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‘Peacemaker’ Trump can end Africa’s biggest war, former White House advisor says

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Fresh from the success of bringing peace to one African conflict, President Donald Trump and his administration are «uniquely positioned» to end the continent’s other major war in Sudan, according to a leading analyst.

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President Trump got the foreign ministers of the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda to the White House June 27 to sign a peace deal to end their 30-year war.

Cameron Hudson, a former senior official on Africa in the George W. Bush administration, exclusively told Fox News Digital Trump’s actions on brokering peace in Africa have been «refreshing» and that U.S. involvement in Sudan is essential. 

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The war in Sudan has claimed tens of thousands of lives, uprooted over 12 million and created what the International Rescue Committee described as «the biggest humanitarian crisis ever recorded.» (Ebrahim Hamid/AFP via Getty Images)

Sudan is often called the forgotten war. An estimated 150,000 have been killed. On Friday, a State Department spokesperson told Fox News Digital a staggering 14.2 million have been displaced since the government and the rebel Rapid Support Forces started the current civil war in April 2023. The spokesperson added «over 30 million people (are) in need of humanitarian assistance, (and) more than 630,000 individuals (are) experiencing catastrophic food insecurity. The suffering in Sudan demonstrates the importance of a swift and durable negotiated end to the conflict.»

At a U.N. Security Council briefing Thursday, Ambassador Dorothy Shea, the acting U.S. representative, said, «By many measures, the conflict in Sudan is the worst humanitarian crisis in the world today. We call on Sudan’s warring parties to cease hostilities, allow unhindered humanitarian access to all parts of the country and protect civilians.»

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Shea added, «The United States calls for accountability for the Rapid Support Forces for the genocide in Sudan, where they have murdered men and boys, even infants on an ethnic basis, targeted fleeing civilians and committed acts of brutal sexual violence against women and girls of other ethnic groups.»

Trump DR Congo Rwanda Peace Agreement

President Donald Trump holds up a signed document to present to Congo Foreign Minister Therese Kayikwamba Wagner, right, as Rwanda Foreign Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe,  Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio watch June 27, 2025, in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington.  (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), declared aid convoys are being targeted, hospitals bombed and food and water deliberately withheld. RSF rebels reportedly have encircled the city and camps of El Fasher in Darfur and effectively put the area under siege.

Hudson, also a former State Department advisor, told Fox News Digital it’s the moment for President Trump to make his move because he «is rapidly staking out a position for himself as a peacemaker in the world, and this message resonates deeply with African leaders and their publics.

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«To the degree that Trump has continued to frame his personal diplomacy in terms of peace, that has been well received. Closer to home, his prioritization of peace in the Congo-Rwanda dispute is seen as genuine.

BIDEN ADMIN SLAMMED FOR ‘WAITING’ TO DECLARE GENOCIDE IN SUDAN

«Africans, by and large, don’t begrudge the president for also having an agenda to secure critical minerals. I think they see his transparency and transactionalism as refreshing from a U.S. president. Washington has a tendency of speaking about our values but pursuing our interests in a contradictory fashion. For Trump, they see his interests as his values.»

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Sudan conflict

Members of the Sudanese army’s Special Mission Forces battallion in the Northern State hold a parade in Karima city on May 19, 2024. (Getty Images)

Looking back at the tsunami of words but lack of definitive action from the previous administration, Hudson added, «If you look at the facts on the ground in Sudan today, this might be the last moment we have to try to walk the country back from the brink of collapse. U.S. involvement now is essential, not just for regional stability but for ensuring the U.S.’s own long-term security interests.

«A failed state of 50 million people on the shores of the Red Sea will disrupt an essential lane of commercial navigation, destabilize partners across the Gulf and send waves of migrants streaming into Europe and Africa. None of this serves Washington’s interests.»

Ambassador Shea said at this week’s Security Council briefing the U.S. believes «external support to the warring (Sudanese) parties only serves to prolong the conflict and must cease.»

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Sudan

An army soldier walks in front of the Republican Palace in Khartoum, Sudan, after it was recaptured by Sudan’s army on March 21, 2025.  (AP Photo)

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Hudson said the U.S. could — and should — end that support.

«The Trump administration is uniquely positioned to make a difference in Sudan,» Hudson said. «The principal backers to the sides in the war — Egypt, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Turkey — are all U.S. allies. where President Trump has cultivated close ties and deep influence. He is in a position to help these countries settle their differences and forge a consensus on ending their support for the war. It will take some dedicated diplomacy, but that is the message that he is trying to send, that he is a peacemaker.»

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«The United States remains focused on working with our partners to resolve the crisis in Sudan,» the State Department spokesperson told Fox News Digital Friday. «We support the restoration of civilian governance in a peaceful, unified Sudan. We continue to engage with key regional and other partners to urge the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) to cease hostilities, allow unhindered humanitarian access to all parts of the country, protect civilians and take steps toward a negotiated peace through inclusive dialogue.»


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Noem thanks Trump for new Shield of the Americas special envoy role after DHS ouster

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During the Shield of the Americas summit in Florida on Saturday, outgoing Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem thanked President Donald Trump for appointing her to a newly created role after she was ousted from overseeing the agency.

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Noem, who is moving to the newly created position of special envoy for the Shield of the Americas, showed no ill feelings toward the president and said she was proud of her work at DHS, arguing the department had secured the border and eliminated public safety threats.

«I do want to thank the president for creating this and for giving me the honor and the opportunity to serve as a special envoy to this region, to the Western Hemisphere,» Noem said during the summit at Trump National Doral outside Miami. 

«This Shield of the Americas will be a powerful example to the rest of the world about what’s possible.»

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Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem delivers remarks during a working lunch at the Shield of the Americas summit, Saturday, at Trump National Doral near Miami. (Rebecca Blackwell / Pool / AFP via Getty Images)

Trump announced this week that Noem would shift into the new role after cutting short her tenure at DHS. 

Noem was removed as the nation’s immigration chief after a turbulent stretch marked by internal clashes and two contentious congressional hearings where even some Republicans pressed her over leadership missteps, including the ad campaign, which she claimed the president had signed off on.

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Noem framed the initiative as an effort to expand border security cooperation beyond the United States.

«The way that we cooperate on our shared ideals of freedom and of democracy and safety and security will be a shining light to all of those who wish to be more like all of us,» she said.

WHAT’S NEXT FOR KRISTI NOEM? 2026 SENATE CHATTER GROWS AFTER DHS EXIT

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Trump removed Noem as the nation’s DHS chief this week after a turbulent stretch. (Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP Photo)

Noem, who previously served in Congress and as South Dakota governor before leading DHS, defended her record overseeing immigration enforcement during the past year.

«In the last year, as secretary of Homeland Security, we have focused on securing our border,» she said. «We have transformed our country from one that was being invaded by enemies, millions of them that were coming in unvetted, that we didn’t know who was there and who wished to harm us.»

«We’ve secured that border,» she continued. «We’ve focused on removing public safety threats, and over 3 million people have been deported or removed from our country in the last year.»

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Noem argued that stronger border enforcement has allowed the administration to pivot toward economic and diplomatic engagement with neighboring nations.

DHS Secretary Kristi Noem speaking before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

DHS Secretary Kristi Noem testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill. (Graeme Sloan/Getty Images)

«Secure borders has changed everything for our country,» she said. «Now that America is secure and our borders are secure, we want to focus on our neighbors and to help our neighbors with their borders and challenges that they have so that they may have the security that we enjoy.»

Trump announced on Truth Social that Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., will replace her effective March 31, while Noem shifts to the newly created envoy role.

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Members of Trump’s Cabinet, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick and United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer attended Saturday’s summit. 

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Leaders from other nations included Argentina’s Javier Milei, El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele Ortez, Bolivia’s Rodrigo Paz Pereira, Costa Rica’s Rodrigo Chaves Robles, Panama’s José Raúl Mulino Quintero, and Trinidad and Tobago’s Kamla Persad-Bissessar, Chile’s Jose Antonio Kast, the Dominican Republic’s Luis Rodolfo Abinader Corona, Ecuador’s Daniel Roy Gilchrist Noboa Azín, Guyana’s Mohamed Irfaan Ali, Honduras’ Nasry «Tito» Asfura and Paraguay’s Santiago Peña.

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Notably missing were the leaders of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, and Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo.

Fox News Digital’s Alec Schemmel contributed to this report.

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'Nice upgrade': Fetterman says Mullin has the votes as Trump moves to replace Noem at DHS

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¿Se puede cultivar vida en Marte? Así sobreviven microorganismos en tierras que imitan al planeta rojo

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Microorganismos lograron replicarse en suelo que simula la aridez y baja humedad de Marte, ampliando los límites de la habitabilidad extraterrestre EFE/SIPA/ais/Archivo

El avance científico reciente ha evidenciado que la vida en Marte podría ser posible bajo ciertas condiciones experimentales. Un equipo internacional demostró que algunos microorganismos sobreviven y se replican en suelos que simulan las condiciones extremas del planeta rojo, ampliando así los límites conocidos para la habitabilidad extraterrestre.

¿Es factible cultivar vida en Marte usando suelos que imitan las características del planeta rojo? Los experimentos actuales confirman que determinados microorganismos logran sobrevivir y multiplicarse con niveles de sequedad y baja disponibilidad de agua similares a los encontrados en Marte, aunque el cultivo de plantas requiere estrategias especiales, como el aporte de nutrientes específicos o la integración de organismos simbióticos.

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Investigadores de la Universidad de Aberdeen y el Centro de Astrobiología de España, liderados por Jyothi Basapathi Raghavendra, Maria-Paz Zorzano y Javier Martin-Torres, realizaron un estudio donde demostraron que bacterias obtenidas de ambientes desérticos consiguieron replicarse y aumentar su ADN en simuladores de regolito marciano. Esta replicación microbiana se registró con actividades de agua tan bajas como 0,34, un valor mínimo que hasta ahora se consideraba inviable según el umbral aceptado de 0,585.

La actividad de agua, clave en estos experimentos, señala cuánta agua libre hay disponible en el suelo para el desarrollo microbiano. El equipo empleó suelos basálticos enriquecidos con yeso y sales, emulando el regolito marciano, y utilizó la cuantificación de ADN para constatar el crecimiento bacteriano, incluso en condiciones de gran aridez.

La actividad de agua disponible
La actividad de agua disponible en el regolito marciano simulado permitió la supervivencia microbiana en condiciones de sequedad récord (Imagen Ilustrativa Infobae)

Los científicos sometieron los suelos simulados a distintos niveles de humedad bajo temperatura y presión constantes. El mayor incremento de ADN ocurrió en suelos con más humedad, pero incluso se observó un aumento del material genético tras un mes de incubación.

Al comparar los distintos grupos el día treinta, los resultados arrojaron un valor estadístico confirmando la replicación microbiana bajo estas condiciones extremas. La validación microscópica y molecular evitó la presencia de procesos no replicativos, reforzando que las células bacterianas estaban activas.

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El papel de las sales hidratables también se puso a prueba: al añadir 5% de sulfato de magnesio al suelo, se consiguió que el regolito retuviera el doble de agua que el estándar, aunque el desarrollo bacteriano resultó ser más lento. El máximo registrado fue de 3,2 nanogramos de ADN, frente a los 5-6 ng de otros escenarios.

El análisis del suelo lunar
El análisis del suelo lunar simulado evidenció presencia de metales y problemas de filtración de agua para el desarrollo vegetal (Imagen ilustrativa Infobae)

Estos hallazgos amplían el margen para la existencia de la vida en ambientes secos y suponen nuevos retos para la exploración espacial. El estudio cuestiona los límites impuestos por el comité COSPAR respecto a las “Regiones Especiales” de Marte, definidos hasta ahora por actividades de agua superiores a 0,5.

Los autores del experimento proponen revisar esos límites legales, ya que algunos microorganismos pueden replicarse con menos humedad de la considerada anteriormente, lo que incrementa los riesgos de contaminación biológica en futuras misiones y refuerza la necesidad de mejores protocolos de esterilización.

Sin embargo, advierten que el experimento se realizó bajo presión y atmósfera terrestre. Replicar los resultados en ambientes con dióxido de carbono y baja presión—más parecidos a Marte—exigirá nuevas pruebas para aproximarse a la realidad marciana.

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La investigadora Jessica Atkin logró
La investigadora Jessica Atkin logró desarrollar plantas de garbanzos en las mezclas de simulación de suelo lunar investigadas. Algunas presentaron signos de estrés, hojas amarillas y poco crecimiento
Crédito: Jessica Atkin.

Paralelamente, la investigación dirigida por Jessica Atkin examinó el cultivo de garbanzo (Cicer arietinum) en simuladores de suelo lunar. Según los expertos, ningún vegetal produjo semillas sin la adición conjunta de compost de lombriz y hongos micorrícicos arbusculares; esta combinación permitió que algunas plantas florecieran y produjeran semillas, aunque el rendimiento se mantuvo bajo en comparación con suelos agrícolas comerciales.

El análisis señala que el suelo lunar simulado contiene metales como aluminio y zinc, e impide una adecuada filtración de agua.

No obstante, la mezcla de compost y hongos simbióticos mejoró tanto la circulación de nutrientes como la masa seca de raíz y tallo, logrando que el peso promedio de semillas fuera comparable al de plantas cultivadas en tierra común cuando se empleó entre 25% y 50% de compost.

Las investigaciones subrayan la necesidad
Las investigaciones subrayan la necesidad de estrategias de bioremediación y microbiomas adaptados para la vida fuera de la Tierra (Imagen Ilustrativa Infobae)

Todas las plantas cultivadas en suelo lunar simulado mostraron signos de estrés, como hojas amarillas y crecimiento restringido, lo que pone de manifiesto la necesidad de nuevas estrategias de bioremediación y microbiomas adaptados para el desarrollo agrícola fuera de la Tierra.

Los resultados de ambas líneas de investigación subrayan que aún no se han reproducido perfectamente las condiciones reales de Marte o la Luna, por lo que extrapolar estos datos a escenarios de colonización espacial requiere cautela y más estudios.

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La capacidad de ciertos microorganismos de multiplicarse en regolito marciano simulado—incluso bajo extrema sequedad y sin fuentes externas de carbono—sugiere que la vida puede persistir en entornos que hasta ahora se consideraban incompatibles, marcando un nuevo umbral para la resiliencia biológica fuera de la Tierra.



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Farage slams British prime minister for ‘extraordinary’ lack of support for Trump’s Iran strikes

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PALM BEACH, FLA – British opposition leader Nigel Farage is taking aim at his country’s prime minister for not supporting the U.S. in its military strikes against Iran.

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«I think not to support America when it asks for support is a pretty extraordinary thing to have done.,» Farage, the leader of the right-wing Reform UK party, said in an exclusive interview Saturday with Fox News Digital.

President Donald Trump has blasted Labor Prime Minister Keir Starmer for initially blocking the U.S. from using British military bases, specifically Diego Garcia — a strategic base located on an Indian Ocean island — for strikes against Iran during Operation Epic Fury. Starmer later permitted the use of the bases for «defensive strikes» after Trump’s complaints. 

Starmer hasn’t spoken to Trump since they connected on a call last weekend, after the U.S. and Israel launched their strikes on Iran. The British prime minister has made clear his country would not be joining the U.S. in attacking Iran, emphasizing he didn’t believe in «regime change from the skies.»

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Britain’s PM Starmer speaks during a press conference, in London. (Thomas Krych/Pool via REUTERS)

Trump, taking a jab at Starmer, said earlier this week, «This is not Winston Churchill we are dealing with.»

Farage criticized Starmer for not changing his stance, «even now, despite the fact that we’ve got an RAF base in Cyprus that’s been under attack, we’ve got allies of ours in the Gulf that are under attack.»

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«I think there’s been less than wholehearted support has come for the Americans in this endeavor. And I think the British Prime Minister on the world stage, he’s upset the Americans,» Farage said. «He’s upset the Cypriots. He’s upset the Gulf states. And he’s pretty friendless at the moment.»

THEY WANT TO DESTROY AMERICA: REPUBLICAN SENATORS WEIGH IN ON IRAN ATTACK

Farage, who seven years ago founded the populist Brexit Party, which later transformed into the Reform UK party, was interviewed ahead of an appearance at an annual economic conference in Florida hosted by the Club for Growth, an influential and politically potent political group that pushes for fiscal responsibility.

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Starmer has been feeling Trump’s wrath not only for their differences over the attack on Iran, but also over the British deal to hand sovereignty of the Chagos Islands, the Indian Ocean archipelago where Diego Garcia is located, to Mauritius. Starmer has argued his lease-back deal is the only way to secure the British-U.S. military base on Diego Garcia.

chagos islands

Diego Garcia, the largest island in the Chagos archipelago and site of a major United States military base in the middle of the Indian Ocean leased from the UK in 1966. (reuters)

Farage, who has been vocal in his opposition to the deal, told Fox News Digital that «outside of America itself,» Diego Garcia «is the most important base you’ve got in the whole world. Now it’s there as part of British sovereignty. We have a treaty between us that goes back to 1966 and Keir Starmer is on the verge of giving away the sovereignty of the Chagos islands and Diego Garcia to Mauritius.»

«If Trump initially had problems with the Brits over using the base, just think what it will be like with the heavily Chinese-influenced Mauritians. They already have said they believe that America should not have struck Iran, that it was against international law, then are calling for a ceasefire,» Farage said.

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NATO CHIEF PRAISES TRUMP’S IRAN STRIKES, SAYS KEY ALLIES ‘ALL FOR ONE, ONE FOR ALL’

Farage, who said his opposition to the deal was a key factor in his weekend trip to the U.S., said, «I would just urge the president, this administration, stay firm. Tell the British government you will not accept giving away of sovereignty to Mauritius, and let’s ensure a future for Diego Garcia. I think it’s really important.»

Farage, who’s hoping to become Britain’s next prime minister, argued that Starmer’s relationship with Trump is beyond repair.

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U.S. President Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer pose for a photo, at a world leaders' summit on ending the Gaza war.

President Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer pose for a photo, at a world leaders’ summit on ending the war in Gaza, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, October 13, 2025. REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett/Pool (REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett/Pool)

«I think the personal relationship between Keir Starmer and Donald Trump has gone. I mean, Trump can be forgiving, but, you know, that would take a long time. So I think that breakdown is there,» he said.

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But as for the longstanding bonds between the two countries, known as the ‘special relationship,’ Farage was more optimistic.

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«The special relationship went through bad times in the past. We had a massive fallout 70 years ago over Suez, but we got back together again. I’m convinced it can, and it will, be mended,» he predicted.

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