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En medio de la tensión con Trump, Cuba publicó una guía para “proteger a la población de una agresión militar”

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Este sábado en Cuba comenzó a circular un instructivo oficial con recomendaciones para “proteger a la población de una agresión militar” y preparar a los ciudadanos ante un eventual escenario de conflicto.

La iniciativa surge en medio del deterioro de las relaciones con Estados Unidos y en un contexto interno atravesado por apagones masivos, escasez de combustible y una crisis económica que golpea cada vez con más fuerza a la isla.

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El documento elaborado por el Estado Mayor Nacional de la Defensa Civil y dirigido “a todas las familias cubanas” fue publicado por distintos portales. Bajo el título “Proteger, resistir, sobrevivir y vencer”, el instructivo contiene una serie de recomendaciones prácticas para actuar frente a posibles ataques enemigos.

Entre las medidas sugeridas, el texto aconseja preparar una mochila de emergencia con agua potable, alimentos no perecederos, medicamentos, artículos de higiene, linternas y radios con energía alternativa. También insta a la población a familiarizarse con las señales de alarma aérea, conocer técnicas básicas de primeros auxilios y mantenerse informada.

Como parte del Día Nacional de la Defensa –que se realiza cada viernes en el país desde comienzos de año– tuvo lugar el Ejercicio Popular de las Acciones en Situaciones de Desastre Meteoro 2026. (Foto: Estudio Revolución)

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La difusión del material ocurre en un escenario de máxima fragilidad interna para la isla. Cuba enfrenta una profunda crisis socioeconómica marcada por la escasez de combustible, la falta de alimentos, la inflación y los constantes cortes de electricidad que afectan a millones de personas. En las últimas semanas, los prolongados apagones provocaron protestas y manifestaciones espontáneas en distintos barrios de La Habana.

La relación entre Cuba y Estados Unidos volvió a tensarse en las últimas semanas tras el endurecimiento de las sanciones impulsadas por la administración de Donald Trump. Washington reforzó las restricciones sobre el suministro energético hacia la isla, una medida que limita el acceso cubano a combustibles y otros recursos considerados estratégicos. Desde la Casa Blanca sostienen que el régimen cubano constituye una “amenaza excepcional” para la seguridad estadounidense por sus vínculos con Rusia, China e Irán.

En ese contexto, Trump aseguró el viernes que confía en lograr un acercamiento político de La Habana hacia Washington. Durante una entrevista de Fox News, el mandatario fue consultado sobre la posibilidad de que Cuba se aleje de China y se acerque a Estados Unidos. “Creo que le vamos a dar un vuelco”, respondió.

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Leé también: Protestas sacuden a Cuba en medio de apagones masivos y una falta total de combustible

En paralelo, el director de la principal agencia de inteligencia estadounidense, John Ratcliffe, viajó recientemente a La Habana para mantener reuniones con altos funcionarios cubanos y analizar la delicada situación política y social que atraviesa el país.

La publicación de la guía coincidió además con la realización del Ejercicio Popular de las Acciones en Situaciones de Desastre Meteoro 2026, una tradicional maniobra anual organizada por la Defensa Civil cubana. El operativo fue encabezado por el presidente Miguel Díaz-Canel y contó con un mensaje especial del líder histórico de la revolución, Raúl Castro.

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Durante el ejercicio, las autoridades repasaron distintos escenarios de emergencia vinculados tanto a desastres naturales como a contingencias estratégicas. El general Ramón Pardo Guerra, jefe del Estado Mayor Nacional de la Defensa Civil, definió al Meteoro 2026 como “un pilar esencial” para fortalecer la capacidad de respuesta de las instituciones y de la ciudadanía.

John Ratcliffe, director de la Agencia Central de Inteligencia, viajó el jueves a Cuba. (Foto: The New York Times)

John Ratcliffe, director de la Agencia Central de Inteligencia, viajó el jueves a Cuba. (Foto: The New York Times)

En ese marco, especialistas del Instituto de Meteorología advirtieron que la próxima temporada ciclónica podría afectar nuevamente a la isla. Según las previsiones oficiales, existe un 40% de probabilidades de que un ciclón impacte en territorio cubano y un 75% de riesgo de tormentas tropicales.

Las autoridades también alertaron sobre el agravamiento de la sequía. Más de un centenar de municipios presentan actualmente condiciones de sequía hidrológica, especialmente en las regiones occidentales y centrales del país.

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En su discurso de apertura del ejercicio, Miguel Díaz-Canel responsabilizó a Estados Unidos por la situación que atraviesa la isla y calificó la política de Washington como “genocida y criminal”. Además, llamó a reforzar la preparación popular y a actualizar los planes de defensa “zona por zona”, ante un escenario internacional cada vez más incierto.

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Murió a los 93 años Bernadette Chirac, ex primera dama de Francia

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Bernadette Chirac ha muerto. La ex primera dama de Francia se apagó anoche a los 93 años, tras acompañar durante toda una vida a Jacques Chirac, su marido y expresidente conservador .

Lo anunció Claude, su hija, la única que sobrevive a la familia. “Bernadette falleció en paz esta noche, rodeada de su familia. Acababa de cumplir 93 años», declaró.

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Aristócrata, exalumna de Ciencias Políticas junto a quien se iba a transformar en su esposo, política y hábil negociadora, Bernadette fue una pareja inseparable para Chirac. Un picaflor que la hizo sufrir pero que la amaba profundamente.

Cuando murió la princesa Diana, en esa madrugada de agosto hace 30 años en el Pont del Alma, el entonces presidente francés no estaba en el Palacio del Eliseo. Nadie lo encontraba hasta que llamaron al chofer y a Bernadette. Chirac estaba con su vieja amante, la tunecina italiana Claudia Cardinale.

El presidente Emmanuel Macron ha abierto un libro de condolencias y se celebrará un homenaje a las 3 de la tarde frente al palacio del Eliseo.

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Bernardette Chirac, la política de Corrèze, una mujer directa y fría

Política, consejera en la región de Corrèze, donde vivía en su castillo ahora un poco abandonado o en el departamento que el ex primer ministro libanés Rafic Hariri les había prestado frente al rio Sena, Bernardette ofreció su experiencia, vetó ministros, detestó a otros, mantuvo a raya a los que podían perjudicar a su marido, con un carácter que podía ser glacial y distinguido.

Con la audacia de la timidez y el humor sutilmente mordaz y peculiar de ciertos aristócratas de la alta sociedad, tenía fama de ser difícil, incluso un poco arisca a veces. Ella lo sabía.

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Poco después de la elección de Jacques Chirac en 1995, reconoció con inusual franqueza que, al comienzo de la vida pública de su esposo, la gente decía: «La señora Chirac es fría; no es muy sociable, no es muy cálida. Él es tan encantador”.

Cuando el expresidente Chirac decaía con su Alzheimer y su pérdida de memoria, su amigo y millonario Francois Pinault lo llevaba de vacaciones a su mansión de Saint Tropez. Al mediodía estaban juntos en la terraza de sillas coloradas del café Senequier, frente a los yates. Chirac se entretenía firmando autógrafos, abrazando chicos, besando manos de señoras, mirando las espectaculares mujeres que pasaban. Chirac siempre tenía un piropo. La gente lo adoraba.

Bernardette se enfurecía y presionaba a Pinault para “sacarlo de esa primera fila”. Chirac no hacía caso y seguía cada mañana con su ritual de vacaciones, antes de perderse en un viejo Mehari, con Pinault al volante. Lo aplaudían.

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Las reacciones de derecha a izquierda ante la muerte de la ex primera dama de Francia

El presidente Emmanuel Macron rindió homenaje a la memoria de una «gran dama con un corazón de oro«.

La ex primera dama dejó su huella «en la vida de Corrèze, donde fue funcionaria electa, y en la vida de millones de pacientes anónimos, gracias a su profundo e inquebrantable compromiso, especialmente como directora de la Fundación Hospitales de París – Hospitales de Francia”, añadió el presidente.

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Los homenajes llegaron desde la derecha y desde la izquierda. Ella hablaba con todos.

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Bernadette Chirac «fue mucho más que una primera dama«, dijo Bruno Retailleau, líder de Los Republicanos, en Instagram. Xavier Bertrand, presidente de la región de Hauts-de-France, afirmó que «será recordada como una mujer de corazón, compromiso, lealtad y apego a su país«.

«Francia llora a una generosa primera dama», escribió Eric Ciotti, alcalde de Niza y aliado de la Reagrupación Nacional, en X .

El expresidente socialista François Hollande, íntimo amigo de los Chirac, la describió como «una mujer íntegra y comprometida», que «incluso podía ser directa cuando tenía algo que decir«. «Lo experimenté personalmente cuando presidía el Consejo General de Corrèze», recordó el exmandatario.

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«A su manera, contribuyó a la lucha feminista«, elogió el líder socialista Olivier Faure. «Supo hacerse un hueco en un siglo donde las mujeres aún eran consideradas meras extensiones de sus maridos» dijo.

Bernadette Chirac estuvo al lado de su esposo, Jacques Chirac, en todas sus batallas. Pero también luchó las propias, como presidenta de la campaña Monedas Amarillas y como consejera general de Corrèze.

Roselyn Bachelot fue una de las que mejor la describió. «Detrás de su exterior a veces mordaz se escondía una mujer extremadamente decidida y generosa», declaró la exministra . Era «a menudo extremadamente mordaz con los poderosos y extremadamente amable con la gente común», según se describió.

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En Instagram, el expresidente Nicolas Sarkozy rindió homenaje a Bernadette Chirac, «leal, valiente, divertida, inquebrantable, cariñosa». «Una gran amiga que siempre me apoyó política y personalmente. Francia ha perdido a una mujer que siempre la sirvió con pasión y dignidad. Honró a nuestro país», escribió.

Bernardette expresaba, a veces sin filtros, su sufrimiento, sus irritaciones, pero también sus juicios inflexibles. Criticaba a su marido, a quien señalaba con facilidad, pero a quien durante mucho tiempo había mirado con cariño. También hablaba de otros políticos, sus esposas o amantes.

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A pesar de su estricta educación y sus refinados modales, Bernadette Chirac, nacida Chodron de Courcel, no era muy buena disimulando. Era incapaz de fingir. Cuando se aburría en una recepción oficial, se notaba. Cuando estaba de mal humor, también se notaba, y a veces se podía oír. Y cuando tenía algo que reprocharle a alguien, era difícil ignorarlo.

A ella le encantaba trasnochar. Nunca ocultó que disfrutaba cenando en casa de los Rothschild o asistiendo a estrenos de ópera. Es cierto que siempre se identificó como católica practicante y nunca ocultó su admiración por el Papa.

A pesar de las caricaturas del programa satírico de marionetas «Les Guignols», Bernadette Chirac logró ganarse el respeto y, posteriormente, el cariño del pueblo francés. Tal como era. Sin disfrazarse ni traicionar su verdadera esencia. Adoptando un papel más tradicional y de derecha que su marido hasta su muerte.

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Top House Democrat says there’s ‘no way’ Platner didn’t know tattoo’s Nazi origins

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A senior House Democrat is joining the growing chorus of critics questioning Senate candidate Graham Platner’s claim that he was unaware of his tattoo’s Nazi origins.

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«There’s no way he didn’t know what the tattoo was,» Rep. Brad Schneider, D-Ill., said Friday in remarks reported by Punchbowl News. «Own it and move on.»

«He’s not willing to do that,» Schneider, the chairman of House Democrats’ largest caucus, lamented.

Schneider’s comments make him one of the most high-profile Democrats to criticize the Maine Senate hopeful, who has also faced mounting scrutiny over sending sexually-explicit messages to other women while newly married, a decades-long history of offensive social media posts and alleged abuse in previous romantic relationships.

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Rep. Brad Schneider, D-Ill., joined the growing chorus of critics questioning Senate candidate Graham Platner’s claim that he was unaware of his tattoo’s Nazi origins. (Sarah Silbiger/Reuters)

DEMOCRAT CONGRESSMAN SLAMS GRAHAM PLATNER’S NAZI-LINKED TATTOO AS ‘DISQUALIFYING’

Platner, a far-left populist, is vying to unseat Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, in one of the most hotly contested races of November’s midterm elections. He is Maine Democrats’ presumptive nominee, though some party insiders have expressed doubts about the viability of his candidacy amid a string of scandals.

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Schneider’s public criticism came after The New York Times reported Thursday that several of Platner’s ex-girlfriends said the Senate hopeful knew about his tattoo’s Nazi-linked design.

One of the women, Lyndsey Fifield, told The Times that Platner taught her the words behind the black skull-and-crossbones tattoo, referring to it as «my Totenkopf.»

«He would joke about it being a Nazi tattoo,» Fifield said, adding that Platner said he chose the tattoo because of his belief that his unit shared similarities to the Nazi SS paramilitary forces.

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Platner vigorously denied Fifield’s account during an interview with MS NOW’s Chris Hayes on Thursday. But he struggled to answer when pressed about how Fifield sent a text to friends saying he had a Nazi-linked tattoo in August 2025, when he first publicly disclosed it two months later during an October podcast episode of «Pod Save America.» 

«How does she know it’s a Nazi tattoo in August of last year, and you don’t know it’s a Nazi tattoo in August of last year?» Hayes asked Platner.

«I can’t say why,» Platner said, adding that he was not a recipient of Fifield’s message. «I certainly didn’t know, and the text messages she’s sending to friends may have recognized it. They didn’t tell me that.»

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Fifield also alleged that Platner assaulted her at one point during their relationship — an allegation that Platner said was false. 

Graham Platner speaking at rally

U.S. Senate candidate from Maine Graham Platner speaks during a campaign event on May 17, 2026, in Portland, Maine. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

GRAHAM PLATNER ACCUSER HITS NYT FOR ALLEGEDLY SOFTENING ALLEGATIONS, SAYS COVERAGE WAS ‘GIFT’ TO DEMOCRAT

Platner has since had the tattoo covered up after it became a campaign issue in late 2025. He wore it for nearly two decades after he said he got it during a night of drinking with his fellow Marines while stationed in Croatia in 2007.

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Amid Democrats’ divisions over Platner’s candidacy, Schneider indicated that he would struggle to support him at the ballot box if he were a Maine voter.

«I’ll leave it to the people of Maine to elect who they want,» he said, in remarks reported by Punchbowl News. «I’m grateful I don’t have to make that choice. I wouldn’t want to have to make that choice.»

Rep. Jake Auchincloss, D-Mass., and Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., have also sharply criticized Platner’s statements related to his since-covered-up tattoo.

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«All I’m saying is when I was growing up, if someone had a clear Nazi tattoo on them, you probably could conclude that they’re a Nazi sympathizer,» Fetterman told CNN earlier this week. «Are you going to continue to defend that or dismiss that?»

Graham Platner pointing to a covered tattoo on his arm during an interview in Portland, Maine

Graham Platner, a Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate in Maine, points to a covered-up tattoo that was previously recognized as a Nazi symbol during an interview in Portland, Maine, on Oct. 22, 2025. (WGME via AP)

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Schneider’s New Democrat Coalition is the largest caucus among House Democrats, with more than 100 members.

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Fox News Digital reached out to the Platner campaign before publication.

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Jeff Bartos says UN reform is no longer an ‘oxymoron’ after $570M in cuts

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UNITED NATIONS — When Jeff Bartos appeared before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in 2025 for his confirmation hearing, he was warned that the job he was seeking might not exist. 

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The Pennsylvania businessman, former political candidate and endurance athlete had been nominated by President Donald Trump to serve as U.S. ambassador for United Nations Management and Reform — a title that has long sounded aspirational in a building famous for bureaucracy.

During his confirmation hearing, Bartos recalled being greeted with a dose of skepticism.

«UN reform? That’s an oxymoron if I’ve ever heard one,» lawmakers told him.

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TRUMP ADMINISTRATION COULD LEAD TO BUDGET CUTS, LEADERSHIP SHAKEUP AT UN

When Jeff Bartos appeared before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in 2025 for his confirmation hearing, he was warned that the job he was seeking might not exist.  (Eduardo Munoz/Reuters)

Less than a year later, Bartos believes the impossible is beginning to happen.

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In an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital, the Trump administration official laid out an ambitious campaign to reshape an institution critics say has become bloated, inefficient and increasingly disconnected from its founding mission.

The effort comes at a pivotal moment for the United Nations. The stakes extend well beyond budgets. As the U.N. confronts a cash crunch, prepares to choose its next secretary-general and faces growing scrutiny from the administration, the debate over reform has become a battle over the institution’s future: whether it remains on its current course or undergoes its most significant restructuring in decades.

UN FACES SEVERE CASH CRISIS AS TRUMP ADMIN RAMPS UP PRESSURE ON WORLD BODY

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U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz speaking at a United Nations Security Council meeting

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz speaks during a United Nations Security Council meeting at U.N. headquarters in New York City on Feb. 28, 2026, following U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran. (Heather Khalifa/Reuters)

Secretary-General António Guterres has repeatedly warned of a growing liquidity crisis as the organization struggles with delayed member-state payments, including billions owed by the United States. At the same time, the Trump administration has made clear that future funding and support will be increasingly tied to reforms.

Bartos argues that pressure is already producing results.

Sitting at the U.N. headquarters, he points to what he calls historic achievements: roughly $570 million cut from the U.N.’s regular budget and 2,900 positions eliminated through negotiations among all 193 member states.

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«Again, never happened before in 80 years,» Bartos said.

«$570 million cut to the regular budget, approximately 3,000 posts cut. Unanimity. That’s by consensus. All 193 countries had to come together.»

For Bartos, the achievement is particularly striking because many diplomats viewed meaningful reform as impossible.

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AMBASSADOR MIKE WALTZ LAYS OUT ‘AMERICA FIRST’ VISION FOR US LEADERSHIP AT THE UN

President Donald Trump meeting United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres at United Nations headquarters

As the U.N. confronts a cash crunch, prepares to choose its next secretary-general and faces growing scrutiny from the administration, the debate over reform has become a battle over the institution’s future.  (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

«I promised you we wouldn’t let you down,» he recalled telling Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Jim Risch months after his confirmation.

The reforms represent only what Bartos describes as a «down payment.» The next phase is already underway.

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As member states negotiate peacekeeping budgets for the coming year, the administration is pushing to reduce spending, streamline missions and eliminate programs it believes no longer serve their intended purpose.

One example, Bartos said, involves changing how the U.N. reimburses countries that contribute equipment to peacekeeping missions.

Previously, reimbursement was largely based on whether equipment was present.

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«The methodology that the U.N. used to reimburse troop-contributing countries for equipment was: ‘Is it there?’» Bartos said.

The United States pushed for a simple change: «You get reimbursed when the equipment is put into action to do work.»

The reform could save roughly $30 million annually, according to U.S. estimates.

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For Bartos, however, the dollar figure matters less than what it represents.

«It’s a culture change,» he said. «Being efficient, being respectful of every dollar, thinking about the taxpayers who fund all this.»

That mindset is driving the administration’s next major targets: employee compensation and pensions.

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Bartos argues that the U.N.’s pension system and benefits structure consume resources that could otherwise be directed toward humanitarian operations.

Not everyone at the United Nations agrees with Bartos’ assessment. U.N. officials argue that many of the reforms predate the Trump administration and were already being pursued under Secretary-General António Guterres.

«From day one, the Secretary-General has been committed to reforms,» U.N. spokesman Stéphane Dujarric told Fox News Digital and added, «A few days ago, on 28 May, the Secretary-General told Member States that they need to act on structural reform, saying, «Genuine reform requires tough choices. This is no time for complacency, self-interest, or foot-dragging.»

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The UN80 initiative is Guterres’ flagship reform effort, aimed at cutting duplication, reviewing mandates and making the UN system more efficient.

Still, Bartos argues the pace and scope of reform changed dramatically once the United States began applying pressure through budget negotiations and funding discussions.

«The U.N. is at a decision point,» Bartos told Fox News Digital.

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The debate comes as the organization faces mounting financial pressure. Dujarric said Guterres remains deeply concerned about ongoing liquidity challenges caused by delayed payments from member states, including the United States.

«Unlike a government, the U.N. cannot borrow or print money,» Dujarric said, warning that the organization is expected to execute programs with funds it has not received while also returning unused funds at the end of the year.

Earlier in 2026, Guterres urged member states either to pay their assessed contributions in full and on time or overhaul the U.N.’s financial rules to prevent what he described as the risk of financial collapse.

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The reforms are unfolding as the U.N. begins preparing for one of the most consequential transitions in years: the search for a successor to Guterres, whose term expires at the end of 2026.

According to Bartos, reform has become a central topic in discussions with prospective candidates.

The administration hopes the next secretary-general will embrace efforts to reduce bureaucracy and return the institution to what Bartos repeatedly describes as a «back-to-basics» approach.

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The challenge, he acknowledges, is enormous.

Yet Bartos insists the experience has prepared him in unexpected ways.

Before entering government, he completed two Ironman triathlons while balancing work and family life.

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«It’s discipline, planning, prioritization,» he said. «It’s not dissimilar to budget negotiations.»

The comparison may sound unusual, but it reflects how Bartos views the job: not as a sprint, but as an endurance race requiring patience, persistence and long-term thinking.

The mission also carries a personal dimension.

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TRUMP REMOVES US FROM UN HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL, BANS UNRWA FUNDING

Ambassador Abdullah Ali Fadhel Al-Saadi speaking at United Nations Security Council meeting

Bartos argues that the UN’s pension system and benefits structure consume resources that could otherwise be directed toward humanitarian operations. (Heather Khalifa/AP Photo)

After two unsuccessful statewide campaigns in Pennsylvania — first as the Republican nominee for lieutenant governor in 2018 and later as a candidate in the state’s 2022 Republican Senate primary — Bartos said he had largely stepped away from politics before returning to public service following the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel. 

Bartos recalled his wife urging him to get involved: «You’ve spent your life working on these issues. You need to do something.»

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He ultimately joined efforts to help elect Trump and later accepted the U.N. role.

Now, after tackling what many considered the first impossible mission — reforming the United Nations — Bartos is preparing for what may prove an even harder challenge.

Bartos said he was recently tasked by U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Mike Waltz with helping lead efforts to combat what the administration views as entrenched anti-Israel bias across the U.N. system, including agencies, special rapporteurs and investigative bodies.

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The debate intensified following the publication of the U.N. secretary-general’s annual report on conflict-related sexual violence, which added Israeli security forces to the report’s blacklist of parties credibly suspected of patterns of sexual violence in armed conflict. Israel rejected the allegations and announced it would suspend engagement with Secretary-General António Guterres’ office.

ISRAEL ACCUSES UN OF PLACING IT ON SAME SEXUAL VIOLENCE BLACKLIST AS HAMAS TERRORISTS, SEVERS TIES

Donald Trump speaking at the United Nations General Assembly podium

President Donald Trump addresses the 74th United Nations General Assembly at the United Nations Headquarters Sept. 24, 2019, during his first term. (AAnthony Behar/Sipa USA)

Responding to the report, Waltz told Fox News Digital that the UN has failed to address what he described as a longstanding pattern of institutional antisemitism.

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«The U.N. was built in the wake of World War II and the Holocaust, and yet, remarkably, it continues to be weaponized against the Jewish people and Israel,» Waltz said. «Whether it’s a U.N. official regularly referencing Israel as a ‘stain on humanity’ and attacking American companies for doing business with Israel, or reports that spread misinformation and propaganda, this antisemitism is completely unacceptable.»

«It’s been over a year since the secretary general signed off on an ‘action plan’ to fight antisemitism at the institution — it would be nice if the institution actually used it,» he added.

Bartos argues that anti-Israel bias has become embedded across multiple U.N. bodies and says the administration is working to dismantle what he calls that infrastructure through diplomacy, funding decisions and engagement with the next generation of U.N. leadership.

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaking at empty United Nations General Assembly chamber

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses the 80th United Nations General Assembly at U.N. headquarters in New York City on Sept. 26, 2025, with many seats empty. (Caitlin Ochs/Reuters)

«There is not a day that goes by that we’re not working on that,» Bartos said.

The United Nations rejects accusations that it has ignored antisemitism within its ranks.

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Dujarric told Fox News Digital that the secretary-general launched a formal Action Plan to Combat Antisemitism in January 2025 aimed at tracking antisemitism within U.N. structures and evaluating whether the organization’s policies and actions are effectively addressing the problem.

Dujarric also disputed suggestions that Guterres directly controls some of the U.N. bodies most frequently criticized by Israel and its supporters. 

«The U.N. mechanisms that you allude to, including human rights mechanisms, are created by and accountable to Member States,» Dujarric said. «The Secretary-General has no authority over them.»

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«It is very important for Member States to actively engage in these mechanisms if they have concerns about their content and tone,» he added.

«The U.N. is at a decision point,» Bartos concluded. 

Whether the institution changes enough to satisfy its largest financial contributor remains one of the most consequential questions facing the organization — and the man charged with answering it insists the work is only beginning.

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