INTERNACIONAL
El primer ministro japonés Shigeru Ishiba anunció su renuncia un día antes de la votación de censura en su partido

El primer ministro japonés, Shigeru Ishiba, anunció este domingo su renuncia, tras menos de un año en el poder, presionado por la debacle que sufrió su partido en las elecciones parlamentarias durante su mandato.
“Decidí renunciar al cargo de presidente del Partido Liberal Democrático”, declaró Ishiba, en referencia a su formación, que ha gobernado en Japón casi de forma ininterrumpida desde hace décadas.
Ishiba, quien asumió el cargo en octubre, había resistido las demandas de opositores dentro de su propio partido, en su mayoría de derecha, diciendo que ello causaría un vacío político en un momento en que Japón enfrenta desafíos clave dentro y fuera del país.
La dimisión se produce un día antes de que su Partido Liberal Democrático tome una decisión divisiva sobre si llevará a cabo una elección interna anticipada, lo que equivaldría a una moción de censura virtual contra él si se aprueba.
Ishiba declaró durante una conferencia de prensa televisada que iniciará el proceso para llevar a cabo una votación interna del partido para elegir a su reemplazo y que no había necesidad de la decisión del lunes.

Si el primer ministro hubiera permanecido, inevitablemente habría luchado para gestionar su partido dividido y su gobierno minoritario.
En julio, la coalición gobernante de Ishiba no logró asegurar una mayoría en la cámara alta de 248 escaños en una elección parlamentaria crucial , lo que sacudió aún más la estabilidad de su gobierno. La pérdida se sumó a una derrota electoral anterior en la cámara baja, donde la coalición liderada por el partido también había perdido la mayoría.
Su decisión se produjo después de su reunión el sábado con el ministro de Agricultura Shinjiro Koizumi y su mentor percibido, el ex primer ministro Yoshihide Suga, quienes aparentemente sugirieron la renuncia de Ishiba antes de la votación del lunes.
Anteriormente había insistido en quedarse, subrayando la necesidad de evitar un vacío político en un momento en que Japón enfrenta grandes desafíos, incluidos los aranceles estadounidenses, el aumento de precios, las reformas de la política del arroz y la creciente tensión en la región.
Desde que el PLD adoptó la semana pasada una evaluación de la derrota electoral que pedía “una reestructuración completa” del grupo, han ganado fuerza las solicitudes para una votación interna anticipada o para la renuncia de Ishiba antes de los resultados del lunes.
El político conservador Taro Aso, conocido por su postura anti-Ishiba, y un ministro y varios viceministros en el gabinete de Ishiba han solicitado una votación anticipada, lo que ha llevado a otros a seguir su ejemplo.
El ex ministro de Salud Norihisa Tamura expresó en un programa de entrevistas de NHK el domingo por la mañana que la mejor manera de detener la división del partido y avanzar es que Ishiba “resuelva” la disputa antes de la votación del lunes, instando a su renuncia. El partido ya ha estado distraído del trabajo necesario en medidas económicas y en encontrar formas de obtener apoyo de la oposición en la próxima sesión parlamentaria, dijo Tamura.
Con la dimisión de Ishiba como líder del partido, se espera que el PLD fije una fecha para su elección presidencial del partido, que probablemente se celebrará a principios de octubre.
Los posibles candidatos incluyen a Koizumi, así como a la ultraconservadora ex ministra de Seguridad Económica Sanae Takaichi, al secretario jefe del gabinete Yoshimasa Hayashi, un moderado y protegido del ex primer ministro Fumio Kishida.
Al carecer de una mayoría en ambas cámaras, el próximo líder del PLD tendrá que trabajar con los principales partidos de oposición para aprobar leyes o enfrentarse a riesgos constantes de mociones de censura.
Sin embargo, los partidos de oposición están demasiado fragmentados para formar una gran coalición que derroque al gobierno.
En las últimas semanas, Ishiba logró que el presidente estadounidense Donald Trump redujera los aranceles del 25% al 15%. Ishiba también dijo que ha hecho que su principal negociador comercial, Ryosei Akazawa, entregue su carta a Trump, expresando su deseo de trabajar con él para crear “la era dorada” de la alianza Japón-Estados Unidos, invitando al líder norteamericano a visitar Japón.
El principal asistente de Ishiba, el secretario general del PLD Hiroshi Moriyama, una figura clave que negoció con los principales líderes de la oposición para ayudar a lograr la legislación desde que el primer ministro asumió el cargo, también ha expresado su intención de dimitir el 2 de septiembre por la derrota electoral, aunque Ishiba no ha aceptado su renuncia. La partida de Moriyama habría asestado un golpe al primer ministro.
Asia / Pacific,Government / Politics,TOKYO
INTERNACIONAL
UN Ambassador Waltz reveals Trump’s Middle East peace plan is ‘the only way forward’

Ambassador Waltz: No one will be left behind in Gaza
U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Michael Waltz joins ‘Fox & Friends’ to discuss efforts to return American bodies still being held by Hamas, drug boat strikes off Venezuela and why the U.S. is a ‘hard no’ on the U.N.’s global carbon tax proposal.
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EXCLUSIVE: U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz told the U.N. that President Trump’s historic Middle East peace plan is «the only way forward» as he negotiates a resolution that would codify the Trump administration’s Gaza deal in the international body in a way that is «fully consistent with an America First agenda.»
Fox News Digital spoke exclusively to Waltz after he convened partners and allies to discuss the United States’ intention to present a resolution to the U.N. Security Council on Gaza.
The resolution will endorse the Board of Peace, set parameters for Gaza’s transitional governance and launch the International Stabilization Force outlined in the president’s 20-point Gaza peace plan.
MIKE WALTZ SEES TRUMP’S GAZA PLAN AS ‘ONCE-IN-A-GENERATION OPPORTUNITY FOR PEACE’
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz (Getty Images)
«Only President Trump has the ability to bring all sides together, just as he did at Sharm El-Sheik,» Waltz told Fox News Digital. «He’s the only person who can truly bridge the divides between the Israelis, the Palestinians and others in the region.»
AS TRUMP ADMIN PUSHES GAZA PEACE PLAN, HISTORY SHOWS UN PEACEKEEPING’S MIXED RECORD
Waltz said the president’s plan is «the best chance for real peace in the Middle East in a generation.»
«And, frankly, it’s a real test for the United Nations — to step up, support the president’s plan and start implementing it,» Waltz told Fox News Digital.
«We’ve seen the death and destruction the war in Gaza caused,» Waltz said. «If we can rally the international community to come together and resolve it using the tools of the U.N., that’s absolutely the right thing to do, and it’s fully consistent with an America First agenda.
«This process of securing peace in Gaza with a Security Council resolution is really about getting the U.N. back to basics,» Waltz continued. «That’s what we’re calling it — back to basics. It’s about strictly focusing on establishing and keeping peace and, in this case, supporting what the president has already set in motion.»

World leaders, including President Donald Trump and Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, pose for a photo at a world leaders summit on ending the Gaza war, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, Oct. 13, 2025. (Suzanne Plunkett, Pool Photo via AP)
President Trump’s plan to end the Gaza conflict calls for Gaza to be a de-radicalized, terror-free zone that does not pose a threat to its neighbors. It also calls for Gaza to be redeveloped for the benefit of the people of Gaza and more.
Under the peace plan, Israeli forces would withdraw from the region, and a temporary transitional governance of a technocratic, apolitical Palestinian committee, responsible for delivering the day-to-day running of public services and municipalities for the people of Gaza will be created.
US MILITARY TO OVERSEE NEXT PHASE OF PEACE DEAL FROM COORDINATION BASE IN ISRAEL
That government will be under the oversight of a new international transitional body called the «Board of Peace,» chaired by President Trump and other members and heads of state.
The resolution would essentially make the plan international law, a U.N. source said.
As for timing, a U.N. source told Fox News Digital that negotiations typically take months in the United Nations, but the U.S. Mission is hoping to get this done in «weeks.»
«We are looking to move quickly,» the source said. «The ceasefire is fragile. We don’t want things to fall apart in any way, shape or form. The sooner we get this resolution done, the sooner countries can begin contributing troops to the stabilization force.»

U.S. President Donald Trump poses with a signed agreement during a world leaders summit focused on ending the Gaza war in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, Oct. 13. (Suzanne Plunkett/Getty Images)
The source also told Fox News Digital that representatives from the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Qatar — not members of the Security Council — presented the resolution with Waltz and the U.S. Mission to the broader Security Council.
«We think that’s really strong,» the source said. «This is about getting humanitarian aid in, stabilizing, governing and rolling up our sleeves and getting to work and having the international community pay for it.»
EXPERTS URGE TRUMP TO BAN TERROR-LINKED UN AGENCY FROM HIS GAZA PEACE PLAN
The source said the resolution would create a mechanism, led by Jared Kushner, Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and Secretary of State Marco Rubio that would ensure «the dollars are going to be used efficiently with a private sector mentality in mind.»
Rubio has said the Trump administration is «seeing things we never thought we’d see before, like the number of countries willing to participate in this effort, be it through money or personnel, or both or expertise.
«We’ve never seen this sort of international cohesion behind something,» Rubio said. «So, we have to be pursuing those opportunities because they’re really great, historic and important.»
Meanwhile, the source said the U.S. is «in the thick of negotiations» but is «moving lightening-fast by U.N. terms.»

Secretary of State Marco Rubio listens to a question as he speaks to the media after visiting the Civil-Military Coordination Center in southern Israel Oct. 24, 2025. (Getty Images)
«They do not want to be part of opposing the best chance we’ve had for peace in a generation,» the source said. «And they don’t want to play the part of bureaucratizing and then being responsible for the fighting resuming.»
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The president has described the peace plan as «the start of a grand concord and lasting harmony for Israel and all the nations of what will soon be a truly magnificent region.»
«I believe that so strongly,» Trump said of the plan. «This is the historic dawn of a new Middle East.»
israel,united nations,middle east
INTERNACIONAL
Canadian spy chief warns of alarming rise in teen terror suspects, ‘potentially lethal’ threats by Iran

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Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) Director Daniel Rogers, during a rare public appearance Thursday, said nearly one in 10 of the agency’s terrorism investigations include at least one person under the age of 18, an alarming trend driven by online extremism.
Since 2014, there have been nearly two dozen violent extremist attacks in Canada resulting in 29 deaths and at least 60 injuries, according to Rogers.
Worryingly, he said, nearly one in ten terrorism investigations at CSIS, the country’s domestic spy agency, include at least one «subject of investigation» under the age of 18.
In August, a minor was arrested in Montreal for allegedly planning an attack on behalf of the terrorist group Daesh, according to Rogers.
Dan Rogers, a national security and intelligence advisor, made a rare speech Thursday. (Reuters/Blair Gable/File Photo)
THE NEW MAFIA: TRUMP, CIVIL RICO AND THE GLOBAL INTIFADA
Just a few months earlier, a 15-year-old Edmonton-area minor was charged with a terrorism-related offense, after Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) investigators feared the teen would commit serious violence related to COM/764, a transnational violent online network that manipulates children and youth across widely accessible online platforms.
Rogers also noted two 15-year-olds were arrested in Ottawa for allegedly conspiring to conduct a mass casualty attack targeting the Jewish community in Canada’s capital in late 2023 and early 2024.
«Clearly, radicalized youth can cause the same harms as radicalized adults, but the societal supports for youth may help us catch radicalization early and prevent it,» Rogers said. «These tragic numbers would have been higher if not for disruptive actions taken by CSIS and our law enforcement partners.»

Multiple attacks over the last year were intercepted by Canadian authorities, officials said. (Fox News Digital/Lisa Bennatan)
The CSIS joined the RCMP and intelligence partners from the U.S., United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand in releasing a joint public report in December, highlighting the evolving issue of young people and violent extremism.
The report provides advice to parents, guardians and others with information to help them identify early concerns and address youth radicalization before it’s too late.
«Since 2022, CSIS has been involved in the disruption of no fewer than 24 violent extremist actions, each resulting in arrests or terrorism peace bond charges,» Rogers said. «In 2024, CSIS played an integral role in the disruption of two Daesh-inspired plots.
«In one case, a father and son were allegedly in the advanced stages of planning an attack in the Toronto area. In another, an individual was arrested before allegedly attempting to illegally enter the United States to attack members of the Jewish community in New York. In these examples, and in many others I can’t discuss publicly, our counter-terrorism teams have partnered with law enforcement and saved lives.»

Canadian officials said they also blocked potentially ‘lethal threats’ by Iran. (Mert Alper Dervis/Anadolu Agency)
ONLINE ‘GORE’ FORUMS ARE ‘GATEWAY TO EXTREMISM’ IN MASS SHOOTINGS, NORMALIZING HORROR FOR KIDS: EXPERTS
He attributed the radicalization to «eroding social cohesion, increasing polarization and significant global events,» which he said «provide fertile ground for radicalization.»
«Many who turn to violence radicalize exclusively online, often without direction from others,» Rogers said. «They use technology to do so secretly and anonymously, seriously challenging the ability of our investigators to keep pace and to identify and prevent acts of violence.»
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Rogers also noted the CSIS collects intelligence and defends against transnational repression, previously focusing on transnational repression by the People’s Republic of China, India and others.
«In particularly alarming cases over the last year, we’ve had to reprioritize our operations to counter the actions of Iranian intelligence services and their proxies who have targeted individuals they perceive as threats to their regime,» he said. «In more than one case, this involved detecting, investigating and disrupting potentially lethal threats against individuals in Canada.»
americas,national security,world,canada,tech,terrorism,media
INTERNACIONAL
Tensión entre israelíes y palestinos: el asalto a una mezquita, la última muestra de la creciente violencia colona en Cisjordania

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