INTERNACIONAL
Estados Unidos dice que enfrenta la «gran amenaza» de Rusia por un arma antisatélites
La Casa Blanca confirmó este jueves que existe una amenaza a la seguridad nacional por un arma antisatélite desarrollada por Rusia.
«Puedo confirmar que está relacionado con una capacidad antisatélite que Rusia ha desarrollado», declaró a periodistas el portavoz del Consejo de Seguridad Nacional, John Kirby, quien añadió que no existe «ninguna amenaza inmediata para la seguridad de nadie».
¿De qué «grave amenaza» para la seguridad se trata? ¿Un proyecto ruso para construir un arma nuclear espacial contra satélites? El asesor de Seguridad Nacional del presidente Joe Biden acudió este jueves al Congreso estadounidense para aclarar el misterio.
Todo comenzó con la publicación el miércoles de una críptica declaración del jefe del comité de inteligencia de la Cámara de Representantes, Mike Turner, en la que invitaba a los congresistas a revisar unas «informaciones acerca de una grave amenaza para la seguridad nacional».
Ningún detalle sobre esta amenaza. Sólo unas líneas, publicadas en las redes sociales, en las que exhorta al presidente Joe Biden a «desclasificar toda la información» sobre el tema.
El mensaje corrió como la pólvora y alimentó todo tipo de especulaciones.
Es muy raro que los altos cargos con acceso a información de inteligencia divulguen públicamente los asuntos en curso a no ser que exista un riesgo para la ciudadanía.
Los congresistas no están autorizados a divulgar la información clasificada que se les hace llegar.
En un intento de que no cunda el pánico, el presidente de la Cámara de Representantes, el republicano Mike Johnson, reaccionó diciendo que «no hay motivo de alarma».
Preguntada por la AFP, una fuente conocedora del tema afirmó que la amenaza es «seria» pero no «urgente».
Citando fuentes no identificadas, varios medios de comunicación estadounidenses hablan de capacidades militares rusas «extremadamente preocupantes».
ABC News fue el primero en informar de que Rusia tiene la intención de colocar un arma nuclear en el espacio contra satélites.
A una pregunta el miércoles sobre estas informaciones, el asesor de Seguridad Nacional de la Casa Blanca, Jake Sullivan, expresó su descontento de que Turner lo haya hecho público antes de una reunión prevista este jueves.
«Es su decisión», declaró. «Lo que puedo decirle es que voy a verle y a hablar con él» el jueves.
El consejero acudirá al Congreso a primera hora de la tarde para informar a un grupo de ocho congresistas con acceso a los datos más delicados de la inteligencia estadounidense.
Rusia consideró «infundadas» las informaciones y las atribuyó a una maniobra del gobierno estadounidense para forzar la aprobación de un paquete de ayuda para Ucrania bloqueado desde hace meses en el Congreso.
«Repetimos constantemente que no responderemos a las diferentes acusaciones infundadas. Si hacen declaraciones deberían ir acompañadas de pruebas», declaró a las agencias de prensa rusas el viceministro de Relaciones Exteriores Sergéi Riabkov.
«Esto se inscribe en la tendencia de los últimos diez años en que los estadounidenses se dedican a invenciones malévolas y nos atribuyen todo tipo de acciones o de intenciones que no les convienen», añadió.
El portavoz del Kremlin, Dmitri Peskov, también reaccionó: «Está claro que la Casa Blanca intenta animar al Congreso a aprobar la ley de finanzas, es evidente. Veremos qué truco usará la Casa Blanca».
El Senado, de mayoría demócrata, ha aprobado un nuevo paquete de ayuda de 60.000 millones de dólares para Kiev, pero el líder republicano de la Cámara de Representantes se niega a votarlo.
INTERNACIONAL
Even if Trump secures Ukraine-Russia peace deal, can Putin be trusted?
Ukraine on Tuesday agreed to a preliminary proposal put forward by the Trump administration that called for a 30-day ceasefire contingent on Russia’s acceptance of the terms in a major step toward ending the brutal war.
But even if the Trump administration is able to get Moscow to the negotiating table and end the three-year war under a new treaty, which several security experts say Russian President Vladimir Putin is under no real pressure to do, can the Kremlin chief be trusted?
Russia under Putin has repeatedly violated formal international agreements intended to protect Ukraine’s sovereignty, chiefly from its former Soviet overlord.
From left, U.S. National Security Advisor Mike Waltz, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Saudi Arabian Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan, Saudi National Security Advisor Mosaad bin Mohammed al-Aiban, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha and Ukrainian Head of Presidential Office Andriy Yermak hold a meeting in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, Tuesday, March 11, 2025. (Saul Loeb/Pool Photo via AP)
UKRAINE ACCEPTS DEAL, SAYS RUBIO: ‘WE’LL TAKE THIS TO THE RUSSIANS’
These agreements include the 1994 Budapest Memorandum, in which Ukraine agreed to relinquish its nuclear arsenal in exchange for assurances over its territorial integrity after its 1991 withdrawal from the Soviet Union, as well as the 1997 Treaty on Friendship, Cooperation, and Partnership by which Moscow and Kyiv agreed to respect one another’s existing borders. Both deals were first violated in 2014 when Putin seized Crimea and backed Russian separatist forces in the Donbas region.
The 2014-2015 Minsk Agreements, though criticized as «weak,» attempted to end Russia’s aggression in eastern Ukraine, an agreement that was never fully achieved and was again violated by Putin’s 2022 invasion.
Some world leaders and security officials, including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, have cautioned that a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine is unlikely to be achieved in the near term and against Putin’s reliability in adhering to any international agreement without serious security commitments from the West.
«The problem here is that the Russians only understand win-lose outcomes, which means that to prevent them from ever attacking Ukraine again, they must see themselves to be the losers in the war just as they did at the end of the Cold War,» Michael Ryan, former deputy assistant secretary of Defense for European and NATO Policy and former acting assistant secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs, told Fox News Digital.
Ukrainian soldiers fire a cannon near Bakhmut, an eastern city where fierce battles against Russian forces have been taking place in the Donetsk region of Ukraine, May 15, 2023. (AP Photo/Libkos)
Security officials interviewed by Fox News Digital argued that securing Ukraine’s future is not about «trusting» Putin. It’s about actually putting Russia in a position where any future violations would hinder Moscow more than it could be enticed by unchecked opportunity.
TRUMP THREATENS SANCTIONS ON RUSSIA, DEMANDS PEACE AFTER MAJOR HITS IN UKRAINE
«Even if a deal is concluded, Russia will continue clandestine operations across the world to expand its footprint in terms of geopolitical influence,» Rebekah Koffler, a former DIA intelligence officer, told Fox News Digital, noting the former KGB operative can be counted on to «continue election interference campaigns, cyber warfare, espionage and destabilization operations across the globe.
«There’s no such thing as peace in Russia’s strategic military thinking. You are in a constant confrontation.»
Ryan argued a Trump-brokered peace deal needs to reflect on the lessons learned from previously failed agreements, like the post-WWI Treaty of Versailles, which arguably led to the rise of Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany.
«How to solve this conundrum? Just as we did after World War II … reconstruction of Ukraine must include economic reconciliation with Russia,» Ryan said. «The Russians saw how we rebuilt the losing side in World War II Germany and Japan. They expected us to do the same for Russia after the Cold War, but we did not.
«We can’t make that same mistake if we want lasting peace for Ukraine and if we want to split Russia from China,» he added, noting other adversaries are watching how the West handles this geopolitical hurdle.
Ukrainian soldiers of the Aidar battalion training at an undetermined location in Donetsk oblast, 4 April 2023. (Diego Herrera Carcedo/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
There are numerous obstacles when it comes to the Trump administration’s attempt to negotiate with Putin, including arguments over occupied territory, international recognition of occupied lands, international aid and support for Ukraine, international confiscation of frozen Russian assets, Zelenskyy’s standing at home, the return of prisoners of war and the return of abducted Ukrainian children, according to Peter Rough, senior fellow and director of the Center on Europe and Eurasia at the Hudson Institute.
«Putin has officially annexed four Ukrainian oblasts as well as Crimea. But Moscow has yet to conquer any of the four entirely,» Rough told Fox News Digital while traveling to Ukraine. «I can’t imagine that Ukraine will withdraw from the areas they control, having fought tooth and nail to defend those regions.
«I also doubt that the West will offer de jure recognition to the areas Moscow controls,» he added. «So, Putin would have to swallow all of that in a peace deal.»
Each issue alone is a massive undertaking to negotiate, and while Ukraine this week may be outlining concessions it could make to secure a deal coordinated by the U.S., Putin is unlikely to do the same, according to Koffler, who briefed NATO years ahead of the 2022 invasion on Putin’s plans.
RUBIO SAYS MINERAL DEAL ‘NOT MAIN TOPIC ON AGENDA’ IN UKRAINE MEETING
«Putin is unlikely to make any concessions as he believes he is in a strong position,» Koffler told Fox News Digital. «The disparity in combat potential dramatically favors Russia over Ukraine, which is out-manned and outgunned because Putin transitioned the Russian military and economy on a wartime footing seven years prior to the invasion of Ukraine.»
Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting on the draft of a 2024 federal budget and the planning period of 2025 and 2026, via video link at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, Sept. 18, 2023 (Sputnik/Mikhail Metzel/Pool)
«Putin believes he has prepared Russia to fight till the last Ukrainian and till the last missile in NATO’s arsenal,» she added, echoing a January warning issued by NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, who said Russia’s defense industry output over a three-month period equates to what all of NATO produces an entire year.
«Putin is highly unlikely to agree to a ceasefire because he doesn’t want to give a strategic pause to Ukraine, the U.S., and NATO to re-arm,» Koffler said. «He doesn’t trust Washington. He doesn’t trust President Trump any more than we trust Putin.
«He trusts Trump even less than Biden because he could read Biden and predict his behavior. He cannot read Trump because Trump is unpredictable.»
The experts argued there are too many variables that could play out during negotiations that will determine whether Putin can be adequately held accountable or «trusted» regarding future agreements.
Ukrainian soldiers work with «pion» artillery in the northern direction of the Donbass front line as the Russia-Ukraine war continues in Donetsk, Ukraine, Jan. 7, 2023. (Diego Herrera Carcedo/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
Ultimately, Koffler said, Putin will not leave eastern Ukraine.
«Ukraine has always been a red line for Putin, in terms of who has geopolitical control of it, Russia or the West. And he will continue to enforce this red line,» she said. «The only way to ensure that Putin doesn’t invade another country is to make NATO strong again, beef up force posture, increase defense spending, secure its command-and-control networks and develop actual deterrence and counter-strategy that addresses every prong of Putin’s strategy.»
INTERNACIONAL
Para cumplir con el recorte de Donald Trump, la NASA echó a su científica jefe y anticipó más despidos
Quién es Katherine Calvin, la referente de la NASA que fue despedida
Los próximos recortes que se esperan en Estados Unidos bajo el mandato de Trump
INTERNACIONAL
La salud del papa Francisco: «El Pontífice se encuentra estable con ligeras mejoras en una situación compleja»
El Papa seguiría semanas en el Hospital
La opinión de un experto sobre el cuadro del papa Francisco
-
POLITICA3 días ago
Documentos oficiales: la Argentina enfrenta 236 demandas fuera del país por más de US$27.000 millones
-
POLITICA3 días ago
El número de muertos por las inundaciones en Bahía Blanca subió a 15
-
POLITICA1 día ago
Santiago Cúneo: «El país necesita más gobernadores como Quintela» y lanza su candidatura para 2025″