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Trump administration official physically assaulted at UNGA by ‘deranged leftist,’ White House says

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EXCLUSIVE: A Trump administration official was physically assaulted by a «deranged leftist» inside the United Nations Thursday afternoon during the gathering of the UN General Assembly, Fox News Digital has learned.

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An official working in international relations for the Department of Health and Human Services was in New York City serving in a support role for HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the department’s leadership team at UNGA.

«An HHS official was followed into a bathroom, recorded, physically assaulted and verbally accosted by a deranged leftist at the UN who somehow entered the venue past multiple layers of security,» White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly told Fox News Digital. «Thankfully, the official is safe, and the lunatic was arrested, but this is part of a disturbing and dangerous set of failures by the UN after their sabotage of President Trump ahead of and during his speech.»

TRUMP SLAMS UN FOR ‘CREATING NEW PROBLEMS,’ QUESTIONS ITS ROLE IN FIERY UNGA SPEECH

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Kelly told Fox News Digital that the U.S. Secret Service will investigate «how this violent protester was admitted into a major national security event.»

A source familiar told Fox News Digital that the individual has been charged with assault, aggravated harassment, attempted assault and criminal possession of a weapon. The individual was released from custody at 7:30 p.m. Friday night, the source said. The individual is expected in court next on Nov. 13. 

United Nations Headquarters in New York City July 16, 2024. (Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

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«The UN must answer why these highly concerning incidents continue to happen against the president and his staff,» Kelly said.

«We are outraged that a member of the U.S. delegation was physically assaulted inside of UN Headquarters the afternoon of September 25,» a U.S. UN spokesperson told Fox News Digital. «This attack must be addressed swiftly, and consequences must be felt.»

The spokesperson told Fox News Digital that «the UN itself recognizes that it has lost its way.»

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WALTZ TO ROOT OUT ANTISEMITISM, ELIMINATE ‘WOKE’ PROGRAMS, GET ‘BACK TO BASICS’ AT THE UNITED NATIONS

«Now, it has devolved into an arena where an American delegation member is harassed and assaulted,» the spokesperson said. «If you can’t keep people safe in your own building, how can you claim to be the world’s diplomatic center?»

The spokesperson called the incident «unacceptable,» and told Fox News Digital that the United Nations «will use every available resource to support the U.S. Secret Service into their investigation of this incident.»

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«We know the UN needs dramatic reform and now must also immediately implement a thorough review of the UN’s security operations,» the spokesperson said. «The UN’s failures are evident worldwide, and now in its own halls.»

The U.S. UN spokesperson added: «Enough is enough.»

The official recounted her experience of being followed, harassed, and physically assaulted inside the United Nations in an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital.

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The official told Fox News Digital that she was walking down the hallway at the UN when a woman began berating her and shining a bright light in her face.

Trump UNGA

President Donald Trump delivers remarks to the United Nations General Assembly at U.N. headquarters in New York City Sept. 23, 2025.  (Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images)

«It was very disorienting,» the official said. «Once I took a step back and regained my footing, it didn’t stop. I realized what was happening. I realized I was being yelled at and that the light was also a recording device.»

The official tried to get away from the woman who was screaming derogatory and pro-Palestinian comments at her as she followed closely behind.

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OUSTED DIRECTOR SAYS AMERICA250 LEADERS ‘HATE TRUMP MORE THAN THEY LOVE AMERICA’ AFTER FIRING FOR KIRK POST

The official said the woman called her a «fascist» and a «Nazi.» 

«The insults changed to specific insults,» the official said, telling Fox News Digital that she went into the women’s bathroom to get away, but that the woman kept following her.

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«Her yelling turned into screaming—hyper-aggressive insults,» the official said. 

The official tried to hide in a bathroom stall, but told Fox News Digital that the woman was pushing and trying to get into the stall. Once the official was able to close the door, the woman put the camera over the door of the bathroom stall to continue filming the official and screaming. 

The new U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, former national security adviser Mike Waltz, speaks at a Security Council emergency meeting

The new U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, former national security adviser Mike Waltz, speaks at a Security Council emergency meeting to discuss Russian fighter jet incursions into NATO member Estonia’s airspace at the United Nations as world leaders arrive for the 80th session of the U.N.’s General Assembly Sept. 22, 2025, in New York City.  (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

The official waited for the screaming to stop, and exited the stall, hoping the woman had left, but the woman was waiting for her at the door, and continued to follow her into the hallway, continuing to yell at her and shine the light in her face. Eventually, the official was able to get away.

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The official told Fox News Digital the incident lasted approximately 10 minutes.

«It felt very political in nature,» she said. «Secretary Kennedy gets a tremendous number of bows and arrows and threats that he deals with, but it seems that it’s not enough, and it is trickling down.»

RJK Jr speaking at event

RFK Jr. speaks at the 2025 Rx and Illicit Drug Summit at Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center in Nashville April 24, 2025. (© Nicole Hester/The Tennessean/USA Today Network)

She added: «That’s a scary thing for the team. But we’re more empowered, and we have amazing leadership.»

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Fox News Digital has learned that the woman was arrested by the New York City Police Department. It is unclear whether she is still in custody.

The NYPD did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

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The United Nations did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

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Senate passes bill to fund most of DHS after House GOP caves

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The 48-day Department of Homeland Security shutdown is one step closer to ending after the Senate moved to fund most of the department Thursday morning.

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The Senate agreed via voice vote to send a bipartisan deal funding the whole department except for President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement and border security efforts to the House for consideration.

The chamber is not expected to vote on the legislation until House lawmakers return to Washington on April 13. 

The Senate vote follows GOP leaders endorsing a two-track approach to funding DHS on Wednesday, with President Trump giving lawmakers a hard deadline to end the record-breaking funding lapse. 

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House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is expected to take up the Senate’s DHS bill after rejecting it last week. (Getty Images)

HOUSE CONSERVATIVES RAGE AGAINST SENATE DHS SHUTDOWN DEAL

The Senate bill accomplishes the first phase of the plan by working with Democrats to fund as much of DHS as possible on a bipartisan basis. However, it would zero out funding for ICE and much of the Border Patrol, save for $11 billion in customs funding going to the agency. Additionally, $10 billion teed up for ICE won’t be funded under the measure.

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As for ICE and the Border Patrol, Republicans have said they will seek three full years of funding for both of these agencies in a party-line budget reconciliation package that will bypass Democrats’ opposition. Trump says he wants the forthcoming bill on his desk by June 1.

«We are going to work as fast, and as focused, as possible to replenish funding for our Border and ICE Agents, and the Radical Left Democrats won’t be able to stop us,» Trump wrote on Truth Social on Wednesday. 

The Senate bill’s passage on Thursday was a déjà vu moment for Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., who helped steer the same measure through the upper chamber last week.

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But House GOP leadership sharply rejected it, calling the measure’s exclusion of ICE and CBP money a «crap sandwich» and warning about the risks of funding those entities using the budget reconciliation process. The chamber then put forward a rival proposal that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., made clear was «dead on arrival» in the Senate. 

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., appeared to relent Wednesday after Trump issued a statement outlining an end to the shutdown that appeared to side with Thune’s two-part approach to funding the department. 

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D.

President Donald Trump has appeared to side with Senate Majority Leader John Thune’s two-track approach to funding the Department of Homeland Security and ending the record-breaking shutdown. (Maxine Wallace/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

GOP INFIGHTING, DEMOCRATS’ UNMET DEMANDS AND A CLEAR WINDFALL: WHO’S WINNING AND LOSING THE DHS SHUTDOWN

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As the DHS shutdown drags on, Trump and congressional Republicans are gambling that budget reconciliation will be the way to fund immigration enforcement for several years to come. Some Republicans have floated funding ICE not just through Trump’s term, but for up to a decade.

The GOP used the same process to fund ICE last year, teeing up $75 billion for enforcement operations for the next four fiscal years.

But the party-line process comes with a host of challenges that could test Republican unity in an election year.

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GOP lawmakers will have to identify spending cuts to pay for it. When Republicans used the process to pass Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act in July 2025, lawmakers nearly stumbled at the finish line over disagreements on cuts to federal Medicaid spending and food assistance programs.

Without a looming deadline like the expiration of Trump’s 2017 tax cuts that Republicans extended in July 2025 through the «big, beautiful bill,» some GOP lawmakers have voiced concern that the party will stay unified.

Republicans have proposed adding other issues into the reconciliation mix, including supplemental funding for the Iran war, affordability measures, the president’s tariff regime and pieces of the election integrity-focused SAVE America Act.

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The budget reconciliation process allows a party with control of the White House and both chambers of Congress to pass tax and spending priorities with a simple majority threshold, though the process is governed by stringent requirements for what is eligible to be included.

Punting ICE and CBP money to a future spending bill could also negatively affect support staff employed by both agencies who have not been paid during the seven-week shutdown.

Compilation image of President Donald Trump and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., claimed victory on Wednesday for forcing Republicans to fund President Donald Trump’s border security and immigration enforcement agenda outside the normal appropriations process. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

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Democrats have repeatedly blocked funding for ICE and the Border Patrol in the Senate since the beginning of the shutdown in mid-February. Though none of their proposals to reform immigration enforcement have been adopted, Democratic leaders claimed victory on Wednesday. 

«Throughout this fight, Senate Democrats never wavered,» Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Wednesday. «We were clear from the start: fund critical security, protect Americans, and no blank check for reckless ICE and Border Patrol enforcement. 

«We were united, held the line, and refused to let Republican chaos win.»

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The Senate deal funding most of DHS could still face roadblocks in the House. A handful of conservatives have already said they will vote «no» while using the same messaging employed by House GOP leadership to oppose the bill last week.

«Let’s make this simple: caving to Democrats and not paying CBP and ICE is agreeing to defund Law Enforcement and leaving our borders wide open again,» Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., wrote on social media Wednesday. «If that’s the vote, I’m a NO.»

government shutdown, homeland security, john thune, mike johnson, republicans

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Elecciones en Perú: ¿Por qué es posible (otra vez) un resultado sorpresa?

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Ante 35 candidatos y aproximadamente un tercio de los peruanos indecisos o sin apoyar a nadie, podría surgir un contendiente sorpresa en los últimos días antes de la votación del 12 de abril.

Los conservadores Rafael López Aliaga y Keiko Fujimori llevan semanas estancados en un empate técnico, cada uno con alrededor del 10% al 12% de apoyo, principalmente de votantes en la capital, Lima, según las encuestas más recientes.

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Pero, en última instancia, serán las regiones fuera de la capital, donde vive el 70% de los 34 millones de habitantes del país, las que marcarán la mayor diferencia en el resultado de las elecciones.

“Hay así un voto sistemáticamente anti establishment, antilimeño, sobre todo en las zonas entre más pobres y alejadas del país”, dijo el analista político Gonzalo Banda.

Estas regiones “van a decidir mucho el voto”, añadió, señalando que son las más difíciles de encuestar y suelen tener el mayor porcentaje de votantes indecisos en un país donde las elecciones generalmente se resuelven en las últimas semanas.

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El caso de 2021

Eso fue lo que ocurrió en las últimas elecciones de 2021, aunque ha habido cuatro presidentes entretanto debido a la constante inestabilidad política del país.

El apoyo al candidato de extrema izquierda Pedro Castillo aumentó drásticamente en la recta final de la campaña, impulsada por los votantes de los Andes y del sur de Perú, quienes se sintieron atraídos por sus promesas de reformar la Constitución y redistribuir la riqueza proveniente de la minería, principal sector de exportación de Perú y principal fuente de inversión extranjera.

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Castillo apenas figuraba en las encuestas dos semanas antes de la primera ronda de las elecciones.

Luego ganó la segunda vuelta contra Keiko Fujimori, que ha llegado tres veces a las segundas rondas, arrasando en los distritos donde hay minas clave. En Chumbivilcas, cerca de la enorme mina de cobre Las Bambas de MMG Ltd., Castillo recibió más del 95% de los votos. Para ganar directamente, un candidato necesita al menos el 50% del total de votos.

Keiko Fujimori, de Fuerza Popular. Foto: Bloomberg

Los proyectos políticos que desafían al sistema, como el de Castillo, han obtenido el apoyo de los votantes de las regiones del sur y mineras, lo que demuestra una división regional en las elecciones peruanas de las últimas dos décadas, dijo Banda, oriundo de la ciudad sureña de Arequipa.

Como presidente, Castillo nunca implementó esas propuestas, aunque durante la campaña inquietaron a la élite empresarial y política del país, rico en minerales, lo que provocó una fuga de capitales histórica de aproximadamente US$16.000 millones, o más del 7% del PBI de Perú en ese momento.

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En estas elecciones, la mayoría de los peruanos están preocupados por el aumento de la delincuencia, la corrupción, la inestabilidad política y el desempleo.

Candidatos emergentes

Ningún candidato lidera en todas las regiones de Perú. Sin embargo, en diferentes partes del país se empieza a perfilar el favorito.

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El sur de Perú se está convirtiendo en un bastión del economista de izquierda Alfonso López-Chau, según la encuesta más reciente de Ipsos para Perú21.

López-Chau, el exdirector del banco central bajo el mandato de Julio Velarde, captó la atención nacional durante las protestas de finales de 2022, cuando, como rector de la Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería, abrió el campus a jóvenes que habían viajado a Lima desde los Andes del sur.

Estos jóvenes exigían elecciones anticipadas tras la destitución de Castillo por intentar disolver el Congreso y gobernar por decreto.

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El candidato Roberto Sánchez, del partido Juntos por el Perú. Foto: EFE

El legado del expresidente de extrema izquierda, que actualmente cumple una condena en prisión por su intento de acaparar el poder, está siendo reivindicado por el candidato Roberto Sánchez, quien fue uno de sus ministros más leales.

Sánchez, cuyo apoyo se concentra principalmente en las zonas rurales según las encuestas, impulsa una nueva Constitución para dar voz a las comunidades marginadas del país. Ha propuesto utilizar las reservas internacionales del banco central para invertir en salud y educación, y renegociar los acuerdos de libre comercio.

En el debate presidencial de la semana pasada, Sánchez lució el sombrero tradicional del norte del Perú, que se convirtió en el sello distintivo de Castillo.

El congresista ha sido uno de los que más rápido ha ascendido en las últimas semanas, al igual que el centrista Jorge Nieto. El sociólogo y exministro de Defensa promete transformar Perú en una fuente de crecimiento más equitativo, pasando de un modelo extractivo a uno diversificado e inclusivo.

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Su apoyo, si bien actualmente está más disperso, proviene principalmente de zonas urbanas, incluyendo Lima.

Aun así, tanto Sánchez como Nieto están empatados con apenas un 5%, luchando por el tercer puesto junto con López-Chau y el humorista Carlos Álvarez, quien goza de mayor popularidad en el norte de Perú, según las encuestas. Tras tres décadas en la televisión, Álvarez se presenta como un candidato antisistema, prometiendo medidas firmes contra la delincuencia.

El voto de las regiones, la clave

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Quien logre movilizar el voto de las regiones probablemente pasará a la segunda vuelta, afirmó el politólogo José Incio, profesor de la Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. “Yo creo que hay todavía espacio para que se alineen las cosas”, añadió.

La historia reciente de Perú sugiere que solo uno de los dos, Fujimori o López Aliaga, tiene probabilidades de llegar a la segunda vuelta.

Rafael López Aliaga. Foto: EFE

“Es muy difícil que un candidato blanco, pituco pegue en las regiones andinas”, dijo Banda.

Fuera de Lima, y entre los votantes de la clase trabajadora, le va mejor a la hija del expresidente Alberto Fujimori que al exalcalde López Aliaga. Las encuestas muestran que solo ganaría en la capital, respaldado principalmente por los sectores más ricos del país.

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En Perú, ser “primero con mucha antelación no te conviene”, dijo Incio. “Es el último que logre generar la expectativa, y ya no queda mucho tiempo como para buscar otra opción. Ese es el que va a capitalizar”.

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Israeli paramedic delivers baby, rushes it to bomb shelter during Iran attack

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Dr. Gal Rosen is an Israeli paramedic who has saved lives under the threat of missile attacks.

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Racing from emergency to emergency, heart pounding, but calm under fire — «don’t think, just act.»

He said he lost his mother when he was a child at the hands of a murderous terrorist. He saved lives as an army paramedic, but he continues to do it now as a civilian — defiantly choosing to live in Israel and work at Tel Aviv’s Magen David Adom (MDA) while under threat and emergencies from multiple-front wars.

He saves lives in the «dark» of war. He sees lives go, sometimes after making difficult split-second decisions.

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ARIZONA DEPUTIES SAVE CHOKING 2-WEEK-OLD BABY IN ROADSIDE RESCUE AFTER PARENTS’ EMERGENCY CALL

Dr. Gal Rosen, a Tel Aviv paramedic, has delivered five babies in his time, but Nikola’s baby boy was his first born under the stress of missile attack and blaring Iron Dome sirens. (Viri Acoca / Photo Provided)

«We need to choose sometimes,» he says, speaking to Fox News Digital during a rare moment off between emergencies. «And this is hard

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But, today, he is sharing a story of «light’: a stark contrast from the stories he usually refuses to share with his family to spare them the horrifying realities of war — even if they live those themselves.

Last Thursday, Rosen delivered a healthy baby boy into the world and, in sudden threat of a missile attack and blaring sirens, carried that son away from the mother in the ambulance as he and the father raced to reach a bomb shelter.

This is his fifth emergency delivery of a newborn as a paramedic. It was his first under the threat of a missile attack and blaring sirens.

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«It was so surrealistic situation, in my opinion, never happened to me, something like this,» he said, able to smile about the gravity of it all one week later, after finally finding sleep and time to reflect.

«This is an amazing thing to share at home,» Rosen said. «Most of my stories are not like this, most of our stories I share are really hard things for my family to hear. This is why, usually, I’m not sharing with my family stories from my work: ‘Sorry, I’m not doing it.’

«Car accidents or about the CPRs or about really difficult situations that I had to deal with.»

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Just two days after bringing one life into the world, he saw five go.

«I had, like last Saturday, five cases of death in the shift,» he said. «I don’t want to get home and tell about it in my family, right? But this story is amazing.

UNSUNG HEROES OF 2025: FIRST RESPONDERS AND EVERYDAY AMERICANS WHO SAVED LIVES ACROSS US

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Dr. Gal Rosen smiles

MDA Dr. Gal Rosen smiles, telling his remarkable story of ‘light’ as a paramedic delivering a newborn baby under the ‘dark’ of war and under the stress of a missile interception with sirens blaring. (Fox News Original)

«I went to my grandma,» he continued, «and said, ‘You have to hear it.’

«She was so proud of me and also my family and my father and my friends and my partner. Of course, this is a really nice story to tell to everyone.«

The call came around 6:30 a.m. local Tel Aviv time on a Thursday morning: a woman was in labor, getting an assist on emergency delivery over the phone as if it was a movie.

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But this was real life, a new life, and war.

By the time the MDA paramedic team arrived, the baby was still inside and the husband was helping his wife through the final moments of delivery. Dr. Rosen stepped in for the last few minutes and helped safely deliver the boy.

Then came the alert.

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Within moments, a warning sounded that a missile attack on Tel Aviv was expected in about 10 minutes. The paramedic suddenly had to balance the urgency of a wartime emergency with the delicate, critical first steps of childbirth.

He quickly placed the newborn on the mother’s chest for skin-to-skin contact, a key step for bonding and early development. He had the father cut the umbilical cord and helped the mother nurse the baby for the first time.

NYPD OFFICERS SAVE CHOKING 2-YEAR-OLD BOY, BODYCAM VIDEO SHOWS

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«I tried to do something as close as possible to reality for them,» he said, wanting to preserve the intimacy of a normal birth even though they were far from a hospital delivery room.

With the help of the father and her team, he then moved the family into the building’s shelter. There, in the middle of blaring alarms and the sounds of missile interceptions overhead, relatives from the apartment building — a grandmother, an aunt and others — came downstairs and saw the baby for the first time.

«It was the first time they met the baby, while there were alarms,» he said. 

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«Adrenaline» and former army paramedic instinct took over.

«I put the helmet, I put the vest and everything, I took the baby, and we stopped by the side and I ran with the baby to a public shelter,» he recalled. «So me and the father, we’re running together, I’m taking the baby with me, running to a shelter and just a random building and there was no shelter there.

«‘OK, this is not good.’ We need to go out.

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«And we’re going out. There is still alarms; I know that we have like maybe 20 seconds left, going to another building, and then we’re getting into a public shelter. There is 50 people there in the shelter and they closed the door. We were still there standing in the shelter, so I gave the father the baby.

«I didn’t want the idea for the father also — you know in the future — to think about the situation that a stranger held his baby while there is a missile attack.«

In the shelter, with the postpartum mother still in the ambulance under the Iron Dome, the unmistakable sound of war came with a shock.

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«We also heard the interception with the Iron Dome,» Rosen said.

The sound, he said, was impossible to ignore: «a boom,» followed by a shock wave you could feel.

The air was vibrating.

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The grateful father and mother, identified by MDA as Nikola and Violet, said the experience was frightening but that the emergency team helped keep them calm.

ICE AGENT SAVES LIFE OF ‘UNRESPONSIVE’ 1-YEAR-OLD BOY IN JFK AIRPORT AS PANIC ENSUES IN TSA SECURITY LINE

«It wasn’t a simple experience,» they wrote in a joint statement, preferring to keep privacy but permitting Dr. Rosen to share the war story out of praise and thankfulness.

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«The labor started at home, and just minutes after the MDA team delivered the baby, the siren caught us, and we went down to a shelter. The team functioned amazingly, calmed us, and treated us in the best possible way. This isn’t the ideal experience, but we’re happy everything ended safely, and we’re grateful to the team who helped us so much.»

In that cramped shelter of about 50 huddling Israelis, surrounded by strangers and the threat of falling missiles, the room broke into applause. People congratulated the father and shouted «Mazal tov.»

Mother was still in the ambulance with members of the MDA team, still at risk postpartum, as the Iron Dome was busting missiles overhead.

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«And after 10 minutes that we sat there, we went out, and we walked in the street with a baby, 30 minutes old, crossing the intersection together, going to the ambulance,» Rosen said. «They put a helmet on her and a vest on the mother, and one of my teammates stayed with her, because she couldn’t come to the shelter. It was too much time, too risky for her.

«And, you know, in these moments, I didn’t think so much. So I just act.

«I realized that it would be better to protect the son; it would better to go to find a shelter. And we didn’t think about the idea that maybe we’ll be in alarms, because we were in the situation, we were at the moment, we’re with the family, with the delivery, with everything, and you can’t imagine something like this — even though it’s Israel, and now we can actually imagine everything.

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«Still, it was really, really, really exciting — excitement and happiness – and a good thing because most of our days right now are dark

Despite losing his mother to a murderous terrorist and living under the threat of multiple-front wars and shrieking Iron Dome sirens and missile attacks, Rosen would choose no other life.

MISSILES ABOVE, NEWBORNS BELOW: ISRAELI HOSPITALS SHIFT CRITICAL CARE UNDERGROUND

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MDA response Israel

Magen David Adom (MDA) emergency teams respond to the scene of Iranian missile barrages in Tel Aviv, Israel on Friday, June 13, 2025. (Magen David Adom (MDA))

«My mother was murdered in a terror attack when I was a kid, when I was a child, and to choose to still be here with my family, to live here: This is our home and to choose, going to a different path, not hate.

«I will save lives, and I will do my best to help other families going through these situations, and I will do my best to make sure there are no other families that will need to suffer from a loss.

«So I think this is the mentality of Israelis in general. But still, see, this is one of the only places in the world that people are getting rescued by a flight to come back to Israel.

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«In a war,» he deadpanned.

But, with everything happening under the stress of war, Rosen kept the calm, precision and resolve of an army paramedic, knowing the best medicine for a baby born under stress is skin-to-skin and mother’s milk.

«I learned in med school, I learned these two things are the most important: Put the baby on the skin, give them the bond, help her to nurse,» he said. «It also can help the mother a lot when she nursing the baby. It’s also helping with postpartum bleeding. And a lot of things.

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«So this situation, it’s hard to do when we are in this missile attack.»

But all is well that ended well and — in the case of Nikola and Violet’s newborn — began as well as could be under the circumstances.

«I was so excited I couldn’t sleep for — like the delivery, it was something like 17 hours into my shift,» he recalled. «So I worked 16 hours. It was after 17 hours shift.

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«Now and after 17 hours shift, I went back home, I tried to sleep, I couldn’t sleep, and then I had to go to another shift. So I was awake for at least 24 hours.«

One week later, the adrenaline and excitement have not worn off. And the baby boy, mother, father and MDA paramedic team live on to tell an all-timer.

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