INTERNACIONAL
Trump advirtió que EEUU podría imponer peajes en Ormuz si el régimen de Irán no llega a un acuerdo final en 60 días

El presidente de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, afirmó este sábado que no se impondrán peajes en el estrecho de Ormuz durante el periodo de alto el fuego de 60 días ni tampoco tras su expiración. El anuncio, realizado a través de la red Truth Social, se produce tras la firma de un memorando de entendimiento entre Washington y Teherán, que abrió una tregua para negociar el fin de la guerra iniciada el pasado 28 de febrero.
“No habrá peajes en el estrecho de Ormuz durante los 60 días que dure el periodo de alto el fuego, y tampoco los habrá una vez transcurrido dicho periodo, a menos que sean impuestos por y para los Estados Unidos de América, en caso de que no se cierre el acuerdo, a cambio de los servicios prestados como ‘ángel de la guarda’ a los países de Oriente Medio, con el fin de reembolsar los costes pasados, presentes y futuros”, señaló el jefe de Estado.
El mensaje del mandatario estadounidense llega en medio de nuevas tensiones en la región, luego de que el mando militar central de Irán anunciara el cierre del estratégico estrecho de Ormuz en respuesta a los recientes ataques de Israel contra Hezbollah en Líbano. Las autoridades iraníes acusaron a Estados Unidos de incumplir el acuerdo y señalaron la “violación continua e implacable del alto el fuego en el sur de Líbano por parte del régimen sionista”.
El estrecho de Ormuz, vital para el transporte global de petróleo y gas, permaneció bloqueado durante gran parte de la guerra, provocando una inestabilidad significativa en los mercados energéticos internacionales. Irán había reabierto la vía marítima tras el memorando firmado con Estados Unidos, permitiendo una reanudación paulatina del tráfico comercial. La situación volvió a complicarse con el cierre anunciado tras los bombardeos israelíes en territorio libanés.
La Armada estadounidense respondió al anuncio iraní asegurando que se mantiene “vigilante”, mientras la diplomacia internacional intenta reactivar los esfuerzos de negociación. El viernes estaba previsto el inicio de una nueva ronda de conversaciones en Suiza, pero el proceso quedó aplazado sin fecha tras la muerte de decenas de personas en Líbano a raíz de los ataques israelíes, en represalia por la muerte de cuatro soldados.
En este contexto, un funcionario estadounidense comunicó la tarde del viernes la entrada en vigor de un alto el fuego entre Israel y Hezbollah. Sin embargo, el ejército israelí reportó nuevos ataques contra posiciones del movimiento islamista libanés, al que responsabilizó de haber disparado más de 50 proyectiles hacia sus tropas en el sur de Líbano en las últimas horas.
Los enfrentamientos han puesto en riesgo el memorando de entendimiento firmado por Donald Trump y el presidente iraní, Masud Pezeshkian, que establece un cese de hostilidades en todos los frentes de la guerra, incluyendo el territorio libanés. Esta condición se considera clave para las autoridades de Irán.
Ambas partes continúan cruzando acusaciones sobre la responsabilidad de las violaciones de la tregua. El portavoz de la cancillería israelí, Oren Marmorstein, declaró en la red X que “Hezbollah continúa violando constantemente el alto al fuego”.
La escalada en Líbano, desencadenada tras el asesinato de un líder iraní durante el primer día de la ofensiva israeloestadounidense, ha sido uno de los principales obstáculos para el diálogo entre Washington y Teherán. El memorando de entendimiento, alcanzado a principios de la semana, contempla la reapertura del estrecho de Ormuz y un periodo de 60 días de negociación para tratar asuntos pendientes como el programa nuclear iraní y el levantamiento de sanciones económicas.
El vicepresidente estadounidense, JD Vance, tenía previsto asistir al inicio de la nueva fase de diálogo en Suiza, aunque aplazó su viaje. De acuerdo con sus declaraciones de este sábado, planea trasladarse al país europeo en los próximos días para participar en las conversaciones de paz. Los negociadores estadounidenses Jared Kushner y Steve Witkoff ya se encuentran en Suiza para abordar aspectos técnicos del diálogo. Irán también envió una delegación diplomática, cuyo portavoz, Esmail Baqai, advirtió que el acuerdo podría peligrar si no se implementa “lo antes posible”.
Por otro lado, Pakistán anunció que el domingo se llevarán a cabo “conversaciones técnicas” entre delegaciones de Estados Unidos y Teherán, mediadas por representantes de Pakistán y Qatar.
El futuro del alto el fuego y la apertura del estrecho de Ormuz dependen de la evolución de las hostilidades y del avance en las negociaciones. La comunidad internacional permanece atenta a los próximos movimientos de los actores involucrados y al impacto sobre el comercio energético global.
North America,Government / Politics
INTERNACIONAL
Arkansas takes home top ranking for religious freedom after Gov Sanders expands key protections

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FIRST ON FOX: Arkansas has been ranked the nation’s top state for religious liberty after Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders signed a series of laws expanding faith protections that helped lift the state to the top.
Earning a score of 89.2%, Arkansas became one of only two states to earn the First Liberty Institute’s annual Religious Liberty in the States index’s first-ever «excellent» rating. The index evaluates states using 50 legal protections across 20 religious liberty safeguards spanning education, healthcare, family law, economic activity and other areas of daily life.
«Religious liberty is America’s First Freedom, and Arkansas is leading the nation in protecting it,» Sanders said.
«Our rights come from God, not government, and every American should be free to live according to their faith and conscience. We’ll continue defending that freedom and ensuring the Natural State remains the best place in the country to live, work and worship.»
AMERICA’S NEXT 250 YEARS DEPEND ON PASSING FAITH AND FREEDOM TO OUR CHILDREN
Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders participates in the first-ever National Outdoor Recreation Executive Forum hosted by Outdoor Recreation Roundtable at Decatur House on May 7, 2024, in Washington, D.C. (Paul Morigi/Getty Images for Outdoor Recreation Roundtable)
The Natural State climbed six spots from last year’s rankings after lawmakers approved several measures expanding legal protections for religious exercise and conscience rights.
Arkansas’ rise was driven largely by Act 677, legislation Sanders signed last year that bars state and local governments from penalizing people, businesses and religious organizations for acting according to their religious beliefs regarding marriage and biological sex.
APPEALS COURT REVIVES LAWSUIT BY ALASKA AIRLINES FLIGHT ATTENDANTS FIRED AFTER OPPOSING PRIDE MESSAGE

A group of people hold hands in prayer. Arkansas topped a new religious liberty index after expanding faith and conscience protections. (iStock)
The state’s religious liberty push also included the Conscience Protection Act, signed by Sanders in 2023, which expanded Arkansas’ Religious Freedom Restoration Act by prohibiting state government discrimination against religious organizations based on their religious identity or status.
Kelly Shackelford, president, CEO and chief counsel at First Liberty, said other states should follow Arkansas’ lead and «strengthen religious liberty protections in their own states.»
«Religious liberty is best protected when leaders are willing to act before the rights of people of faith are threatened,» Shackelford said.
GOV SANDERS REVEALS ‘MAJOR BREAKTHROUGH’ ON EDUCATION AS RED STATE POSITIONS ITSELF AS ‘BLUEPRINT’ FOR NATION

Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders speaking at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on July 17, 2024. (Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Dr. Mark David Hall, director of the Religious Liberty in the States project, said Arkansas demonstrates how states can protect what America’s founders called «the sacred right of conscience,» allowing people to practice their faith not just at church, but in their everyday lives.
«States have always served as laboratories of liberty, and this year’s results show why that matters,» Hall said.
Sanders also publicly defended religious freedom in December. She rejected demands from the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF), a group that advocates for the separation of church and state, to reverse her proclamation closing state offices for Christmas.
In a response letter previously obtained by Fox News Digital, Sanders pushed back on claims it was unconstitutional, saying «only by voicing our own faith and celebrating other faiths can we make our state’s diverse religious communities feel seen and heard.»
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«With this index, citizens and legislators can see where their state is doing well, where it still has room to improve, and which existing laws could help better protect the right of conscience,» Dr. Paul D. Mueller, associate director of the Religious Liberty in the States project, said.
faith values, sarah sanders, politics, first amendment religion us, arkansas
INTERNACIONAL
Bloqueo de Trump en Ormuz: Estados Unidos bombardea puertos iraníes y Teherán ataca petroleros en el estrecho

INTERNACIONAL
‘Did you call 911?’ Tuberville recounts Graham’s frantic final phone call

A closer look at the ‘aortic dissection’ that killed Sen. Lindsey Graham
Fox News Senior Medical Analyst Dr. Marc Siegel clarifies Sen. Lindsey Graham’s preliminary cause of death: a ruptured aorta due to cardiovascular disease. Siegel thoroughly explains the rare condition of aortic dissection and discusses common risk factors like high blood pressure and plaque. He advises on preventative health measures and regular check-ups, emphasizing what Graham would want people to consider their health.
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A Senate Republican added further detail to the late Sen. Lindsey Graham’s, R-S.C., final moments thanks to an unlikely connection.
Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., revealed that it was a former member of his staff that called for medical assistance to aid Graham over the weekend, who died suddenly just after his return from an overseas trip.
«My former scheduler was Lindsey’s scheduler, and one of my staff members was with that scheduler the night Lindsey called,» Tuberville told reporters. «He called [and] basically said, ‘Listen, I’m having chest pains. You know, I need to do something.’ ‘Did you call 911?’ And he goes, ‘No, that’s the reason I called you.’»
GRAHAM REPORTEDLY REFUSED MEDICAL HELP BEFORE SCHEDULED TV APPEARANCE
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., stands at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. (Aaron Schwartz/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
«And so she called 911 … By the time she got there, 911 had knocked the door down, and they were working on him,» he continued.
A preliminary cause of death was revealed Sunday evening. His office said that the longtime lawmaker had died from «aortic dissection due to arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease.»
Aortic dissection is when a tear occurs in the inner wall of the aorta, the body’s main artery, and is a life-threatening medical emergency.
«Lindsey basically worked himself to death, most of us have families, he didn’t have any family,» Tuberville said. «And if we had a couple of days off, he went to that airport, and he went somewhere to try to work out something for our country.»
LINDSEY GRAHAM’S SISTER APPOINTED TO SENATE AS GOP RUSHES TO PROTECT FRAGILE MAJORITY
Axios reported that in one of Graham’s final conversations, he told an unnamed source that he was feeling unwell but wanted to wait until after his scheduled appearance on NBC’s «Meet the Press» to seek medical attention.
«I can’t die now. I still need to do the Russia sanctions, get Iran sorted out and do Israeli-Saudi normalization,» Graham said.
His death has rocked the Senate, where emotional tributes rolled in throughout the day on Monday, the upper chamber’s first day back in Washington, D.C., since recessing for the Fourth of July.
GRAHAM’S DEATH IGNITES GOP SCRAMBLE FOR SENATE SEAT AS TRUMP HINTS HE ALREADY HAS A FAVORITE

Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., speaks to reporters as he returns to his office at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 10, 2026, in Washington, D.C. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
Graham’s desk in the Senate, which is where the late Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., his close friend, once sat, was draped with a black veil and a glass bowl of sharp white roses atop it.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., in an emotional tribute to the late lawmaker, said that the «halls of the Senate already feel empty without him.»
«I am comforted by the knowledge that, in the end, he has just changed his address. And that one day, Mr. President,» Thune said through tears. «We will laugh together again.»
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Graham will be succeeded, temporarily, by his sister, Darline Graham Nordone. She is slated to be sworn in to the position on Tuesday after being tapped by South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster to fill in for her late brother.
«I think this is what Lindsey would have wanted, and I plan to honor him in this way,» Nordone said during the ceremony in Columbia, South Carolina. «Now to Lindsey, I miss you more than I can even put into words. But I’m going to do this, I got it.»
politics, lindsey graham, senate elections, john thune, health
DEPORTE2 días ago“Hablame bien”: el tenso cruce de Lionel Messi con el árbitro en la victoria de Argentina ante Suiza en el Mundial
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