abierto para garantizar la libre circulación de productos energéticos.
Por su parte, Teherán informó que, desde el miércoles, la marina iraní autorizó el paso de buques chinos por el estrecho, hecho que atribuyó a las “estrechas relaciones entre ambos países y su asociación estratégica”, según un comunicado del Cuerpo de la Guardia Revolucionario Islámica (CGRI).
En las negociaciones indirectas con Estados Unidos, el régimen iraní exige que cualquier tregua incluya también al Líbano, lo que implica que Israel detenga los ataques contra Hezbollah. Estados Unidos, por su parte, insta a las autoridades libanesas a desarmar al grupo terrorista chií proiraní.
El Departamento de Estado señaló que las conversaciones en Washington buscan romper de forma decisiva con el enfoque de las últimas dos décadas, que permitió a grupos terroristas atrincherarse, enriquecerse, socavar la autoridad del Estado libanés y poner en riesgo la frontera norte de Israel.
Hezbollah reiteró el jueves su rechazo a estas negociaciones. Uno de sus diputados, Ali Ammar, calificó el proceso como una “concesión gratuita” a Israel. La semana pasada, Rubio, afirmó que un acuerdo de paz entre Israel y Líbano es “inminentemente posible” y debería concretarse en el corto plazo. A su vez, señaló al grupo Hezbollah como el principal obstáculo para el avance de las negociaciones.
“El problema entre Israel y Líbano no es Israel o Líbano, es Hezbollah”, declaró en una rueda de prensa. El jefe de la diplomacia estadounidense instó a las autoridades libanesas y a su Ejército a “empezar a plantar cara” al grupo terrorista y proceder a su desarme.
(Con información de AFP)
Middle East,Military Conflicts
INTERNACIONAL
Both parties target Trump’s $2B fund as ICE funding package enters danger zone

Senate scraps border and ICE funding vote
Fox News chief congressional correspondent Chad Pergram reports on the pushback against President Donald Trump’s ‘anti-weaponization fund’ on ‘The Bottom Line.’
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President Donald Trump’s nearly $70 billion immigration enforcement package has entered uncertain waters as the Senate embarks on a marathon of votes that could blow up the legislation.
At the heart of the issue is the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) now-defunct nearly $2 billion «anti-weaponization» fund. It’s another rare instance where both sides of the aisle are frustrated with the administration, and it could spell doom for the broader bill.
That’s because Democrats and Republicans are lining up amendments to ensure the fund is dead, to varying degrees.
GOP ADVANCES ICE FUNDING PACKAGE AFTER FORCING TRUMP’S CONTROVERSIAL $2B FUND INTO RETREAT
President Donald Trump listens to members of his Cabinet during a meeting in the White House Cabinet Room in Washington, D.C., on May 27, 2026. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
Senate Republican leadership is hopeful that they can prevent those amendments from surviving during the newly launched «vote-a-rama,» but success isn’t guaranteed. One positive for the GOP is that every Republican voted for the package in its first procedural hurdle Wednesday afternoon.
«I feel good going into it,» Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said. «But, you know, you got a lot of conversations with our members [who] understand what’s at stake, how critical it is that we defeat amendments that would be corrosive to the bill or undermine in any way its privilege.»
One issue is that should an amendment targeting the fund pass, it could remove the reconciliation package’s ability to advance with just a simple majority of votes. That would effectively give Democrats a win in killing the package outright.
Whether the amendments will be considered under a simple majority or 60-vote threshold could change the landscape and will ultimately be up to the Senate rules referee to determine whether they comply with the Byrd rule, which undergirds the reconciliation process.
GOP DEMANDS TRUMP KILL CONTROVERSIAL $2B FUND BEFORE REVIVING ICE FUNDING PACKAGE
Republicans believed that those add-ons would hit that 60-vote mark, giving them a little bit of breathing room.
«I mean, you never know with 100% accuracy,» Thune said. «There are a lot of creative ways of drafting amendments, but we feel pretty confident that most of those would be at 60.»
The fund, announced last month as part of a settlement between the Trump family and the Internal Revenue Service, received strong pushback from Republicans who feared that without proper guardrails, people convicted of assaulting police officers during the Jan. 6, 2021, riot on Capitol Hill could access the taxpayer funds.
Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso, R-Wyo., whose main job is to wrangle and twist the arms of wary Republicans to vote for the package, put the primary blame on Senate Democrats as fractures in the GOP simmered.
GOP LEVERAGES ICE FUNDING PACKAGE TO MAKE TRUMP’S CONTROVERSIAL $2B FUND ‘NEVER EXIST’
«The Democrats continue to talk about everything they want to talk about, except actually securing the border and protecting the American people,» Barrasso said. «They’re gonna come with all sorts of things, all in an effort to delay our efforts to support the American people and keep them safe and secure.»
But there are Republicans who will have their own anti-weaponization fund amendments. So far, Sens. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., and Bill Cassidy, R-La., two lawmakers who are increasingly prone to break with Trump, have teed up add-ons to address the fund.
There is the option to deal with the fund outside of reconciliation, too.
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Cassidy, who Trump successfully just ousted from office, didn’t say which route he would prefer, but wanted «something which just makes it sure that somebody doesn’t change their mind in the White House, it doesn’t come back.»
Tillis contended that there were enough Republicans with concerns over the fund that something needed to be done, but wanted it to be a GOP-led initiative. He’s not picky about whether his amendment gets a shot either.
«I don’t care about my own personal amendment,» Tillis said. «There’s a few out there, as long as one touching on the issue gets there. I’m not gonna slow leadership down. I wouldn’t do anything to make it as corrosive to the underlying bill so that it loses privilege. But we gotta do this.»
politics, homeland security, republicans, senate elections, democrats senate, donald trump
INTERNACIONAL
Israel bombardea el Líbano pese al acuerdo de tregua: Hezbollah rechaza un diálogo «humillante» y afrontará nuevos ataques

INTERNACIONAL
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.»
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.
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.
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 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.
«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.
«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.»

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.
mount everest, extreme travel, camping hiking, asia world regions, world
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