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Is Trump considering bold Africa play to push back on China, Russia and Islamic terrorists?

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President Donald Trump is reportedly working on a move that would give the U.S. a new military and economic foothold in Africa, counter China and Russia and strike a blow against Islamist terrorists in the region. And now a leading senator has told Fox News Digital this goal can be realized by recognizing the breakaway Somaliland as an independent state.

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Somaliland, on the southern coast of the Gulf of Aden, broke away from Somalia in 1991. Its government is said to be offering the U.S. a new air and sea base close to the entrance of the Red Sea, and directly across from Yemen and the Houthis, if the U.S. formally recognizes it, 30% of the world’s container ship traffic is reported to pass through its waters en route to or from the Suez Canal.

In the Oval Office on Aug. 8, Trump told reporters, «We’re looking into that right now,» when asked about the recognition of Somaliland and the possible resettlement of Gazans there, adding, «We’re working on that right now, Somaliland». 

TRUMP URGED TO AID YEMEN’S ANTI-HOUTHI FORCES AS TERROR GROUP ESCALATES ATTACKS ON SHIPPING

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A general view of the city of Hargeisa, Somaliland, in September 2021.  (Eduardo Soteras/AFP via Getty Images)

The chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Africa, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas., told Fox News Digital, «There is a very real opportunity that President Trump will recognize Somaliland during this administration.»

Cruz added, «President Trump is bringing a new era of clarity in American national security, after four years of the Biden administration rewarding our enemies and punishing our allies, and recognizing Somaliland should be part of this new era.

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«Somaliland has been a reliable ally to the United States, is integrating itself with us and our allies globally, and is committed to helping us counter efforts by China to undermine the safety and prosperity of Americans,» he said.

The White House did not respond to a Fox News Digital request for comment.

Somaliland security personnel stand watch in front of shipping containers being stored at Berbera Port.

Somaliland security personnel stand watch in front of shipping containers being stored at Berbera Port. (Ed Ram/AFP via Getty Images)

Neighboring Somalia has been battling Islamist fundamentalist fighters for decades. U.S. Africa Command has increased the number of airstrikes against both ISIS and al-Shabab terrorists under the current administration.

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Al-Shabab fighters

Across from Somaliland, al-Shabab terrorists conduct military exercises in Mogadishu, Somalia. (AP Photo/ Farah Abdi Warsameh)

But Somaliland, 99% Muslim, has allegedly eliminated radicalism and has aligned itself with the U.S. and Israel, leading Cruz to tell Fox News Digital, «They’re a Muslim country, in a very dangerous part of Africa, showing real courage. I will continue to push for deepening the U.S.-Somaliland partnership, including through the Africa Subcommittee in the Senate, and I expect that my colleagues on both sides of the aisle will be receptive to doing so.»

‘PEACEMAKER’ TRUMP CAN END AFRICA’S BIGGEST WAR, FORMER WHITE HOUSE ADVISOR SAYS

Sen. Ted Cruz

Sen. Ted Cruz has urged President Trump to recognize Somaliland as an independent state. (Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images)

Earlier this month, Cruz wrote to President Trump about Somaliland, stating, «it requires the status of a state. I urge you to grant it that recognition.»

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Somaliland’s president, Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi , is optimistic, telling the British Guardian newspaper on May 30, «Recognition is on the horizon.» He added, «It’s a matter of time. Not if, but when».

Somaliland’s port at Berbera is the jewel in any Washington deal. Analysts say it is in such a strategic position that both Russia and China have tried to acquire it. Right next door to it is one of Africa’s five longest runways, offering the U.S. the possibility of both a sea and air base that can strike Houthi rebels to the north and Al Shabaab terrorists to the east. 

President Trump in the Oval Office on Aug. 22, 2025

President Donald Trump speaks with reporters in the Oval Office of the White House, Friday, Aug. 22, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Jacquelyn Martin/AP Photo)

In his letter to the White House, Cruz wrote, «Somaliland has emerged as a critical security and diplomatic partner for the United States, helping America advance our national security interests in the Horn of Africa and beyond. It is strategically located along the

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Gulf of Aden, putting it near one of the world’s busiest maritime corridors. It possesses capable armed forces and contributes to regional counterterrorism and piracy operations. It has proposed hosting a U.S. military presence near the Red Sea along the Gulf of Aden.»

US AFRICA COMMANDER HIGHLIGHTS TERROR GROWTH IN SAHEL AND COMPETITION WITH CHINA FOR INFLUENCE

Houthi hijacker

This handout screen grab captured from a video shows Yemen’s Houthi fighters’ takeover of the Galaxy Leader Cargo in the Red Sea coast off Hudaydah, on November 20, 2023 in the Red Sea, Yemen.  (Photo by Houthi Movement via Getty Images)

The U.S.’s largest military base in Africa is just up the coast in Djibouti. But there are security and surveillance issues at the Camp Lemonnier U.S. base where the Chinese and other nations have opened their own bases and monitoring stations nearby.

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Somaliland is also offering the White House access to rare earth minerals essential for high-tech industries, such as lithium and silicon quartz.

The U.S. has described Somalia, with large numbers of both ISIS and al-Qaida-linked operatives, as a terrorist safe haven. Now the increasing presence of China and military forces from countries such as Turkey is reportedly leading some in Washington to be increasingly unhappy with its «one Somalia» policy, where Somaliland continues to be recognized only as a part of Somalia. 

People walk in front of a mosque in the city of Hargeisa, Somaliland, on September 16, 2021.   

People walk in front of a mosque in the city of Hargeisa, Somaliland, on September 16, 2021.    (Eduardo Soteras/AFP via Getty Images)

For now, a State Department spokesperson told Fox News Digital the official position: «The United States recognizes the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Federal Republic of Somalia, which includes the territory of Somaliland. The State Department is not in active discussions with Somaliland’s representatives about a deal to recognize Somaliland as a state.»

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But, Somaliland’s foreign minister worked Washington’s corridors and politicians in April, and several African sources, including the influential Horn Observer news outlet, have reported that President Abdullahi is expected to come to D.C. «soon». U.S. officials, including the U.S. ambassador to Somalia, Richard Riley, are said to have been to Somaliland to meet with the president at least three times this year.

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Cómo fue el operativo secreto que montó Estados Unidos para rescatar a su piloto derribado en Irán

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En Infobae al Mediodía, el analista Andrei Serbin Pont detalló cómo Estados Unidos llevó adelante una de sus operaciones más arriesgadas desde la guerra de Vietnam: la extracción de un piloto que permaneció 36 horas escondido en las montañas iraníes, luego de que su F-15 fuera derribado cerca de la central nuclear de Isfahán.

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Durante el programa junto a Maru Duffard, Jimena Grandinetti, Fede Mayol y Facundo Kablan, Serbin Pont relató: “No se piloteó mucho la nave, fue derribada y vimos lo que fue un rescate absolutamente de película. No solo el derribo de la aeronave, también el despliegue de inteligencia, una instalación nuclear de por medio y una ciudad de más de dos millones de habitantes al lado. Todo eso ocurrió en 48 horas”.

La trastienda del rescate: comandos, engaño y una base improvisada

El especialista ubicó el episodio en las inmediaciones de Isfahán, uno de los focos del programa nuclear iraní. “Fue en las proximidades de Isfahán que cae el F-15, derribado por misiles de defensa. La aeronave logra avanzar unos 70 kilómetros antes de impactar, y ahí empieza la operación de rescate”, explicó.

El operativo secreto de rescate estadounidense en Irán involucró comandos especiales y desinformación cerca de la central nuclear de Isfahán (Infobae en Vivo)

El piloto, parte de una tripulación de dos, fue rescatado rápidamente, pero el WSO —encargado de navegación y armas— debió sobrevivir 36 horas oculto, mientras fuerzas iraníes lo buscaban intensamente. “Estados Unidos arma una base aérea transitoria a 50 kilómetros de una central nuclear. Utilizan una pista que estaba en la zona, aterrizan aviones de transporte con helicópteros adentro y despliegan comandos para ir a buscar al piloto”, narró Serbin Pont.

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El despliegue incluyó fuerzas especiales estadounidenses y de Israel, pararescatistas y un impresionante apoyo aéreo: “Tuvieron que enfrentar armamento antiaéreo y hasta hubo enfrentamientos armados desde el aire. El piloto logra subir más de dos mil metros para activar el localizador y ser encontrado”.

La operación, además, incluyó un elemento clave de guerra de información. “Estados Unidos y la CIA fueron proactivos en desinformar. Hicieron creer a Irán que el oficial estaba en el sur del país. Filtraron videos, difundieron rumores y manipularon la opinión pública para que Irán concentrara sus fuerzas lejos del verdadero punto donde ocurría el rescate”, expuso el analista.

Andrei Serbin Pont - Infobae en Vivo
El piloto del F-15 derribado sobrevivió 36 horas oculto en las montañas iraníes mientras era buscado por fuerzas locales (Infobae en Vivo)

Problemas logísticos, destrucción de evidencia y un escape al límite

El operativo no estuvo exento de inconvenientes técnicos. Serbin Pont describió: “Los aviones de transporte quedaron varados en la tierra blanda de la pista improvisada. Hubo que llamar a aeronaves más pequeñas para evacuar al personal, incluido el rescatado. Cuando logran salir, aviones de combate estadounidenses destruyen los equipos y los restos de las aeronaves y helicópteros que no pudieron despegar, para evitar que caigan en manos iraníes”.

La magnitud del despliegue dejó imágenes impactantes de restos calcinados, que generaron especulaciones sobre el verdadero objetivo de la misión. El conductor subrayó: “Surge la pregunta de si esta operación fue solo para rescatar al tripulante, o si había un objetivo mayor, considerando la cercanía con la central nuclear y el uranio enriquecido iraní, uno de los puntos que Estados Unidos exige negociar”.

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El contexto internacional agregó presión: el rescate coincidió con un ultimátum de la Casa Blanca para reabrir el estrecho de Ormuz y con una escalada de amenazas cruzadas. “Se está hablando tanto de diálogo como de ultimátums. Trump insiste en que Estados Unidos puede destruir Irán en una noche. Todo en un momento donde la negociación está trabada y hay movimientos militares que generan sospechas”, resumió Serbin Pont.

Andrei Serbin Pont - Infobae en Vivo
Estados Unidos y la CIA organizaron una campaña de desinformación para distraer a Irán y proteger la ubicación real del rescate (Infobae en Vivo)

Estrategia, desinformación y la guerra que sigue sin resolverse

El bloque cerró con un análisis sobre la guerra informativa y las consecuencias para el conflicto. “La campaña de desinformación fue deliberada. Manipularon a los medios y a la opinión pública para asegurar el éxito de la operación de extracción. Solo necesitaban ganar tiempo”, sostuvo el conductor.

La descentralización del mando iraní, según Serbin Pont, permite que el régimen siga operando incluso tras la muerte de altos jefes militares. “Irán aprendió de los bombardeos del año pasado y descentralizó su estructura de comando. Eso les permite seguir dando batalla y resistiendo”, explicó.

Por último, el impacto económico y político no es menor: “El barril de petróleo superó los 110 dólares. La situación afecta a los mercados y a la campaña electoral estadounidense, donde las divisiones internas entre republicanos se hacen cada vez más visibles. El frente interno preocupa tanto como el externo”.

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Infobae te acompaña cada día en YouTube con entrevistas, análisis y la información más destacada, en un formato cercano y dinámico.

• De 7 a 9: Infobae al Amanecer: Nacho Giron, Luciana Rubinska y Belén Escobar.

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• De 9 a 12: Infobae a las Nueve: Gonzalo Sánchez, Tatiana Schapiro, Ramón Indart y Cecilia Boufflet.

• De 12 a 15: Infobae al Mediodia: Maru Duffard, Andrei Serbin Pont, Jimena Grandinetti, Fede Mayol y Facundo Kablan.

• De 15 a 18: Infobae a la Tarde: Manu Jove, Maia Jastreblansky y Paula Guardia Bourdin; rotan en la semana Marcos Shaw, Lara López Calvo y Tomás Trapé

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• De 18 a 21: Infobae al Regreso: Gonzalo Aziz, Diego Iglesias, Malena de los Ríos y Matías Barbería; rotan en la semana Gustavo Lazzari, Martín Tetaz y Mica Mendelevich

Seguinos en nuestro canal de YouTube @infobae.



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Mauro compares Iran rescue of missing colonel to Maduro capture, credits intelligence preparation

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U.S. intelligence agencies had already done the groundwork needed to locate a missing colonel inside Iran, Paul Mauro said Monday, arguing the operation relied on intelligence gathered well before the mission began.

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«You’ve got to collect, you collect, you collect and a lot of it sometimes you’re never going to use,» Mauro told «Fox & Friends.»

«The key is when you need it, it has to be there.»

Mauro pointed to the Maduro case, which unfolded at the behest of the Trump administration in January, noting U.S. forces’ ability to pinpoint where the Venezuelan dictator and his wife were going to be at the time in order to make an effective capture.

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RESCUE EXPERT SAYS MOST DANGEROUS MOMENT COMES AFTER ‘JACKPOT’ CALL IN RECOVERY BEHIND ENEMY LINES

War Secretary Pete Hegseth shakes the hand of a American airman on a covert CENTCOM visit with troops in ‘theater.’ (War Secretary/X)

«They got him as they were running to a safe room without a scratch. Everybody comes out without a scratch,» he said.

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«They got them as they were fleeing. That’s how detailed the messaging was, and that’s how synchronized the operation was.»

Mauro said that same level of preparation and coordination was on display in the Iran mission, where U.S. forces rescued a missing U.S. weapons systems officer from a downed F-15E following a multi-day search inside enemy territory.

TRUMP CALLS RESCUE OF DOWNED AIR FORCE PILOT AN ‘EASTER MIRACLE’

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US servicemen standing in front of multiple computer screens in a control room

Artificial intelligence is a big factor in the Iran war and Iran realizes it. (iStock)

U.S. intelligence was able to act quickly to retrieve the missing colonel once his location was confirmed.

«[This] was one of those situations where the bell rang. ‘Guys, what [have] you got?’ President turns around, [War Secretary] Hegseth turns around, [and] they all talk to Ratcliffe and they say, ‘What [have] you got, director?’ and fortunately it was there.»

Mauro said the operation highlights a broader fact about intelligence work that is apparent to those working within its community: its success comes down to the people running the sources.

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«At the end of the day… it comes down to people,» he said.

«If you think that you can sit in a cubicle someplace and get everything you need to be done, that’s not how it’s going to go. You need people in country, in dangerous areas, Americans working on our behalf that you’ll never hear about… they’re running the sources so that, again, when you need it, they say, ‘My source is good.’«

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WATCH: Oklahoma trans attorney jailed for contempt after epic court meltdown

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A custody hearing in Ada, Oklahoma, last month took a turn for the unexpected — and the incredibly loud — after an attorney who identified himself as transgender was arrested and dragged from the courtroom where he had appeared to represent his client just minutes before.

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The exchange occurred during a custody hearing in Pontotoc County, Oklahoma, some 90 minutes southeast of Oklahoma City. The attorney, Rob Hopkins, was jailed for contempt after sparring repeatedly with the judge, Lori Jackson, during an otherwise unremarkable proceeding.

Surveillance footage, audio, and body camera footage reviewed by Fox News Digital has shed new light on the extraordinary confrontation, in which Hopkins can be seen actively resisting arrest by bailiffs. At one point, Hopkins can be seen splaying his body across the judge’s bench, resulting in a pile of documents being swept off its finely polished wood surface. 

«You’re HURTING ME!» Hopkins bellowed, as bystanders looked on. «I can’t BREATHE!» he shrieked again, louder.

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Attendees in the courtroom could be seen looking on quietly as Hopkins twisted, turned, and contorted his body to evade the handcuffs that officers used to restrain him.

«I felt very threatened by this person,» one individual could be heard telling the judge.

SHELTERS, JESUS, AND MISS PAC-MAN: US JUDGE GRILLS DOJ OVER TRANS POLICY IN DIZZYING LINE OF QUESTIONING

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(Surveillance footage provided to Fox News Digital by the Oklahoma District Attorney’s Office, 22nd District.)

The meltdown in question, and the arrest, occurred during a custody hearing punctuated by repeated interruptions from Hopkins and warnings from Jackson that he would be held in contempt. 

Hopkins then suggested she was discriminating against him for his transgender status, escalating tensions inside the courtroom. 

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«It’s because I’m a transgender attorney practicing all over the state,» Hopkins leveled sharply, to which Jackson shot back: «I don’t know what you are.» 

«I don’t know you from Adam,» Jackson said later, describing his conduct as «entirely inappropriate.»

Shortly after, bailiffs entered the courtroom, prompting the hearing to descend into complete chaos.

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 «Do NOT HURT ME!» Hopkins yelled at the officers. 

«I’m being thrown down!» he bellowed, as he threw himself on the bench before the officers eventually forced him onto the floor.

‘BLANKIES,’ ICE TACTICS AND LUXURY JETS: TOP MOMENTS FROM NOEM’S HOUSE TESTIMONY

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More officers streamed in to help restrain Hopkins, whose uproarious exclamations had, at that point, drawn a crowd — not only in the courtroom, but also in the hallways surrounding it, as the body camera footage shows. 

«Get a female officer, now!» Hopkins demanded. «Call 911!» he shrieked, as the officers attempted to place him in handcuffs. 

«I can’t breathe! I can’t breathe!» he declared.

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From the floor of the court, Hopkins accused the officers of «throwing his glasses» onto the floor — a claim that surveillance footage reviewed by Fox News Digital appears to refute — and ordered the officers to place them back on his face. 

«Put them on my face,» Hopkins demanded repeatedly, as the officers attempted to place Hopkins into a seated position and escort him from the court. «PUT THEM ON MY FACE!» Hopkins screamed once more, the volume and urgency unchanged from his request for emergency services just seconds before.

 ‘YOU SHOULD BE ASHAMED!’: PROTESTER DRAGGED FROM KRISTI NOEM’S SENATE HEARING

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Rob Hopkins, a transgender lawyer in Oklahoma, was jailed for contempt during a procedural hearing in Ada, Oklahoma, last month after a viral meltdown. Surveillance footage and images provided by Oklahoma District Attorney's Office, 22nd Prosecutorial District.

Rob Hopkins, a transgender lawyer in Oklahoma, was jailed for contempt during a procedural hearing in Ada, Oklahoma, last month after a viral meltdown.  ( Oklahoma District Attorney’s Office, 22nd Prosecutorial District.)

Hopkins said he has since shuttered his law firm following the contempt charge and fallout from the hearing.

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He did not respond to Fox News Digital’s requests for comment regarding either the proceedings in question or the reason for his firm’s closure.

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