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Esto es lo que sabemos sobre el tiroteo contra soldados de la Guardia Nacional

Una soldada de la Guardia Nacional resultó muerta y otro está gravemente heridos después de que un hombre les disparó a pocas cuadras de la Casa Blanca.
El sospechoso, un hombre de 29 años procedente de Afganistán, también resultó herido después de abrir fuego, según las autoridades que lo detuvieron y dijeron que parecía haber actuado solo.
El sospechoso había trabajado con unidades militares respaldadas por la CIA en Afganistán durante la guerra de Estados Unidos en ese país, según dijo el jueves la agencia. El presidente Donald Trump habla con los periodistas tras hablar con las tropas a través de un vídeo desde su finca Mar-a-Lago el jueves 27 de noviembre de 2025, en Palm Beach, Florida. (Foto AP/Alex Brandon)
En un discurso televisado el miércoles por la noche, el presidente Donald Trump calificó el tiroteo como un acto terrorista y dijo que el sospechoso “pagaría un precio muy alto”.
Esto es lo que sabemos sobre el tiroteo:
A los soldados les dispararon cerca de la Casa Blanca
El tiroteo sucedió alrededor de las 2:15 p. m. cerca de la entrada de la estación de metro Farragut West, a pocas cuadras de la Casa Blanca. Allí, según las autoridades, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, un afgano de 29 años, abrió fuego con un arma del calibre .357. Alcanzó a dos integrantes uniformados de la Guardia Nacional, Wolfe, de 24 años, y Beckstrom, de 20, ambos pertenecientes a la Guardia Nacional de Virginia Occidental, según informaron.
El sonido de los disparos aterrorizó a algunos transeúntes. La enfermera Stacey Walters dijo que viajaba en un Uber cuando oyó los disparos.
“Tenía ganas de llorar”, afirmó. “Nunca había estado tan cerca de algo así, y menos durante las fiestas”.
La fiscala general de Estados Unidos, Pam Bondi, dijo el jueves que el sospechoso podría enfrentarse a una pena de cadena perpetua.
Uno de los guardias se había ofrecido como voluntario para trabajar el jueves, para que otros pudieran estar en casa con sus familias durante el día festivo.
El sospechoso trabajó con unidades respaldadas por la CIA y entró en Estados Unidos como refugiado
Las autoridades identificaron a Rahmanullah Lakanwal, un afgano de 29 años, como el sospechoso del tiroteo. Resultó herido tras recibir disparos de otros miembros de la Guardia Nacional y permaneció en el hospital, donde fue objeto de vigilancia, según informó Jeanine Pirro, fiscala federal de Washington D. C.
Lakanwal trabajó para diversas agencias del gobierno estadounidense en Afganistán, incluida una unidad militar respaldada por la CIA en Kandahar, según dijo la CIA el jueves.
Lakanwal entró en Estados Unidos en septiembre de 2021 a través de la Operación Bienvenidos Aliados, un programa que permitía la entrada a Estados Unidos de ciudadanos afganos que huían de la toma de poder de los talibanes, según Kristi Noem, la secretaria de Seguridad Nacional.
El programa permitía a determinadas personas afganas permanecer en el país durante dos años. No era una vía para obtener la residencia permanente y requería que encontraran otras formas de permanecer en el país, como solicitar asilo.
En el momento del ataque, el sospechoso vivía en Bellingham, Washington, con su esposa y varios hijos, dijo Pirro. Había cruzado el país en coche, afirmó, con la intención de cometer un atentado en la capital del país.
Tras el tiroteo, Trump ordenó el envío de otros 500 soldados de la Guardia Nacional a Washington
El presidente ordenó el envío de otros 500 soldados de la Guardia Nacional a Washington D. C. después del tiroteo.
Trump ya ha enviado a 2000 miembros de la Guardia Nacional a la capital del país, como parte de un intento de despliegue de miles de soldados en ciudades estadounidenses este año en su ofensiva contra la inmigración y la delincuencia. Jueces federales de todo el país, incluido el circuito de Washington D. C., han intentado limitar su autoridad para utilizar a estos soldados.
En Washington D. C., miembros de la Guardia Nacional han patrullado las paradas de metro y las zonas turísticas y han colaborado en la intensificación de las operaciones de inmigración y deportación de la ciudad.
(*) Jin Yu Young reporta desde Seúl sobre Corea del Sur, la región Asia-Pacífico y las últimas noticias mundiales.
The New York Times, Tiroteo, casa blanca
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La lujosa y superprotegida «dacha» que descubrió Stalin y ahora es de Vladimir Putin: el supuesto blanco de un ataque que Ucrania desmiente

Políticos, artistas, cosmonautas y una boda
La residencia favorita de Putin
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Senate races to avoid government shutdown with time ticking and lingering issues

Shutdown looms in 2026 as healthcare premiums set to spike
Fox News chief congressional correspondent Chad Pergram and Rep. Kevin Kiley, R-Calif., join ‘Fox News Live’ to discuss the expiration of Obamacare subsidies, rising healthcare premiums going into 2026 and concerns of another government shutdown.
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The Senate will return to a fast-approaching government funding deadline, but this time both sides appear ready to avoid another shutdown.
When lawmakers in the upper chamber return Monday, they will have three working weeks to fund the government. That process fizzled out before they left town earlier in December, but lawmakers are hopeful that both parties can come together to ward off a repeat of September’s funding deadline.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., told reporters before leaving the Capitol that Democrats’ goal was to have the remaining slate of appropriations bills completed by the Jan. 30 deadline. It takes 12 spending bills to fund the government, and so far, neither chamber has come close to hitting that mark.
DEMOCRATS’ LAST-MINUTE MOVE TO BLOCK GOP FUNDING PLAN SENDS LAWMAKERS HOME EARLY
Senate Democrats’ three-year extension of expiring enhanced Obamacare subsidies was destined to fail on Thursday as the Senate prepared to vote on dueling proposals. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)
«We want to get through the process and get the appropriations bills done,» Schumer said.
It’s a stark departure from his and Democrats’ earlier position, given that they shut the government down for a record 43 days in a bid to bring expiring Obamacare subsidies to the forefront of discussions.
Congressional Democrats also have been leery of working with their Republican counterparts after President Donald Trump’s roughly $9 billion clawback package, which cut funding to already agreed-to programs and priorities, passed on a partisan vote over the summer.
A similar issue played out just as the Senate was on the cusp of advancing a five-bill spending package before skipping town.
2026 DEADLINES LOOM AS CONGRESS LEAVES DC WITH SEVERAL UNFINISHED BATTLES

The Senate appeared primed and ready to advance a government funding package, but a last-minute block from Senate Democrats forced Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., to abandon the plan, for now. (Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Sens. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., and John Hickenlooper, D-Colo., held up the process over the Trump administration’s plan to dismantle the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado.
Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought had just announced that same day that the facility would be put under a microscope, and charged that the NCAR was «one of the largest sources of climate alarmism in the country.»
For now, the duo appear entrenched in their position.
«This holiday season, hundreds of NCAR employees face uncertainty about their jobs and communities across the state are worried they won’t get the support they need to rebuild their lives after historic flooding and wildfires,» Bennett said in a statement. «Colorado deserves better, and I am doing everything in my power to fight back and protect our state from the President’s vindictive chaos.»
There’s also the issue of dealing with the Obamacare subsidies, which will have expired by the time lawmakers return to Washington, D.C. A group of bipartisan senators are working on a possible solution, and there are plans in the House — one from the GOP that already passed and another bipartisan effort that is expected to get a vote early next month — that could make their way onto the Senate floor.
RAND PAUL’S ‘FESTIVUS REPORT’ CALLS OUT COCAINE DOGS, COVID INFLUENCERS AND A MOUNTAIN OF DEBT

Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., tried to derail Senate Republicans’ bid to confirm over 80 of President Donald Trump’s nominees, but the GOP instead is putting even more into a package for a vote next week. (Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images)
And Congressional Democrats are likely to use the healthcare issue as leverage during the impending spending fight.
Exactly how lawmakers avoid another shutdown is still in the air. The Senate is determined to advance its five bill package, which includes legislation to fund the departments of Defense, Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, Commerce, Justice, Interior, Transportation, and Housing and Urban Development.
But in order for those bills to make it to Trump’s desk, the House has to agree. So far, the lower chamber has only passed a handful of spending bills, and has not brought any appropriations bills to the floor for months.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., already is gaming out a «a contingency plan.»
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«We got to fund the government by the end of the month,» Thune said. «And so we’re looking at, you know, determining what that looks like, obviously, if we can pass the five bill package, and if we can’t, then what that looks like.»
«So there’s a lot of thought being given and just to make sure that we don’t end up in a, you know, posture at the end of the month where we’re looking at, staring at a shutdown again,» he continued.
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Anti-Iran regime protests grow across country as Trump admin boosts demonstrators offering support

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Protests spread across Iran on Tuesday after President Donald Trump and other administration officials voiced support for demonstrators. Speaking Monday, Trump pointed to Iran’s economic collapse and long-standing public discontent while stopping short of calling for regime change.
Inside Iran, demonstrations entered a third consecutive day, expanding beyond the capital’s commercial center. The exiled opposition coalition National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) reported widespread strikes and student protests across Tehran and multiple provincial cities, describing clashes with security forces and anti-government chants. A video obtained by the NCRI appears to show protesters pushing back security forces, forcing them to leave the scene on Tehran’s Jomhouri Street.
Iran International reported that universities emerged as major protest hubs, with rallies at Tehran University, Sharif University of Technology, Shahid Beheshti University, Elm-o-Sanat University and Khajeh Nasir University. Security forces tightened entry controls at campuses and reinforced offices linked to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
IRANIAN PRESIDENT SAYS HIS COUNTRY IS AT ‘TOTAL WAR’ WITH THE US, ISRAEL AND EUROPE: REPORTS
Strikes spread across Tehran’s Shoush and Molavi districts and into Isfahan’s Naqsh-e Jahan Square, while parts of Tehran’s Grand Bazaar and the gold market shut down. Mobile phone traders gathered outside major shopping centers after closing their stores. Protests turned violent in several locations, with tear gas fired in Tehran and Malard and reports of live fire in Hamadan. Nighttime demonstrations were reported from Qeshm Island in the south to Zanjan and Hamadan in the north, with videos showing chants of «death to the dictator.»
Speaking at a press conference at Mar-a-Lago on Monday, Trump said he was «not going to talk about overthrow of a regime.» Instead, he focused on Iran’s deteriorating economy and the state’s violent response to protests. «They’ve got tremendous inflation. Their economy is busted, the economy is no good,» Trump said.
He said that when Iranians gather to protest, the regime responds with lethal force.
Nooses with red roses are displayed during the Anglo-Iranian community rally to support the Iranian people’s push for a new revolution. Members of the Anglo-Iranian community, along with supporters of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), commemorated the 45th anniversary of the revolution in Iran that saw the overthrow of the Shah’s regime and eventually led to a theocratic Islamic republic in 1979. (Loredana Sangiuliano/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
«Every time they have a riot or somebody forms a group, little or big, they start shooting people,» Trump said. «You know, they kill people. All of a sudden people start getting shot and that group disbanded pretty quickly.»
Trump said he has watched the unrest build for years, describing Iran’s leadership as brutal.
«I’ve watched this for years — there is tremendous discontent,» he said. «I’ve watched it for years, and vicious, vicious people.» His remarks came as protests intensified following the collapse of Iran’s currency to historic lows. The rial fell to roughly 1.45 million per U.S. dollar on the open market, triggering strikes and demonstrations centered on Tehran’s Grand Bazaar and spreading to other major cities, according to Iran International’s live reporting. Videos and eyewitness accounts described heavy security deployments, clashes with demonstrators and the use of tear gas as unrest widened.
TRUMP VOWS TO ‘KNOCK THE HELL OUT OF’ IRAN IF NUCLEAR PROGRAM IS REBUILT AGAIN AFTER HIGH-STAKES MEETING
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz issued a direct message of support. «The people of Iran want freedom,» Waltz wrote on X. «We stand with Iranians in the streets of Tehran and across the country as they protest a radical regime that has brought them nothing but economic downturn and war.»
A parallel statement from the U.S. government’s Persian-language account, @USAbehFarsi, said Washington supports the Iranian people’s efforts «to make their voices heard,» urging the Islamic Republic to respect fundamental rights rather than suppress protests.
Iranian officials acknowledged the unrest but defended the government’s approach. Reuters reported that government spokeswoman Fatemeh Mohajerani said Tehran recognizes protests and that officials would set up a mechanism to engage with protest leaders. Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian directed his interior minister to address protesters’ «legitimate demands» and engage in dialogue with their representatives.
Independent analysts warned the unrest reflects deeper structural strains. The OSINT research group SpecialEurasia said in an assessment on Tuesday that Iran’s internal stability has reached a «critical threshold,» citing the convergence of currency collapse, renewed international sanctions and chronic water and energy shortages. The group noted that the participation of bazaar merchants, traditionally a pillar of regime support, signals declining confidence in the state’s economic management and raises the risk of prolonged unrest.
NCRI leader Maryam Rajavi said the protests reflect the anger of «tens of millions» driven to the breaking point by inflation, corruption and clerical rule. NCRI’s claims reflect opposition reporting and cannot be independently verified due to restrictions on access inside Iran.

Protesters march in downtown Tehran, Iran, Monday, Dec. 29, 2025. (Fars News Agency via AP)
Cameron Khansarinia, vice president of the National Union for Democracy in Iran, said the latest demonstrations underscore a growing shift in public sentiment. «Iranians have once again taken to the streets.» Citing President Donald Trump’s remarks this week, he added that «each time they do, the regime tries to crush it,» but argued that «Iranians’ desire to be free is increasingly becoming greater than their fear of the regime.» Khansarinia claimed that chants in support of Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi have been growing in the protests, saying the protesters showed «remarkable bravery.»
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Protesters march in downtown Tehran, Iran, Monday, Dec. 29, 2025. (Fars News Agency via AP)
As protests continue, verification of casualties and arrests remains limited, but the scale and spread of the unrest underscore mounting pressure on Iran’s leadership amid economic free fall and growing public defiance.
iran,world protests,donald trump,wars
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