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Under Israeli bombardment, Lebanon urges Trump to intervene, calls for ‘immediate’ talks with Israel

Kraig Pakulski 0 24 Article rating: No rating


CNN

By Nick Paton Walsh, Natalie Wright, and Sarah Dadouch, CNN

Beirut (CNN) — The prime minister of Lebanon made an urgent appeal Thursday to President Donald Trump to intervene in the cause of peace, calling for an immediate ceasefire and direct talks with Israel.

Nawaf Salam told CNN in an exclusive interview that he sought a ceasefire “yesterday, not tomorrow,” as the death toll from Israel’s onslaught against the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah reached 1,000. More than 100 of the dead are children, according to Lebanese officials.

Asked what his message for Trump would be, Salam said: “To help put an end to the Lebanese conflict. I would like to reaffirm to President Trump our readiness to enter into immediate negotiations.” He called the US a “strategic partner” and said Trump “more than anyone else” could “play a decisive role” in ending the war.

“So we call on a greater engagement of the US. I mean direct contact. We are ready for negotiations with Israel,” the prime minister said.

The prospect of a negotiated end to the conflict in Lebanon, which began 17 days ago when Hezbollah fired projectiles into Israel to avenge the death of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, has dissipated over the past 48 hours as Israel’s military campaign has focused on a wider ground invasion. France has suggested some ideas for a settlement, Salam said, and there are contacts with US officials. Yet he shied away from suggesting actual talks have begun.

One of the likely sticking points will be that Lebanon does not recognize the state of Israel. Pressed three times on whether such a concession was possible in any peace deal, Salam declined to directly offer the move, and he blamed the lack of progress on Israel’s failure to respond to Lebanese overtures.

“We have been for two weeks extending our hands to have direct talks with the Israelis. So far, we haven’t received an agenda from the Israelis,” he said. Once Lebanon has a “clear agenda” from the Israelis, “then I will definitely answer your question,” he added.

Salam, widely respected as a statesman and key to the government’s renewed pledge to disarm Hezbollah, said Lebanon lacks the military capacity to do so and urgently needs military aid for its army. But he rejected any involvement by foreign troops and insisted that Lebanese territorial integrity was central to a peace deal.

Israel has pushed farther into Lebanon in the past week, and concerns are mounting it seeks to create a deeper “buffer zone” along the border. Israeli forces are occupying the land south of the Litani River, an area it has called on Lebanese to evacuate.

“We cannot accept any buffer zone, security zone, any infringement on our sovereignty,” Salam said. “We cannot negotiate any form of treaty, deal or arrangement with Israel (before our) sovereignty is fully restored.”

Salam expressed grave concerns over the growing humanitarian crisis of a million Lebanese displaced by Israel’s campaign and its evacuation orders, which now impact all of southern Lebanon below the Zahrani River, as well as much of southern Beirut.

“That’s almost 20%, if not 25%, of the Lebanese population,” he said. “These people are also the victims of the war. This war has been imposed on us. We didn’t seek it, we didn’t choose it, and now our main objective is how to end it. Lebanon is turned into a battlefield of the war between Israel and Iran.”

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Under Israeli bombardment, Lebanon urges Trump to intervene, calls for ‘immediate’ talks with Israel

Kraig Pakulski 0 22 Article rating: No rating
An explosion erupts from a building following an Israeli strike in central Beirut

By Nick Paton Walsh, Natalie Wright, and Sarah Dadouch, CNN

Beirut (CNN) — The prime minister of Lebanon made an urgent appeal Thursday to President Donald Trump to intervene in the cause of peace, calling for an immediate ceasefire and direct talks with Israel.

Nawaf Salam told CNN in an exclusive interview that he sought a ceasefire “yesterday, not tomorrow,” as the death toll from Israel’s onslaught against the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah reached 1,000. More than 100 of the dead are children, according to Lebanese officials.

Asked what his message for Trump would be, Salam said: “To help put an end to the Lebanese conflict. I would like to reaffirm to President Trump our readiness to enter into immediate negotiations.” He called the US a “strategic partner” and said Trump “more than anyone else” could “play a decisive role” in ending the war.

“So we call on a greater engagement of the US. I mean direct contact. We are ready for negotiations with Israel,” the prime minister said.

The prospect of a negotiated end to the conflict in Lebanon, which began 17 days ago when Hezbollah fired projectiles into Israel to avenge the death of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, has dissipated over the past 48 hours as Israel’s military campaign has focused on a wider ground invasion. France has suggested some ideas for a settlement, Salam said, and there are contacts with US officials. Yet he shied away from suggesting actual talks have begun.

One of the likely sticking points will be that Lebanon does not recognize the state of Israel. Pressed three times on whether such a concession was possible in any peace deal, Salam declined to directly offer the move, and he blamed the lack of progress on Israel’s failure to respond to Lebanese overtures.

“We have been for two weeks extending our hands to have direct talks with the Israelis. So far, we haven’t received an agenda from the Israelis,” he said. Once Lebanon has a “clear agenda” from the Israelis, “then I will definitely answer your question,” he added.

Salam, widely respected as a statesman and key to the government’s renewed pledge to disarm Hezbollah, said Lebanon lacks the military capacity to do so and urgently needs military aid for its army. But he rejected any involvement by foreign troops and insisted that Lebanese territorial integrity was central to a peace deal.

Israel has pushed farther into Lebanon in the past week, and concerns are mounting it seeks to create a deeper “buffer zone” along the border. Israeli forces are occupying the land south of the Litani River, an area it has called on Lebanese to evacuate.

“We cannot accept any buffer zone, security zone, any infringement on our sovereignty,” Salam said. “We cannot negotiate any form of treaty, deal or arrangement with Israel (before our) sovereignty is fully restored.”

Salam expressed grave concerns over the growing humanitarian crisis of a million Lebanese displaced by Israel’s campaign and its evacuation orders, which now impact all of southern Lebanon below the Zahrani River, as well as much of southern Beirut.

“That’s almost 20%, if not 25%, of the Lebanese population,” he said. “These people are also the victims of the war. This war has been imposed on us. We didn’t seek it, we didn’t choose it, and now our main objective is how to end it. Lebanon is turned into a battlefield of the war between Israel and Iran.”

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Pese a la insistencia de Trump, los indocumentados no votan en Estados Unidos

Kraig Pakulski 0 24 Article rating: No rating

Análisis por Juan Carlos López, CNN en Español

Algunos políticos, entre ellos el presidente Donald Trump, poseen una habilidad particular: ofrecen resolver problemas inexistentes. Es como la broma que cuenta que un candidato llegó a un pueblo a prometer un puente y cuando le dijeron que no había río, se comprometió a llevarlo también.

El puente que hoy ofrece Trump se llama el SAVE America Act, o la ley para “salvar a Estados Unidos”. ¿De qué quiere salvar Trump al país? Del fraude electoral, según insiste.

Suele ser difícil encontrar a alguien que esté a favor del fraude electoral; bueno, de pronto puede ser algún político que quiera ganar las elecciones aun si las pierde…

El puente, con río incluido, que ofrece Trump, quedó sintetizado en uno de sus recientes mensajes en su red social, en el que hasta inventó una palabra en inglés, “mutilization” por mutilación. ¡NO MÁS ELECCIONES AMAÑADAS! Identificación de votante, prueba de ciudadanía, no votación por correo manipulada (¡somos el único país del mundo que permite esto!), no hombres en deportes femeninos, ni MANIPULACIÓN transgénero de nuestros hijos. ¡90% a 99% TODOS PROBLEMAS! Solo personas enfermas, dementes o trastornadas en la Cámara o el Senado podían votar en contra del SAVE AMERICA ACT”, dijo.

Trump insiste en que ganó las elecciones que perdió en 2020 frente a Joe Biden. El margen fue muy amplio. En el Colegio Electoral, que define el ganador, Biden obtuvo 306 votos, 74 más de los 232 de Trump, y en el voto popular la ventaja para el demócrata fue de siete millones de votos. Cinco años después, Trump insiste en que hubo fraude, algo que no ha podido demostrar. El Centro Brennan, de la Facultad de Derecho de Universidad Nueva York, presentó un informe en el que desglosa la estrategia del gobierno de Trump para usar alegaciones infundadas de presunto fraude en 2020 para incidir en los resultados de los próximos comicios, que, según los sondeos, podrían no favorecer al partido de gobierno.

La Constitución Política establece que las elecciones son responsabilidad de cada Estado y que el Congreso puede legislar sobre la manera en que se llevan a cabo las mismas para garantizar equidad. Es decir: el gobierno federal no tiene un papel directo en las elecciones y mucho menos el presidente, que ni siquiera es mencionado en el artículo sobre comicios.

A pesar de eso Trump promulgó un decreto para implementar medidas que no son de su competencia, como exigir un documento de identidad para demostrar que la persona es ciudadana. Cada estado tiene sus propias normas y, por lo general, se basan en el principio de darle el beneficio de la duda a quienes se inscriben para votar. Solo ciudadanos por nacimiento o naturalización lo pueden hacer.

Según Trump el sistema electoral estadounidense está plagado de fraude, pero como muchas de las afirmaciones del mandatario, carece de sustento. Un análisis del Instituto Brookings reveló que, en el estado de Pensilvania, por ejemplo, en 32 elecciones, durante tres décadas, con más de cien millones de votos revisados, fueron detectados 39 casos de fraude. En Arizona, el porcentaje de votos fraudulentos entre 1999 y 2024, con 35 elecciones y más de 42 millones de votos, fue de 0,0000845 % o 36 votos fraudulentos y que ningún resultado electoral ha sido alterado nunca por frau

State agency files lawsuit against Sable’s use of oil pipeline in Gaviota State Park

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SANTA BARBARA COUNTY, Calif. (KEYT) – A state agency has filed a civil suit against Sable Offshore alleging that the Houston-based company's use of a four-mile segment of pipeline inside of Gaviota State Park, currently being used to transport crude oil without the proper paperwork, is technically trespassing.

"This is a civil action brought by State Parks to enjoin Defendants Sable Offshore Corp. and Pacific Pipeline Company from trespassing at Gaviota State Park," opened Wednesday's civil filing in Santa Barbara County Superior Court. "State Parks previously granted an easement to Sable's predecessor-in-interest to place and operate the pipeline through the Park. That easement, however, expired in 2016, and neither Sable nor its predecessors-in-interest have acquired a new easement. Thus, Sable is not currently authorized to transport oil through the segment of the pipeline that runs through the Park. Sable is also not authorized to leave its pipeline in the Park. Despite this lack of authorization, on or about March 16, 2026, Sable began transporting oil through the pipeline, and is therefore trespassing on State Parks' property."

"State Parks seeks an injunction directing Sable to cease the flow of oil through the Park and to remove the pipeline according to the expired easement," requested the state agency in its filing.

On March 13, the Trump Administration stated that it had compelled the private energy company to restart oil production, including the use of onshore pipelines shuttered since a massive oil spill from a ruptured pipeline in 2015.

The shut down in 2015 included both offshore and onshore oil-producing infrastructure collectively known as the Santa Ynez Unit.

"Ever since a catastrophic oil spill at Refugio Beach in 2015 led to a court-ordered consent decree, CAL FIRE - Office of the State Fire Marshal has been responsible for overseeing the repair of the lines that caused the spill, which are now operated by Sable Offshore Corp in Santa Barbara County," shared Daniel Villaseñor with the California Natural Resources Agency.

The ruptured pipeline, formerly known as Line 901 and now referred to as Line CA-324, impacted 150 miles of California coastline and destroyed thousands of acres of shoreline habitats. Its sister pipeline which was also shut down at the same time, Line 325, which runs from the Gaviota Coast to Pentland Station in Kern County was also restarted after the order from the Trump Administration.

Transportation of oil through onshore pipelines through Santa Barbara County, a small section of San Luis Obispo County, and eventually to Kern County are necessary to sell crude oil from offshore platforms and the first sales from the Santa Ynez Unit are expected to hit the market on April 1, 2026, shared Sable Offshore.

"Since 2016, State Parks has issued annual Right of Entry ("ROE") permits to Sable’s predecessors-in-interest or compani

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