INTERNACIONAL
Israel atacó Irán para enterrar sus aspiraciones nucleares y sepultar a su cúpula militar

Explosiones en Irán. Lo que se previó desde las primeras horas de esta semana, finalmente se concretó. En las últimas horas un alto funcionario internacional dijo a Infobae: “Hay rumores en el aire”.
Se refería a la posibilidad de que Israel dispusiera su sistema de misiles y sus poderosos F-35 para ejecutar quirúrgicas operaciones en el corazón del régimen. No sólo en Teherán, su capital, sino en diferentes áreas del territorio. Y altos mandos.
La misión finalmente se conoció y también su nombre: “Operación Nación de Leones”.
Además de la principal ciudad iraní, también se sintieron detonaciones en Natanz -severamente atacada- y Fordow -en el centro del país- donde operan estructuras nucleares, el corazón del conflicto que estas semanas enfrentó a ambas naciones.
Natanz y Fordow son centrales subterráneas y las que más resquemores y sospechas despertaban en Occidente. Irán se vanagloriaba de que ambas eran impenetrables, unas verdaderas fortalezas. Ahora, sólo resta evaluar los daños, que serán minimizados por los ayatolás.
A pesar de lo anunciado del ataque, los radares y los sistemas antimisiles iraníes no fueron suficientes para repeler los bombardeos y la penetración israelí que, al parecer, no fue sólo por aire. Quizás eso tenga una explicación.
De acuerdo a información confidencial a la que accedió Infobae, el Mossad -el servicio secreto israelí- habría dirigido operaciones encubiertas para impedir que sus defensas pudieran accionarse. ¿Hackeo a sus sistemas? Misterio por el momento.
En un mensaje al país, Benjamin Netanyahu -quien por estas horas padecía embates opositores en el parlamento- señaló que la misión aérea tenía por objetivo destruir el “corazón del programa de enriquecimiento nuclear de Irán y sus esfuerzos por fabricar armas nucleares”.
Al tiempo que Israel resolvió comprometer las centrales atómicas iraníes alertó a su población por posibles represalias y dispuso el desplazamiento de todo sus sistemas antiaéreo.
En un comunicado, las Fuerzas de Defensa de Israel (IDF) señalaron que se trató de una “ofensiva combinada basada en inteligencia de alta calidad para golpear el programa nuclear de Irán, y en respuesta a la agresión en curso del régimen iraní contra Israel. Poco después, decenas de jets completaron la primera etapa que incluía ataques contra docenas de objetivos militares, incluidos objetivos nucleares en diferentes zonas de Irán”.
Desde el domingo, Irán venía amenazando no sólo a Israel sino también a Estados Unidos. Decía que si fracasaban las negociaciones con la Casa Blanca -cuya próxima reunión se esperaba para este próximo domingo con Steve Witkoff, el enviado especial de Donald Trump para Medio Oriente– lanzaría una ofensiva contra objetivos norteamericanos en la región.
También expuso un supuesto informe sobre las centrales nucleares israelíes que formarían parte de sus blancos militares si eso ocurriera.
Fue en medio del duro revés que recibió el régimen del Ayatollah Alí Khamenei por parte del organismo nuclear de las Naciones Unidas que dirige Rafael Grossi. Ese ente aprobó una resolución que condena a Teherán por incumplir sus compromisos en materia atómica.
Este miércoles, ante la inminencia de la ofensiva israelí, Washington anticipó movidas en Medio Oriente y dispuso que gran parte del personal no esencial de las embajadas en Irak, Kuwait y Bahrein abandonara sus posiciones.
Pero no sólo las centrales nucleares iraníes sufrieron golpes. La estructura militar del régimen teocrático, también. En un principio se informó que el general Mohammad Bagheri, una de las máximas autoridades de la Guardia Revolucionaria Islámica había sido alcanzado en el operativo.
Bagheri estaba sancionado por el Reino Unido, por Canadá y por los Estados Unidos. El general fue uno de los supervisores y principal nexo iraní del programa de drones que Rusia utilizó para atacar Ucrania. Su muerte, desmentida en un primer momento, fue luego ratificada por las autoridades. Festejos en Kiev.
Pero algo peor que ese rumor ocurrió en la madrugada iraní. Además de Bagheri, también fue eliminado el comandante en jefe de la Guardia Revolucionaria, el general Hossein Salami -sucesor de Qasem Soleimani. Lo confirmó la televisión estatal local.
La cúpula militar iraní se desangra.

Otros generales iraníes y científicos nucleares también fueron sido alcanzados por los bombardeos israelíes en la madrugada del viernes 13 de junio. Entre los especialistas se encontraban Mohammad-Mehdi Tehranchi, presidente de la Universidad Islámica Azad, y Fereydoun Abbasi, ex jefe de la Organización de Energía Atómica de Irán.
Israel informó que, además de Salami y Bagheri, también quedaron fuera de carrera el comandante en Jefe de la Fuerza Aérea de la Guardia Revolucionaria, Amir Alí Hajizadeh. Otro de los alcanzados fue el comandante del Comando Khatem al-Anbiya, Gholam Ali Rashid, estructura encargada de la respuesta militar de emergencia.
En los últimos meses el daño que Israel hizo a Irán y sus sucursales terroristas es incalculable. Le despachó sus peores derrotas desde el nacimiento de la República Islámica: de Hassan Nasrallah -jefe de Hezbollah-, pasando por Ismail Haniya -pope de Hamas– ultimado en pleno Teherán y Yahya Sinwar -cerebro de los ataques del 7 de octubre- hasta finalmente Salami. Todos muertos.
“Advierto que cualquiera que intente desafiarnos pagará un alto precio”, dijo el jefe del Ejército israelí, Eyal Zamir. “Estamos entrando en esta operación juntos con un objetivo por delante: garantizar un futuro más seguro para el Estado de Israel y sus civiles, en un esfuerzo unificado y fe, vamos a ganar”.
Hasta última hora del jueves en Washington no se había cancelado la reunión con Irán para tratar el acuerdo nuclear que fue permanentemente boicoteado por la teocracia chiíta. “Game over”, dijo un analista a Infobae al ser consultado sobre el destino de esas conversaciones.
X: @TotiPI
Middle East,Military Conflicts,Tehran
INTERNACIONAL
Biden admin skirted rules to deliver massive contract to nonprofit run by ex-official, IG report reveals

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EXCLUSIVE: A new Inspector General’s report released Thursday morning accuses the former Biden administration of bypassing federal rules when issuing a more than half-a-billion dollar «sole source contract» to a nonprofit led by a former Biden official to deal with the unaccompanied minor crisis in 2021.
The Administration of Children and Families (ACF), which is under HHS and manages unaccompanied minors, awarded $529 million for a 1-year contract in March 2021 to a nonprofit called Family Endeavors, Inc. to help establish and manage a new emergency intake site in Texas (EIS) with 2,000 extra beds. However, according to the OIG’s new report, Biden’s ACF failed to follow federal procurement requirements that require full and open competition due to their own «insufficient planning,» rather than the COVID induced emergency the Biden administration cited.
Furthermore, the inspector general’s report found that the contract price was more than double the agency’s own cost estimate of $244 million, and indicated that the agency «subsequently modified» the award 15 times, extending the period until May 2022 and increasing the value to more than three times the original estimate from ACF.
DOGE SAYS TEXAS NONPROFIT WITH FORMER BIDEN TRANSITION MEMBER REAPED MILLIONS OPERATING EMPTY FACILITY
A family seen walking towards a barrier blocking passage across the U.S. border. (Department of Health and Human Services)
«ACF knew well in advance of March 2021 that it was projected to need more shelter beds than existing sites could provide and should have begun contract planning at that time,» the report states. «ACF failed to reasonably conduct the necessary advanced planning to execute a contract for procurement of those beds and related services using full and open competition.»
The report says ACF made only a limited attempt to do the necessary research for the contract, and did not even follow the findings it came up with.
«On March 5, 2021, Endeavors emailed ORR offering emergency assistance for the care of unaccompanied alien children. On March 13, 2021, Endeavors emailed ORR again with an unsolicited proposal, which included a statement of capabilities and concept of operations for an emergency shelter to serve unaccompanied alien children. Three days later, on March 16, 2021, ACF awarded a firm-fixed-price sole source contract to Endeavors to provide and operate an EIS facility in Pecos, Texas,» the report states.

Images of the emergency intake site in Pecos, Texas operated by Family Endeavors, Inc. The nonprofit received $529 million to build out 2,000 beds. (Department of Health and Human Services)
The contract beginning March 2021 was «by far the largest ever» for Endeavors Family, Inc., and came months after the company hired Andrew Lorenzen-Strait, who served as an adviser to the Biden-Harris transition team. The contract was also the second largest ever awarded by the agency, according to Axios.
«Despite multiple requests, ACF could not provide support for its review of the Endeavors quote, the price analysis techniques used to analyze the quote, or an [independent Government cost estimate] for an EIS dated before the contract was awarded,» the new inspector general’s report states. «When we asked for documentation, ACF told us that it was under significant time constraints to award contracts.»
WHITE HOUSE, DHS PUSH BACK ON CLAIMS ICE TARGETED 5-YEAR-OLD IN MINNESOTA, SAY CHILD WAS ‘ABANDONED’
Family Endeavors Inc. told Axios that its work on the border was a «continuation of services» that it has conducted for the migrant population since 2012. By April 2021, a month after the contract began, federal procurement records showed ACF had already paid $255 million of the no-bid contract to the nonprofit, which had already dwarfed the nonprofit’s total $43 million budget in 2018.
Family Endeavors, Inc. did not immediately respond to an after-hours email from Fox News seeking comment.
In September 2023, then-Chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, former Rep. Mark Green, R-Tenn., and then-Chairman of the House Subcommittee On Oversight, Investigations and Accountability, former-Rep. Dan Bishop, R-N.C., sent a letter to Lorenzen-Strait about his ties to both the Biden administration and Endeavors. The letter requested him to both reach out to the committee for an interview and mandated he preserve records on his communications with leaders involved in granting other «sole source» contracts.
«On January 20, 2021, Family Endeavors, Inc. (Endeavors) named you the Senior Director for Migrant Services and Federal Affairs. Immediately preceding your position with Endeavors, you served on the Biden-Harris transition team, and previously was an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) official,» the letter said. «In March 2021, just two months after you joined Endeavors, ICE awarded an $86.9 million sole source contract to Endeavors to provide beds and services in hotels for migrants who illegally crossed the Southwest border.»
The letter cites an undercover video recording from Project Veritas of Lorenzen-Strait «boasting» about his participation in government contracts related to migrant services.
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«Specifically, you refer to the Endeavors contract as a ‘corrupt bargain.’ You further discuss ‘brokering’ a deal that won Cherokee Federal, a team of tribally owned federal contracting companies, a nearly $2 billion contract with the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to provide services to unaccompanied alien children,» the letter continues with its claims. «In the video, you admit that Cherokee Federal is not equipped to handle the contract. You also admit that while you are publicly involved with the company Deep Water Point & Associates, you hid participation in government contracts through the entities, VerdinPoint and The Tanager Group.»
A HHS spokesperson said that under President Donald Trump the ACF is implementing stricter accountability measures and strengthening oversight.
«The previous administration wasted more than $1.8 billion dollars on a facility intended to house illegal aliens that was not even used in the last year of the previous administration, and that kind of fiscal mismanagement is exactly what Secretary Kennedy is working to correct,» the spokesperson said. «In fact, this contract was cancelled in the early months of the Trump administration as soon as this mismanagement was discovered. HHS and ORR remain fully committed to protecting children, restoring accountability at every level of the system, and putting Americans first.»
Edmund DeMarche contributed to this report.
immigration,joe biden,homeland security,deportation,politics,banking finance
INTERNACIONAL
EE.UU. presiona a Venezuela para que haga más para estimular la inversión

Postura
INTERNACIONAL
Russia to suspend flights to Cuba as Trump sanctions cut fuel supply

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Russia will temporarily suspend flights to Cuba after airlines reported difficulties refueling aircraft on the island, aviation authorities said Wednesday.
Russia’s Federal Air Transport Agency Rosaviatsia said in a statement posted on Telegram that the airlines Rossiya, part of the Aeroflot Group, and Nordwind were forced to adjust their flight programs due to problems securing fuel in Cuba.
In the coming days, Rossiya will operate several outbound-only flights from Havana and Varadero to Moscow to return Russian tourists home before halting service.
After those repatriation flights are completed, the airline’s Cuba program will be suspended until the situation improves, the agency said, calling the decision one made «in the interests of passengers.»
US MILITARY SEIZES ANOTHER FUGITIVE OIL TANKER LINKED TO VENEZUELA
Aeroflot Russian Airlines and Rossiya Airlines jet aircraft at Moscow-Sheremetyevo International Airport in Moscow, Russia, Sept. 16, 2021. (Leonid Faerberg/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
The Transport Ministry and Rosaviatsia said they are maintaining close contact with Cuban aviation authorities and are exploring alternative options to restore two-way service.
The announcement comes two weeks after President Donald Trump declared a national emergency over Cuba and authorized new measures aimed at choking off the island’s oil supplies.
CUBA PROTESTERS DEMAND FOOD, ELECTRICITY AS RUBIO SAYS NATION ON ‘VERGE OF COLLAPSE’ FROM MARXIST POLICIES

A vehicle fills up with fuel at a gas station in Havana, Cuba, Jan. 28, 2026. (Yamil Lage/AFP via Getty Images)
In a Jan. 29 executive order, Trump said Cuba poses an «unusual and extraordinary threat» to U.S. national security and empowered his administration to impose tariffs on goods from any country that «directly or indirectly sells or otherwise provides any oil to Cuba.»
The order, which took effect Jan. 30, allows additional duties on imports from countries found to be supplying oil to Havana, part of what Trump described as a «zero tolerance» policy toward the Cuban government.
The Federal Aviation Administration’s website shows a Notice to Airmen, or NOTAM, an official alert issued to pilots about hazards or operational disruptions, was posted Feb. 10 for nine Cuban airports warning that Jet A-1 fuel is not available.

Passengers carry their luggage at Jose Marti International Airport in Havana, Cuba, July 2, 2025. (Yamil Lage/AFP via Getty Images)
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The advisory covers Havana (MUHA), Varadero (MUVR), Cienfuegos (MUCF), Santa Clara (MUSC), Camagüey (MUCM), Cayo Coco (MUCC), Holguín (MUHG), Santiago de Cuba (MUCU) and Manzanillo (MUMZ), and remains in effect through March 11.
cuba,airlines,sanctions,donald trump
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