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Staying warm, Sunday March 22nd forecast

Kraig Pakulski 0 21 Article rating: No rating
Overcast Beach

Noticeable cooling has started to take hold as the onshore flow has strengthened enough to produce a very welcome sea breeze. However, this cool down is relative in the sense that we are still well above normal for many areas. Inland areas will continue to see above normal temperatures for Sunday, but highs will stay below advisory and or warning alert levels. Fog will also push inland overnight and maybe even reach most interior valleys by early Sunday. Highs will be in the 60's and 70's near the beach with fog lingering for some areas all day long. Inland areas will once again be very warm with highs mostly in the low to mid 80's.

Looking ahead, our recent heat wave will go down as incredible and historic. The good news is that we don't expect a repeat of that next week, but things will likely stay above normal and rain appears to be off the table for the rest of March. The marine layer will linger through Sunday and Monday and then weaken through the middle and second half of the work week as high pressure builds once again. Highs will warm back in to the 80's and 90's which means a few areas will likely see heat advisories posted. Again, we should not see a repeat of last week, but it will stay very warm and even hot as we head toward next weekend. A storm system then is forecast to approach the northern portions of our state which will cool things down slightly through the weekend. Rain chances now look very slim with maybe something showing up toward the last day of the month or very beginning of April.

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The post Staying warm, Sunday March 22nd forecast appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Cuba anuncia segundo apagón nacional en menos de una semana

Kraig Pakulski 0 9 Article rating: No rating

Por Max Saltman y Mauricio Torres, CNN en Español

El Ministerio de Energía y Minas de Cuba anunció este sábado que toda la isla ha sufrido otro apagón eléctrico.

“Se ha producido una desconexión total del Sistema Eléctrico Nacional”, dijo el Ministerio en una publicación en X. “Ya comienzan a implementarse los protocolos para el restablecimiento”.

Esto ocurre solo días después de que Cuba viviera el lunes su primer colapso nacional de la red eléctrica desde que Estados Unidos comenzó a bloquear los suministros de petróleo procedentes de Venezuela a principios de este año.

La Unión Eléctrica de Cuba, que pertenece al Ministerio de Energía, prevía un déficit de 1.740 megawatts (MW) para la hora pico de esta noche, según el reporte que publicó por la mañana en X.

De acuerdo con el gobierno de Cuba, los apagones en la isla —que se habían vuelto frecuentes en los últimos años— se han agravado durante los primeros meses de 2026 debido a la escasez de combustible para que las centrales eléctricas puedan operar.

La falta de petróleo también ha impactado en otros aspectos, como los servicios públicos y el transporte de alimentos, una situación que ya ha generado algunas protestas en La Habana y otras ciudades.

El presidente de Cuba, Miguel Díaz-Canel, dijo recientemente que entiende el malestar que estos problemas generan, aunque aseguró que las autoridades están trabajando para buscar vías de solución.

Dentro de este contexto, el canciller de Cuba, Bruno Rodríguez, señaló este sábado que su país permanece abierto a tener un diálogo serio y respetuoso con Estados Unidos, que mantiene presiones sobre la isla y un embargo económico desde la década de 1960.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Noticia en desarrollo.

The post Cuba anuncia segundo apagón nacional en menos de una semana appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Cuba announces second nationwide blackout in less than a week

Kraig Pakulski 0 8 Article rating: No rating

By Max Saltman, Mauricio Torres, CNN

(CNN) — Cuba’s Ministry of Energy announced Saturday evening that entire island has suffered another electrical blackout, leaving more than 10 million people without power.

“A total disconnection of the National Electric System has occurred,” the ministry said in a post on X. “Protocols for restoration are already beginning to be implemented.”

It comes days after Cuba endured its first nationwide power grid collapse on Monday, since the US began blocking fuel supplies from Venezuela earlier this year.

Yesterday, Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said in a speech to international activists bringing humanitarian aid to the island that his government recognizes that “there could be an attack on Cuba,” and is preparing accordingly.

US President Donald Trump has spoken frequently in recent weeks about Cuba, predicting an imminent collapse of the ruling communist government there. On Monday, he wondered aloud whether he would have the “honor of taking” the island.

“You know, all my life I’ve been hearing about United States and Cuba, when will the United States having the honor of taking Cuba? That’s a big honor,” Trump said from the White House. “Taking Cuba in some form, yeah, taking Cuba — I mean, whether I free it, take it, I think I can do anything I want with it.”

The president refused to say when asked whether an operation to “take” Cuba would involve the same level of force as the US capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in January.

Last week, Díaz-Canel confirmed in a national address that Cuba was speaking with its US counterparts about negotiations to end the fuel embargo. Since then, Cuba’s government has clarified that it does not intend to negotiate about its political system.

Since Cuban revolutionaries led by Fidel Castro overthrew the regime of Fulgencio Batista in 1959, the country has been under a strict economic embargo from the United States. Cuba has weathered through previous stretches of severe economic uncertainty, such as the “Special Period,” when the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union cut the communist government’s main source of outside assistance.

This latest crisis is similarly bleak. The lack of fuel from Mexico and Venezuela has stopped virtually all tourism to the island, disrupted education, cut services at hospitals and has prevented farmers from bringing their produce to market.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

CNN’s Uriel Blanco, Patrick Oppmann and Anabella González contributed.

The post Cuba announces second nationwide blackout in less than a week appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Iran launched missiles at US-UK military base in the Indian Ocean. Here’s what that says about its capabilities

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

By Kaanita Iyer, Gianluca Mezzofiore, CNN

(CNN) — Iran’s attempt to strike a US-UK base over 2,000 miles (over 3,000 kilometers) off its coast has renewed questions about Tehran’s military capabilities and how far its missiles can reach.

On Friday morning local time, Iran launched two intermediate-range ballistic missiles at Diego Garcia, a joint US-UK military base in the Indian Ocean, a US official told CNN, adding that neither of them struck the base. This marks what appears to be the first known attempt to target the base, which was deliberately built in a remote location beyond the reach of many adversaries.

While the attack was unsuccessful, it shows that Iran may not be adhering its self-imposed missile range limit of 2,000 kilometers, raising concerns about whether Tehran could hit US and European interests farther away than previously thought.

Jeffrey Lewis, distinguished scholar of global security at Middlebury College, told CNN that Iran was developing an intercontinental ballistic missile that was “reoriented to space launch” after then-Supreme Leader Ali Hosseini Khamenei “imposed a 2,000-kilometer range limit” in 2017.

“They were waiting for Khamenei to change his mind or, well, die,” Lewis said. “Now he’s dead.”

Trita Parsi, the co-founder of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, believes the US homeland is safe from Iranian strikes, but he told CNN that the attempted attack “suggests that other bases that the US thought is outside of the range of Iran may actually be within the range,” along with American ships “that have been kept 3,000 kilometers away.”

Parsi also wonders whether this incident could cause some European countries that have allowed the US to use its military bases to reconsider.

Earlier this month, the UK agreed to a US request to allow American forces to use its military bases for operations against Iranian missile sites. Meanwhile, Romania has allowed US refueling planes, as well as US surveillance and satellite equipment, to be at its bases, according to Reuters.

“It does put certain European bases in within their range,” Parsi said, adding, “I don’t know if that’s going to cause a rethink on the European side but it definitely increases the risk for them.”

President Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed, including in his first comments after the US struck Iran late last month, that Tehran has been building missiles that “could soon reach the American homeland.”

However, an unclassified assessment from the Defense Intelligence Agency from 2025 said that Iran could develop a “militarily-viable” intercontinental ballistic missile by 2035 “should Tehran decide to pursue the capability.”

Sources also told CNN late last month that there was no intelligence to suggest that Iran is pursuing an intercontinental ballistic missile program to hit the US at this time.

Parsi said the unsuccessful strike on Diego Garcia raises “question marks whether (Iran) may also have other types of weapons that we did not believe that they have that they might be using.”

Iran has several missiles with a range of 2,000 kilometers, including the Sejjil and Khorramshahr weapons, along with the long-range Soumar cruise missile that has a r

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