INTERNACIONAL
La segunda fase del acuerdo de Gaza avanza con desconfianza y hay dudas por el rol del Consejo de Paz de Trump

La segunda fase del frágil acuerdo de cese el fuego en la Franja de Gaza está formalmente en marcha, aunque la creación del Consejo de Paz presidido por Donald Trump y el comité nacional palestino encargado de administrar el enclave genera tantas dudas como certezas.
Mientras Israel mira con desconfianza el anunciado desarme de Hamas y la participación directa de Turquía y Qatar, dos de sus tradicionales rivales en la región, el grupo islámico palestino teme que las tropas israelíes se nieguen a retirarse del territorio y fijen una nueva frontera. Además, rechaza la presencia de Israel en la junta de paz.
Leé también: Trump cumple un año en el poder: cambio de reglas comerciales, tensión global y una renovada Doctrina Monroe
La conformación de estos dos grupos previstos en el acuerdo serán claves en el cumplimiento de esta nueva etapa del plan. Si bien tendrán tareas muy diferentes, sus trabajos estarán interconectados.
El comité palestino, conformado por reconocidos tecnócratas ajenos a Hamas, se encargará de administrar los asuntos internos de Gaza. En tanto, el Consejo de Paz, que Javier Milei integra por invitación de Trump, será un panel internacional que supervisará la reconstrucción y las garantías políticas de un territorio devastado tras dos años de guerra. También habrá un “consejo ejecutivo” internacional que se reservará un papel asesor y tendrá entre sus miembros a un diplomático turco y otro qatarí. Allí se generan los mayores temores israelíes por su rol en el futuro de Gaza.
Qué dicen los palestinos
Los palestinos se reservarán un rol clave en el llamado Comité Nacional para la Administración de Gaza. Estará integrado por un grupo de tecnócratas. Su papel será “supervisar la restauración de los servicios públicos esenciales, la reconstrucción de las instituciones civiles y la estabilización de la vida cotidiana en Gaza”, según la Casa Blanca. Allí Hamas estará absolutamente excluido.
Este comité estará presidido por Ali Shaath, exviceministro de la Autoridad Nacional Palestina (ANP), que gobierna en las partes de Cisjordania no ocupada por Israel. Este enclave palestino está dominado por Al Fatah, grupo rival de Hamas. Ali Shaath encabezará el gobierno de tecnócratas palestinos (Foto: AP)
“El Comité Nacional para la Administración de Gaza está compuesto por personalidades gazatíes muy respetadas. La mayoría proviene de la sociedad civil y algunas tienen antecedentes en Al Fatah. Pero recibieron el apoyo de todas las facciones palestinas y de la presidencia palestina”, dijo a TN el analista palestino Mkhaimar Abusada, exjefe del Departamento de Ciencias Políticas de la Universidad Al-Azhar en Gaza.
Según el experto, el grupo elegido también goza de la confianza de Hamas.
Leé también: Trump les cobrará US$1000 millones a los países que quieran formar parte de la Junta de la Paz
Pero el mayor problema radica en la disposición del grupo islámico a entregar las armas, tal como exige la fase dos del acuerdo. Voceros del ala militar y la rama política del grupo islámico han divulgado versiones contrapuestas sobre este punto clave en el avance del tratado.
Si Hamas no entrega sus armas, Israel no avanzará en sus obligaciones, que incluyen un retiro gradual de sus soldados del territorio palestino. Pero el grupo islámico sostiene que no renunciará a su armamento si las fuerzas israelíes no salen del enclave.
Sin embargo, hay otro punto en discordia. Hamas condenó “con firmeza” la inclusión en el Consejo de Paz del primer ministro de Israel, Benjamín Netanyahu. “Condenamos enérgicamente la inclusión del criminal de guerra y jefe del Gobierno de ocupación, Netanyahu, buscado por la Corte Penal Internacional, en la Junta de Paz, y consideramos que esto es una grave indicación de que se contradicen los principios de justicia y rendición de cuentas”, aseguró el grupo islámico en un comunicado.
Qué dice el gobierno israelí
El gobierno israelí teme que los nuevos consejos creados en esta nueva fase consoliden una nueva realidad administrativa en el enclave gazatí, pero sin garantizar el desmantelamiento del poder de Hamas en el territorio.
La oficina del primer ministro afirma que la conformación del gobierno tecnócrata palestino “no fue coordinada con Israel”.
El mayor cuestionamiento radica en que este cuerpo está estructurado de manera tal que refleja el funcionamiento de un “gobierno soberano” con áreas de ejecución como interior, judicial, asuntos religiosos, administración de tierras, asuntos municipales, agua, telecomunicaciones, comercio, economía, educación, salud, vivienda, finanzas, agricultura, asuntos sociales y de la mujer, según fuentes citadas por The Media Line, un sitio de noticias estadounidense especializado en la cobertura de Medio Oriente.

El primer ministro de Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu (Foto: REUTERS/Nathan Howard)
De esa forma, afirman que este “comité” palestino tendrá una gestión civil temporal que va mucho más allá de una simple coordinación humanitaria. Es, en la práctica según las fuentes, un gobierno de facto en Gaza.
Pero hay otros cuestionamientos. El líder de la oposición israelí, Yair Lapid, rechazó la participación de Qatar y Turquía en el llamado Consejo Ejecutivo de Gaza, otra de las entidades previstas en la fase dos del acuerdo y que “ayudará a respaldar una gobernanza eficaz y la prestación de servicios de primer nivel que promuevan la paz, la estabilidad y la prosperidad del pueblo de Gaza”, según la Casa Blanca.
En Israel sostienen que este consejo ejecutivo será un órgano decisivo para determinar lo que sucederá en el futuro en la Franja.
Leé también: Milei confirmó que la Argentina integrará el Consejo de Paz creado por Trump para evitar conflictos en Gaza
Lapid dijo que Qatar y Turquía son socios ideológicos de Hamas y no deben integrar esa junta.
Pero Netanyahu prefirió enfocarse en su alianza firme con Trump y en el desarme total de Hamas. “La fase dos dice algo simple: Hamas será desarmado y Gaza será desmilitarizada. Nos mantendremos fieles a esos objetivos y los lograremos, ya sea por las buenas o por las malas”, advirtió.
Para The Israel Times, Netanyahu se encuentra ahora en una situación difícil. Por un lado, no puede oponerse al plan, bajo presión de Trump. Pero también reconoce que esta segunda etapa tendrá actores hostiles en roles clave y esa no es una fórmula para el éxito. “Incluso podría ser la primera etapa de la rehabilitación de Hamas, no su desaparición”, afirmó el periódico.
El principal objetivo israelí es hoy eliminar a Hamas.
En ese escenario, Israel debería ceder el control de Gaza a las fuerzas internacionales que llegarán al enclave para garantizar la paz, según prevé la segunda etapa del acuerdo. Así, “su capacidad para controlar lo que sucede al otro lado de la frontera se verá drásticamente reducida”, alertó The Israel Times.
gaza, Israel, Donald Trump, hamas, Sumario
INTERNACIONAL
Guerra contra Irán: Para China, miles de millones de dólares están en riesgo por un conflicto que se extiende
INTERNACIONAL
Iran’s new supreme leader is ‘his father on steroids,’ experts warn of hardline rule

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
«Think of Mojtaba Khamenei as his father on steroids.»
That is how Kasra Aarabi, director of Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps research at the advocacy group United Against Nuclear Iran, described Iran’s new supreme leader in comments to Fox News Digital following reports that the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has been selected to lead the Islamic Republic.
«Mojtaba was already operating as a ‘mini supreme leader’ in the Bayt-e Rahbari — his father’s office and the core nucleus of power in the regime,» Aarabi said.
IF KHAMENEI FALLS, WHO TAKES IRAN? STRIKES WILL EXPOSE POWER VACUUM — AND THE IRGC’S GRIP
File photo shows Mojtaba Khamenei, son of Iran’s late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, attending a demonstration to mark Jerusalem day in Tehran. (Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
«His father had created the Bayt’s extensive apparatus as a hidden power structure to ensure continuity should he be eliminated — and through Mojtaba’s appointment, this is exactly what we will get,» Aarabi said.
President Donald Trump also reacted to Mojtaba Khamenei’s rise. In an interview with the New York Post, Trump said he was «not happy with» the younger Khamenei replacing his father as leader of Iran’s theocratic system but declined to elaborate on how the United States might respond. «Not going to tell you,» Trump said when asked about his plans regarding the new supreme leader. «Not going to tell you. I’m not happy with him.»
An Iranian source with knowledge of the leadership transition told Fox News Digital that earlier speculation Mojtaba might pursue reforms now appears unlikely given the circumstances surrounding his appointment.
«Previously there were whispers suggesting that if Mojtaba were to become the leader, he might introduce reforms that would both open up the domestic political space and bring a more interactive approach to foreign policy,» the source said.
«However, now this possibility seems very weak.»
Mojtaba was chosen «amid disputes, controversies, and pressure from the IRGC,» according to the source, meaning he «owes his appointment to their support and therefore cannot act against their wishes.»
TRUMP SAYS IRAN’S SUCCESSION BENCH WIPED OUT AS ISRAELI STRIKE HITS LEADERSHIP DELIBERATIONS

Military members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in western Tehran, Iran (Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Built inside Iran’s security state
Mojtaba Khamenei, 56, has spent decades building influence inside the power structures surrounding Iran’s supreme leader.
Born in 1969 in Mashhad, he pursued clerical studies in Tehran, Iran, after the 1979 Islamic Revolution that brought his father to prominence. Over time, however, analysts say his influence developed less through traditional clerical authority and more through Iran’s security institutions.
In 2019, the United States sanctioned Mojtaba under Executive Order 13867. The U.S. Treasury Department said he had been «representing the supreme leader in an official capacity despite never being elected or appointed to a government position aside from work in the office of his father.»
Behnam Ben Taleblu, senior director of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies’ Iran Program, said Mojtaba’s background reflects a broader shift inside the Islamic Republic.

People hold placards with an image of Iran’s new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei with late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, during a gathering to support Mojtaba Khamenei, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Tehran, Iran, March 9, 2026. (Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) Via Reuters)
«Despite donning a turban, Mojtaba is the product of the regime’s national security deep state,» Ben Taleblu told Fox News Digital. «Expect him to work with and through the IRGC to keep his hold on power.»
Aarabi said Mojtaba has spent years consolidating influence behind the scenes.
«His past tells us he enjoys micromanaging every aspect of authority to satisfy his thirst for power,» Aarabi said, describing how Mojtaba allegedly relocated IRGC command centers to his office during protests, engineered election outcomes and installed loyalists across state institutions.
Since 2019, Aarabi added, Mojtaba has also been implementing what he described as his father’s effort to «purify» the regime by promoting ideological loyalists across the political system.
«Mojtaba is a deeply antisemitic, anti-American, and anti-Western ideologue,» Aarabi said. «He has personally been involved in repression in Iran and terror plots abroad.»
IRAN’S SENIOR CLERICS ‘EXPOSED’ AFTER BUILDING STRIKE IN QOM, SUCCESSION CHOICE LOOMS

Kashmiri Shiite Muslims carry pictures of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as they march in a protest rally on the fourth day of mourning in Magam, Jammu and Kashmir, on March 4, 2026. (Faisal Khan/Anadolu/Getty Images)
Analysts see harder line ahead
Analysts say Mojtaba’s rise may further strengthen the role of Iran’s security institutions.
«The rise of the younger Khamenei expedites trendlines seen in Iranian politics and national security for years,» Ben Taleblu said. «From one Khamenei to another, things in Iran can be expected to go from bad to worse if this regime survives.»
«And like the elder Khamenei, corruption runs in the family,» he added.
Ben Taleblu warned that the regime may also escalate tensions externally as a survival strategy.
«The regime knows it is weak, but believes it can extract a price and widen a crisis in order to survive,» he said.
For opposition groups inside Iran, the leadership transition signals continuity rather than reform.
«He’s the son of Khamenei and they have same ideology and they same strategy and they try to continue the same policy,» said Khalid Azizi, spokesperson for the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran.
«So far it’s very difficult to say what he will be done and is he going to have a different policy? I don’t expect this.»
The Iranian source who spoke with Fox News Digital said that while engagement with the United States and the West is theoretically possible in the future, the chances remain slim.
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

On March 1, 2026, in Sana’a, Yemen. pro-Iran protesters brandish billboards depicting the Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Hosseini Khamenei, flags of Yemen and Iran, weapons, and chant slogans at a rally held to condemn the U.S.-Israel aerial attacks on Iran and the killing of Khamenei and several military officials. (Mohammed Hamoud/Getty Images)
«As I mentioned,» the source said, «this possibility is very weak.»
«In short,» Aarabi said, «Mojtaba is his father on steroids. He’s certainly no MBS.»
ali khamenei,war with iran,iran,terrorism
INTERNACIONAL
Hegseth once warned against endless wars. Now he’s leading Trump’s strike-first doctrine

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
In a little over a year, the United States has carried out dozens of airstrikes on vessels in the Caribbean tied to alleged narco-trafficking networks, launched sustained operations against Houthi forces in the Red Sea, captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, struck Iranian nuclear facilities and now embarked on an extended military campaign aimed at degrading Tehran’s missile, drone and command infrastructure.
The tempo marks one of the most assertive stretches of American force projection in recent years, spanning Latin America, the Middle East and critical maritime corridors.
For War Secretary Pete Hegseth, it also represents a striking turn.
HEGSETH BLASTS BRITS, SAYS IRAN’S CHAOTIC RETALIATION HAS DRIVEN ITS OWN ALLIES ‘INTO THE AMERICAN ORBIT’
Just before the 2024 presidential election, he described himself as a «recovering neocon,» expressing regret over his support for Iraq-era interventionism and warning against open-ended wars.
Several analysts say the defining feature of the administration’s approach may be less about ideological evolution and more about alignment and execution.
«Unlike in Trump one, everyone in Trump’s cabinet now — Hegseth, Rubio, etc. — understands that the president is the boss,» said Matthew Kroenig, a defense strategist at the Atlantic Council. «In Trump 1.0 you had some Cabinet officials who thought their job was to save the Republic from Trump, the so-called adults in the room. And so I think it’s pretty clear the president wanted to go in this direction, and I think Hegseth sees himself as supporting the president’s vision.»
‘Validation of … leadership’
That cohesion has coincided with a pattern of risk-taking.
Several of the administration’s most consequential military moves, from Venezuela to the Houthis to the current Iran campaign, carried the potential for escalation.
«Unlike in Trump one, everyone in Trump’s cabinet now — Hegseth, Rubio, etc. — understands that the President is the boss,» said Matthew Kroenig, a defense strategist at the Atlantic Council. (The White House/Handout via Reuters)
Some strategists say the relative absence of early blowback from those interventions may have reinforced the administration’s willingness to escalate into the Iranian theater.
PENTAGON POLICY CHIEF GRILLED AS DEM CLAIMS TRUMP BROKE PROMISE ABOUT GOING TO WAR WITH IRAN
«I’m not sure I would have advised this,» Kroenig said of the Iran operation. «It is pretty risky, but it’s going well so far.»
Iranian missile launches have declined in volume. Regional allies have not broken ranks. Whether that constitutes strategic success, however, depends on the metric.
Justin Fulcher, a former Pentagon adviser to Hegseth, argued the early phases of the campaign reflect what he described as a «return to strategic clarity.»
«Deterrence is only credible when our allies actually believe that if President Trump says something, we will back it up,» Fulcher said. «This is a validation of Secretary Hegseth and President Trump’s leadership.»

«Deterrence is only credible when our allies actually believe that if President Trump says something, we will back it up,» former Pentagon advisor Justin Fulcher said. «This is a validation of Secretary Hegseth and President Trump’s leadership.» (Kevin Wolf, File/The Associated Press )
TRUMP SAYS IRAN’S SUCCESSION BENCH WIPED OUT AS ISRAELI STRIKE HITS LEADERSHIP DELIBERATIONS
Hegseth, a former Army officer who served in both Iraq and Afghanistan, has argued that the current campaign bears little resemblance to those conflicts.
«This is not Iraq. This is not endless. I was there for both,» Hegseth said at a press conference in early March. «Our generation knows better and so does this president.»
In a separate interview, he added, «This is not a remaking of Iranian society from an American perspective. We tried that. The American people have rejected that.»
Danielle Pletka, a senior fellow at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute think tank, said the campaign has unfolded largely as expected.
«I think things have gone reasonably well,» Pletka said, pointing to degraded air defenses and what she described as repeated miscalculations by Iran. «All they’ve really done is made everybody quite mad, and that was a really bad calculation on their part.»
At the same time, she cautioned against interpreting the administration’s actions as part of a fixed doctrine.
«I don’t think that it is doctrinal,» Pletka said. «I think this is ad hoc.»
Some longtime Trump supporters have said the current conflict is not what they expected from Trump, who campaigned on ending wars and «America First.»
«It feels like the worst betrayal this time because it comes from the very man and the admin who we all believed was different and said no more,» Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., wrote on X. «Instead, we get a war with Iran on behalf of Israel that will succeed in regime in Iran. Another foreign war for foreign people for foreign regime change. For what?»
In Pletka’s view, the president has shown a pattern of attempting diplomacy first and shifting to force only when he concludes negotiations are unserious. She argues that posture distinguishes the current moment from past interventions.
She also emphasized that much of the operational credit belongs to the professional military.
«The planning behind this is credit to the U.S. military and to the CENTCOM commander and to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs,» she said.
That distinction complicates efforts to attribute the current posture solely to Hegseth’s personal worldview. While the defense secretary has become a public face of the administration’s deterrence messaging, the execution of high-tempo campaigns rests heavily with career military leadership.
Some critics argue the administration has yet to clearly articulate an end state for the Iran campaign.
«Pete Hegseth needs to check with his boss on what the objective is,» former national security advisor John Bolton recently said on CNN. «How does Hegseth explain that we’ve already changed the regime, which wasn’t our objective? I think the Pentagon top leadership, civilian top leadership, needs some attitude adjustment. I think the military’s doing fine, but I wonder about the civilian leadership.»
The White House pushed back forcefully on criticism of the campaign.
Anna Kelly, a White House spokesperson, said Monday that Hegseth «is doing an incredible job leading the Department of War,» pointing to what she described as the «ongoing success of Operation Epic Fury» and other missions.
Kelly said Iranian retaliatory attacks «have declined by 90 percent because the Department of War is destroying Iran’s ballistic missile capabilities,» and added that Hegseth works «in lockstep with President Trump every day» to ensure the U.S. military «continues to be the greatest, most powerful fighting force in the world.»
The Pentagon echoed that assessment.
«Operation Epic Fury continues to advance with overwhelming success and precision,» Chief Pentagon Spokesman Sean Parnell said, describing a «resolute, full-spectrum campaign» aimed at the «total dismantlement of Iran’s terrorist network or its unconditional surrender.»
Others see the moment in broader historical terms.
Peter Doran, a foreign policy analyst, described the campaign as a potential attempt to «end a 47-year war» waged by the Islamic Republic against the United States, but on Washington’s terms.

U.S. Central Command released footage showing strikes on Iranian mobile missile launchers. (@CENTCOM via X)
«This is a clear effort to end a 47-year war that Iran has been waging against the United States,» Doran said.
He argued that visible American military performance could reverberate beyond the Middle East, particularly in Beijing.
«They look good,» Doran said of U.S. forces. «That will serve, I hope, as a disincentive for adventurism.»
If the operation ultimately succeeds in significantly degrading Iran’s military infrastructure, Doran argued, it could reshape the Middle East and expand diplomatic opportunities such as broader Arab-Israeli normalization.
«It changes everything in the Middle East,» he said.
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
Yet even supporters acknowledge that long-term effects remain uncertain. In Venezuela, Maduro’s removal marked a dramatic shift in U.S. policy, but the governing apparatus he built remains largely intact. Degrading missile stockpiles and drone infrastructure in Iran may buy time, but whether it produces durable deterrence or simply postpones reconstitution remains to be seen.
For now, the administration’s willingness to take calculated risks and its ability to avoid immediate escalation have reinforced the perception of restored American assertiveness. Whether that assertiveness translates into lasting strategic gains will likely define Hegseth’s tenure far more than the rhetoric that preceded it.
Hegseth and the Pentagon did not respond to requests for comment.
war with iran,donald trump,pete hegseth,iran,pentagon
CHIMENTOS3 días agoWanda Nara involucrada en la separación de su hijo Valentino: su ex nuera contó toda la verdad
CHIMENTOS1 día agoLa cruda confesión de Amalia Granata por el trastorno que sufre su hijo Roque: “Le hicimos estudios y salió que tiene TDAH, dislexia y disgrafia”
ECONOMIA3 días ago«Crisis industrial masiva»: alarmante informe de la UBA se mete en la pelea de Milei con la UIA



















