Connect with us

INTERNACIONAL

White House again defends success of B-2 raid on Iran amid new report some uranium survived

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

The White House maintains that last month’s Operation Midnight Hammer «obliterated» Iran’s nuclear sites despite a new report from The New York Times suggesting Israeli officials have concluded some enriched uranium survived the targeted U.S. attack.

Advertisement

According to the Times, a portion of the stockpile of near-bomb-grade enriched uranium located underground survived bombs dropped by B-2 stealth bombers June 21, 2025, which may still be accessible to Iranian nuclear engineers.

When asked about the report, Anna Kelly, a White House deputy press secretary, told Fox News, «As President Trump has said many times, Operation Midnight Hammer totally obliterated Iran’s nuclear facilities. The entire world is safer thanks to his decisive leadership.»

The White House’s messaging reiterates what President Donald Trump has said since the night of the attacks, which is that Iran’s nuclear sites were «totally obliterated.»

Advertisement

OPERATION MIDNIGHT HAMMER: HISTORIC B-2 BOMBER MISSION FLEW FROM MISSOURI TO STRIKE IRANIAN NUCLEAR SITES

President Donald Trump is joined by Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth during an address to the nation in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., June 21.  (Carlos Barria/Reuters/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Operation Midnight Hammer commenced when B-2 stealth bombers took off from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri at 12:01 a.m. June 21. Some of the bombers flew west and into the Pacific as a decoy, while the main strike force of seven B-2 Spirit bombers, each with two crew members, flew silently eastward with minimal communication as they undertook the 18-hour flight to the target area.

Advertisement

The flight required the aircraft to refuel multiple times without landing, and when overland, the strike group linked up with escort and support aircraft from Central Command.

At about 5 p.m. EST, a U.S. submarine launched over two dozen Tomahawk land attack cruise missiles against key surface infrastructure targets as the main strike force entered Iranian airspace.

MIDNIGHT HAMMER IS ‘MISSION ACCOMPLISHED’ BUT THERE’S ONE BIG RED FLAG

Advertisement
Iran's Fordow nuclear site

Iran’s Fordow nuclear site, left; a U.S. stealth B-2 bomber. (Reuters; Getty)

Additional tactics were used to deceive Iranian forces as the B-2 strike group approached Fordow and Natanz. A total of 14 Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP) weapons, commonly known as bunker-busters, were dropped on Fordow and Natanz, while Tomahawk missiles launched by U.S. submarines were last to strike, hitting targets at Isfahan.

After the mission, Trump posted on Truth Social that the U.S. military carried out «massive precision strikes on three key nuclear facilities in the Iranian regime: Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan.»

Trump also addressed the nation on television, touting the success of Operation Midnight Hammer.

Advertisement

«Iran’s nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated,» Trump said. «And Iran, the bully of the Middle East, must now make peace. If they do not, future attacks would be far greater and a lot easier.»

PENTAGON FLEXES US MILITARY’S DECOYS AND STRATEGIC DECEPTION THAT TOOK IRAN AND WORLD BY SURPRISE

Hegseth

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth takes a question from a reporter during a news conference at the Pentagon in Arlington, Va., June 22. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

Trump and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth have railed against the «fake news» media ever since the attacks for casting doubt that the U.S. strikes on Iran destroyed the country’s nuclear program.

Advertisement

While at a NATO summit last month, Hegseth slammed CNN and The New York Times, arguing they work «to find a way to spin» the news.

«There’s a reason the president calls out fake news for what it is,» Hegseth said. «These pilots, these refuelers, these fighters, these air defenders. The skill and the courage it took to go into enemy territory flying 36 hours on behalf of the American people and the world to take out a nuclear program is beyond what anyone in this audience can fathom.» 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

Advertisement

«And then the instinct, the instinct of CNN, the instinct of the New York Times, is to try to find a way to spin it for their own political reasons, to try to hurt President Trump or our country,» he added. «They don’t care what the troops think. They don’t care what the world thinks. They want to spin it to try to make him look bad based on a leak. 

«Of course, we’ve all seen plenty of leakers. And what [do] leakers do? They have agendas. And what do they do? Do they share the whole information or just the part that they want to introduce?»

Fox News Digital’s Emma Colton and Stephen Sorace contributed to this report.

Advertisement

Advertisement

INTERNACIONAL

Trump administration refines EEOC approach to transgender workplace discrimination claims

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the federal agency responsible for enforcing laws against workplace discrimination, will allow some complaints by transgender workers to proceed, a change from earlier guidance that indefinitely halted cases alleging workplace discrimination against transgender people.

Advertisement

An email was sent earlier this month to leaders of the EEOC in which Thomas Colclough, director of the agency’s Office of Field Programs, said if new transgender worker complaints involve «hiring, discharge or promotion, you are clear to continue processing these charges.»

Even with the change, those complaints will still face higher scrutiny than other workplace discrimination cases, requiring approval from acting EEOC chair Andrea Lucas, who was appointed by President Donald Trump earlier this year.

Lucas has said one of her priorities would be «defending the biological and binary reality of sex and related rights.»

Advertisement

UTAH BATH & BODY WORKS MANAGER SAYS SHE WAS FIRED OVER COMPANY’S PRONOUN POLICY

Acting EEOC chair Andrea Lucas has said one of her priorities would be «defending the biological and binary reality of sex and related rights.» (Getty Images)

Since Trump returned to the presidency in January, the EEOC has shifted away from its previous interpretation of civil rights law that included prohibiting workplace discrimination against people based on their gender identity.

Advertisement

This comes after the agency issued a landmark finding a decade ago that a transgender civilian employee of the U.S. Army had faced discrimination when her employer refused to use the worker’s preferred pronouns or allow the individual to use bathrooms based on gender identity rather than biological sex.

Under Lucas’ authority, the EEOC has dropped several lawsuits alleging discrimination against transgender workers. Lucas defended that decision during her Senate committee confirmation hearing last month, citing Trump’s executive order stating that there are only two sexes — male and female.

But she also acknowledged that the 2020 Supreme Court ruling Bostock v. Clayton County «did clearly hold that discriminating against someone on the basis of sex included firing an individual who is transgender or based on their sexual orientation.»

Advertisement

US EQUAL OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION DEMANDS 20 LAW FIRMS DISCLOSE DEI EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES

EEOC

Since Trump returned to the presidency in January, the EEOC has shifted away from its previous interpretation of civil rights law. (Andrew Harrer/Getty Images)

Colclough said in his email that the EEOC will consider transgender discrimination complaints that «fall squarely under» the Supreme Court’s ruling, including cases involving hiring, firing and promotion, which reversed an earlier policy that de-prioritized cases filed on behalf of transgender workers.

«Under federal law, charge inquiries and charges of discrimination made to the EEOC are confidential,» an EEOC spokesperson told The Associated Press, while declining to comment on the specifics of its updated policy.

Advertisement

«Pursuant to Title VII and as statutorily required, the EEOC is, has been, and will continue to accept and investigate charges on all bases protected by law, and to serve those charges to the relevant employer,» the spokesperson added.

But even the cases the EEOC will consider under the Supreme Court ruling must still be reviewed by a senior attorney advisor and sent to Lucas for final approval.

The expanded review process for transgender cases is not typical of other discrimination complaints and reflects the agency’s increased scrutiny of these cases, according to former EEOC commissioner Chai Feldblum, who was appointed by former President Barack Obama.

Advertisement
The seal of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission

Under current leadership, the EEOC has dropped several lawsuits alleging discrimination against transgender workers. (Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

«It is a slight improvement because it will allow certain claims of discrimination to proceed,» Feldblum told The Associated Press. «But overall it does not fix a horrific and legally improper situation currently occurring at the EEOC.»

Colclough’s email did not clarify how long the review process might take, or whether cases that include additional claims, such as harassment or retaliation, would be eligible to proceed, and the EEOC declined to address those questions.

Advertisement

«This is not the EEOC being clear to either its own staff or to the public what charges are going to be processed,» Feldblum said. «This is not a panacea.»

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

Japón denunció una posible injerencia extranjera en su campaña para las elecciones parciales de la Cámara de Consejeros

Published

on


Japón denunció una posible injerencia extranjera en su campaña para las elecciones parciales de la Cámara de Consejeros (EFE/EPA/FRANCK ROBICHON/ARCHIVO)

El gobierno japonés está evaluando indicios de posible injerencia extranjera en la campaña electoral para los comicios parciales de la Cámara Alta que se celebrarán este domingo 20 de julio, una votación crucial para el Partido Liberal Democrático (PLD) del primer ministro Shigeru Ishiba, que actualmente gobierna en minoría.

El viceportavoz del Ejecutivo, Kazuhiko Aoki, confirmó este miércoles en conferencia de prensa que “no se descarta la posibilidad de que se haya producido una injerencia”, y aseguró que el gobierno “está trabajando para garantizar unas elecciones justas”. Las declaraciones de Aoki se produjeron tras las advertencias del ministro de Digitalización, Masaaki Taira, quien informó que se han recibido reportes sobre actividades sospechosas en redes sociales que podrían estar vinculadas a esfuerzos externos de manipulación.

Advertisement

“Si bien existen aspectos positivos, como la posibilidad de obtener información, también debemos considerar los negativos”, señaló Taira, al referirse al uso político de las redes sociales y su potencial para intensificar divisiones sociales y promover la radicalización. Según informó la agencia de noticias Kyodo, el gobierno se encuentra en proceso de análisis para identificar el origen y naturaleza de estos intentos de influencia.

El primer ministro de Japón,
El primer ministro de Japón, Shigeru Ishiba (REUTERS/Todd Korol/Archivo)

La votación del domingo tiene un carácter decisivo para el oficialismo. Tras la derrota en la Cámara Baja en octubre pasado, el PLD busca mantener la mayoría parlamentaria junto a su socio Komeito. Sin embargo, las encuestas anticipan una posible pérdida de hegemonía, debido al crecimiento de partidos minoritarios con discursos nacionalistas, antiinmigración y antisistema, amplificados en redes en medio de un contexto económico adverso.

Las sospechas sobre injerencia se producen en un clima de tensión con China. El martes, el Ministerio de Defensa japonés publicó su informe anual de seguridad en el que advirtió que las actividades militares chinas “podrían impactar seriamente la seguridad de Japón”. El documento destaca como precedente la incursión confirmada de un avión militar chino en el espacio aéreo japonés en agosto del año pasado. Además, en septiembre, un portaviones chino y dos embarcaciones de escolta navegaron entre las islas japonesas de Okinawa y Miyako, cerca de Taiwán.

El gobierno del primer ministro
El gobierno del primer ministro Shigeru Ishiba investiga reportes de manipulación en redes sociales a pocos días de los comicios del 20 de julio (AP)

El libro blanco repite la advertencia del informe anterior: las ambiciones militares de China representan “un desafío estratégico sin precedentes y el más grave” para Japón y la comunidad internacional. En respuesta, el portavoz del Ministerio de Exteriores chino, Lin Jian, declaró que el informe “exagera la llamada amenaza china” y que Beijing “expresa una fuerte insatisfacción y oposición firme”.

En paralelo, Japón reportó que cazas chinos volaron a solo 30 metros de un avión patrulla japonés sobre el mar de China Oriental, en otro incidente que agrava las fricciones. El año pasado, buques chinos se acercaron 355 veces a las islas Senkaku, administradas por Japón y reclamadas por China. Tokio también confirmó que en junio, por primera vez, dos portaviones chinos realizaron ejercicios simultáneos en aguas económicas japonesas, hechos que Beijing calificó de “entrenamiento rutinario”.

Advertisement

El informe de Defensa señala además que las maniobras conjuntas de China y Rusia son “claramente una demostración de fuerza contra Japón” y reafirma que Corea del Norte sigue representando “una amenaza más grave e inminente que nunca”.

En respuesta a estos desafíos, Japón continúa incrementando su gasto en defensa y reforzando su cooperación militar con Estados Unidos y sus aliados regionales. Este fortalecimiento incluye negociaciones bilaterales para definir el rol que Tokio asumiría en caso de un conflicto entre Washington y Beijing por Taiwán.

(Con información de EFE y AFP)

Advertisement



polling station

Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

Arizona Republicans choose nominee to replace late rep in deep-blue border district

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Arizona Republicans nominated contractor and small business owner Daniel Butierez in the special primary election to represent Arizona’s 7th congressional district on Tuesday night. 

Advertisement

Because the district spans hundreds of miles along the U.S. border with Mexico, all three Republican candidates made border security a central issue in their campaigns and vowed to carry out President Donald Trump’s robust crackdown on illegal immigration. 

The Republican nominee will challenge the Democrat’s Tuesday night winner, former Pima County Supervisor Adelita Grijalva, in the race to replace her father, the late Democratic Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva, this November. 

Grijalva died of lung cancer-related complications in March. His more than two decades representing Arizona in the House of Representatives made him one of the state’s longest-serving U.S. representatives. 

Advertisement

TOP DEMOCRATS ADMIT ‘FAILURE,’ FECKLESSNESS ON BORDER IN SCATHING NY TIMES REPORT

Daniel Butierez, who is seeking the Republican nomination in the race to replace the late Rep. Raúl Grijalva in Arizona’s 7th Congressional District, talks to reporters while awaiting results Tuesday, July 15, 2025, in Tucson, Ariz. (Kelly Presnell/Arizona Daily Star via AP)

His vacancy queued up a competitive Democratic primary, including his daughter, who had endorsements from prominent Democrats, such as Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. 

Advertisement

DEM’S IMMIGRATION REFORM PLAN ADDS BORDER PATROL AGENTS, OFFERS SELECT MIGRANTS PATHWAY TO CITIZENSHIP

Also competing in the Democratic primary was social media influencer and progressive activist Deja Foxx, who picked up an endorsement from Leaders We Deserve, David Hogg’s super PAC that stirred up intraparty fighting this year when the former DNC vice chair unveiled his plan to spend $20 million to primary older incumbent Democrats in safe blue districts. 

Former Arizona representative Daniel Hernandez, progressive businessman Patrick Harris Sr. and environmental justice scholar José Malvido Jr., also vied for the Democratic endorsement. 

Advertisement
grijalva

The late Rep. Raul Grijalva, a Democrat from Arizona, speaks before the signing of a moratorium on mining in the area of the Grand Canyon in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 9, 2012.  (Joshua Roberts/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

In a reliably blue district along the U.S. border with Mexico, representing parts of Tuscon, Yuma and Nogales, Butierez is likely to face an uphill battle in the special election this September. 

Grijalva won his re-election by 27 points in 2024, despite Trump defeating former Vice President Kamala Harris by more than five points statewide in Arizona last year. 

arizona border wall

In an aerial view, a U.S. Border Patrol agent searches for immigrant footprints while looking through the U.S.-Mexico border fence on March 9, 2024, in Yuma, Arizona.  (John Moore/Getty Images)

Butierez, a contractor and small business owner, received about 37% of the vote as the Republican nominee against Grijalva in 2024. Running again in the special election this year, he has vowed to «fight to keep our border secure, slash taxes where appropriate, and crush the fentanyl crisis destroying Arizona families.»

Advertisement
Candidate Daniel Butierez

Candidate Daniel Butierez answers a question during the Republican primary debate inside the Arizona Public Media studio in Tucson, Ariz. on June 9, 2025. (Mamta Popat/Arizona Daily Star via AP)

Also competing in the Republican primary was Jorge Rivas, a Salvadoran-born restaurant owner based in Tucson. 

House Natural Resources Committee Ranking Member Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., makes a closing statement at a House hearing in 2020.

House Natural Resources Committee Ranking Member Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., makes a closing statement at a House hearing in 2020.  (Bonnie Cash-Pool/Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Rivas picked up national attention when Trump tweeted a photo of him wearing a «Latinos Love Trump» cowboy hat at a rally in Phoenix during the 2020 presidential election, according to KAWC. He briefly launched a gubernatorial bid in 2022. 

Advertisement

Finally, general contractor and business owner Jimmy Rodriguez ran with a mission «to secure our borders, boost our economy, and empower families across CD7.»

Continue Reading

LO MAS LEIDO

Tendencias

Copyright © 2025 NDM - Noticias del Momento | #Noticias #Chimentos #Política #Fútbol #Economía #Sociedad