US conducts strikes in Syria in response to attack that killed two American soldiers

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By Zachary Cohen, Haley Britzky, CNN

(CNN) — The US struck multiple targets in Syria on Friday that the US military tied to ISIS as retaliation for the recent attack against American troops there that killed two service members, according to two US officials.

Dubbed “Operation Hawkeye,” a reference to the fact that the two US soldiers killed were from the “Hawkeye State” of Iowa, the strikes hit dozens of targets the military connected to ISIS — including infrastructure and weapons storage sites across Syria, one of the officials said.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth called the strikes a “declaration of vengeance,” in a post on X late Friday afternoon.

“This is not the beginning of a war — it is a declaration of vengeance,” he wrote. “The United States of America, under President Trump’s leadership, will never hesitate and never relent to defend our people.”

After the attack on December 13 that killed the two soldiers and a civilian interpreter, US and partner forces conducted 10 operations resulting in the death or detention of around 23 people, that official added. Those operations also yielded intelligence from electronics gathered during the operations that provided information contributing to targeting for the strikes, according to the same US official.

Hundreds of American troops continue to be deployed to Syria as part of the US’ longstanding mission to combat ISIS, a mission that began when ISIS rapidly took control of a large chunk of Syria and Iraq in the mid 2010s. Subsequently, US and partner operations, paired with a change in regime in Syria, largely eliminated that territorial control.

The goal of Operation Hawkeye is to deliver a big blow to ISIS remnants in Syria and their ability to pose a threat to US forces in the region, the same official told CNN.

Partner nations, including Jordan, joined the US in the strikes, the official said.

While the Trump administration vowed retaliation against ISIS in the wake of the December 13 attack, CNN has reported that Syria’s Ministry of Interior Affairs said the attacker had been a part of Syria’s Internal Security service. US and Syrian officials acknowledged to CNN that the gunman’s ties to ISIS are not entirely clear-cut; ISIS has not claimed responsibility for the attack.

The two US service members killed in Syria were identified this week as Sgt. Edgar Brian Torres Tovar, 25, of Des Moines, Iowa, and Sgt. William Nathaniel Howard, 29, of Marshalltown, Iowa. They were killed while engaging hostile forces in Palmyra, Syria, the US Army said. Both soldiers were assigned to the Iowa National Guard’s 1st Squadron, 113th Cavalry Regiment, 2nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 34th Infantry Division.

Three additional Iowa National Guard members were wounded in the attack and evacuated for further medical treatment.

“Our priority right now is supporting the families of our fallen and wounded soldiers,” Maj. Gen. Stephen Osborne, adjutant general of the Iowa National Guard, previously said in a statement. “The entire Iowa National Guard grieves for this terrible loss, and we stand together to support the soldiers and their families.”

Roughly 1,800 Iowa National Guard soldiers began deploying to the Middle East earlier this year as part of Operation Inherent Resolve, a release from Gov. Kim Reynold’s office said.

This is a developing story and will be upda

EE.UU. realiza ataques en Siria en respuesta al ataque que mató a dos soldados estadounidenses

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Por Zachary Cohen y Haley Britzky, CNN

Estados Unidos atacó varios objetivos en Siria este viernes, los cuales las Fuerzas Armadas estadounidenses vincularon con ISIS, como represalia por el reciente ataque contra militares estadounidenses en ese país, que dejó dos efectivos muertos, según dos funcionarios de Estados Unidos.

La operación, denominada “Hawkeye” en referencia a que los dos soldados fallecidos eran originarios de Iowa, conocido como el “estado Hawkeye”, alcanzó decenas de objetivos relacionados con ISIS, incluyendo infraestructura y depósitos de armas en distintas zonas de Siria, según uno de los funcionarios.

Tras el ataque del 13 de diciembre, en el que murieron los dos soldados y un intérprete civil, fuerzas de Estados Unidos y sus aliados realizaron 10 operaciones que resultaron en la muerte o detención de unas 23 personas, añadió el funcionario. Además, se obtuvo información de dispositivos electrónicos incautados durante esas operaciones, lo que ayudó a identificar los objetivos de los ataques.

Cientos de militares estadounidenses siguen desplegados en Siria como parte de la misión de largo plazo para combatir a ISIS, que comenzó cuando el grupo tomó rápidamente el control de amplias zonas de Siria e Iraq a mediados de la década de 2010. Posteriormente, las operaciones conjuntas y los cambios en el Gobierno sirio eliminaron en gran medida ese control territorial.

El objetivo de la Operación Hawkeye es asestar un golpe importante a los remanentes de ISIS en Siria y reducir su capacidad de amenazar a las fuerzas estadounidenses en la región, dijo el funcionario a CNN.

Países aliados, como Jordania, participaron junto a Estados Unidos en los ataques, según la misma fuente.

Aunque el gobierno de Trump prometió represalias contra ISIS tras el ataque del 13 de diciembre, CNN informó que el Ministerio del Interior de Siria señaló que el atacante era miembro del servicio de Seguridad Interna sirio. Funcionarios de Estados Unidos y Siria reconocieron a CNN que los vínculos del atacante con ISIS no están del todo claros; el grupo no se ha atribuido el ataque.

Los dos militares estadounidenses fallecidos en Siria fueron identificados esta semana como el sargento Edgar Brian Torres Tovar, de 25 años, de Des Moines, Iowa, y el sargento William Nathaniel Howard, de 29 años, de Marshalltown, Iowa. Murieron mientras enfrentaban a fuerzas hostiles en Palmira, Siria, según el Ejército de Estados Unidos. Ambos pertenecían al 1° Escuadrón, 113º Regimiento de Caballería, 2ª Brigada de Infantería, 34ª División de Infantería de la Guardia Nacional de Iowa.

Otros tres miembros de la Guardia Nacional de Iowa resultaron heridos en el ataque y fueron evacuados para recibir atención médica.

“Nuestra prioridad en este momento es apoyar a las familias de nuestros soldados caídos y heridos”, declaró el general de división Stephen Osborne, jefe de la Guardia Nacional de Iowa. “Toda la Guardia Nacional de Iowa lamenta esta terrible pérdida y estamos unidos para apoyar a los soldados y sus familias”.

Aproximadamente 1.800 soldados de la Guardia Nacional de Iowa comenzaron a desplegarse en Medio Oriente a principios de este año como parte de la Operación Inherent Resolve, de acuerdo con un comunicado de la oficina de la gobernadora Kim Reynolds.

Noticia en desarrollo…

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The tech firm that helped police find the Brown shooting suspect has sparked privacy concerns. Its CEO responds

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By Clare Duffy, CNN

New York (CNN) — On Thursday afternoon in New York City, I sat down with Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley. We met to discuss the company’s expansion from making cameras for reading license plates to building drones for law enforcement, and his response to recent privacy concerns surrounding Flock’s technology.

Just hours later, Providence Police Chief Oscar Perez credited Flock’s cameras and technology for helping to locate the Brown University shooting suspect.

To Langley, the situation underscored the value and importance of Flock’s technology, despite mounting privacy concerns that have prompted some jurisdictions to cancel contracts with the company.

“America cannot tolerate tragedies like what we saw at Brown and MIT this past week,” Langley said in an X post following the news. “We intend to continue using technology to make sure our law enforcement are empowered to do their jobs.”

Langley told me on Thursday that he was motivated to start Flock to keep Americans safer. His goal is to deter crime by convincing would-be criminals they’ll be caught.

“I think we run a risk today as a country that a generation of people will not believe America works for them because they don’t feel safe, because in some communities … you don’t feel safe,” Langley said. “It’s too easy to get away with crime in America.”

Finding the Brown shooting suspect

Flock is a safety technology company that works with local law enforcement agencies and private companies. The Atlanta-based company, founded in 2017, announced in March that it was valued at $7.5 billion after its latest $275 million funding round from major Silicon Valley investors, who include Andreessen Horowitz and the Peter Thiel-backed Founders Fund.

Its flagship product is an outdoor camera, referred to as “LPR” cameras, that can read license plates and identify other details about vehicles as they drive by. Flock’s AI system allows police to search its network of footage for a specific car. Around 6,000 law enforcement agencies across the United States use its LPRs.

That’s how Providence Police tracked down 48-year-old Claudio Neves Valente, who police say was responsible for both the Brown shooting and the killing of an MIT professor days later.

Perez described plugging a description of Valente’s vehicle into Flock’s system. One of Flock’s cameras had recently spotted the car, helping police pinpoint Valente’s location.

Flock turned on additional AI capabilities that were not part of Providence Police’s contract with the company to assist in the hunt, a company spokesperson told CNN, including a feature that can identify the same vehicle based on its description even if its license plates have been changed.

Responding to privacy concerns

The company has faced criticism from some privacy advocates and community groups who worry that its networks of cameras are collecting too much personal information from private citizens and could be misused. Both the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the American Civil Liberties Union have urged communities not to work with Flock.

“State legislatures and local governments around the nation need to enact strong, meaningful protections of our privacy and way of life against this kind of AI surveillance machinery,” ACLU Senior Policy Analyst Jay Stanley wrote in an August blog Read more

Rubio calls ‘status quo’ with Venezuela ‘intolerable’ as Trump admin sanctions Maduro family members

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By Jennifer Hansler, CNN

(CNN) — US Secretary of State Marco Rubio decried the “status quo” with the Maduro government as “intolerable” as the Trump administration on Friday announced new sanctions on family members of the embattled Venezuelan leader.

For months, the administration has carried out a campaign of deadly military strikes in the Caribbean and Pacific and mounting economic pressure against Caracas as part of what they have described as a war against drug trafficking. They have resisted saying that they are actively seeking regime change in Venezuela but have accused President Nicolas Maduro of being illegitimate and a narco-trafficker.

On Friday, Rubio doubled down on those accusations.

“It is clear that the current status quo with the current Venezuelan regime is intolerable for the United States,” Rubio said Friday when asked about comments from the White House chief of staff that Trump “wants to keep on blowing boats up until Maduro cries uncle.”

“The status quo that they operate and cooperate with terrorist organizations against the national interest of the United States – not just cooperate, but partner with and participate in activities that threaten the national interest of the United States,” Rubio said at a press conference.

“So yes, our goal is to change that dynamic and that’s why the president is doing what he’s doing,” he said.

“No one can argue that transnational criminality and terrorism in our hemisphere is not a threat to the national interest of the United States,” he said. “We reserve the right and have the right to utilize every element of national power to defend the national interest of the United States.”

US military forces have carried out scores of deadly military strikes against alleged drug vessels, killing over 100 people. Those strikes have come under extreme scrutiny by members of Congress. In an interview with NBC Friday, President Donald Trump did not rule out war with Venezuela. Earlier this week, the US president announced a “total and complete blockade” of sanctioned oil tankers coming to and leaving from Venezuela. He has repeatedly threatened land strikes in the country. Neither Trump nor Rubio has committed to informing Congress ahead of time about that potential act of war.

On Friday, the Treasury Department announced new sanctions on Maduro’s family members – the second round against his relatives in as many weeks.

Officials have argued that their campaign of punitive financial tactics and controversial and deadly military strikes is to stop drug trafficking, not necessarily to oust the regime in Caracas.

Last week, the administration hit three of Maduro’s nephews with sanctions, including the two so-called “narco nephews” who were granted clemency in October 2022 as part of a prisoner swap for Americans detained in Venezuela. The third nephew, Carlos Erik Malpica Flores, was sanctioned for being a member of the Venezuelan government.

The latest round of sanctions target Maduro’s sister-in-law and other relatives of Malpica Flores.

“Maduro and his cronies have devastated Venezuela’s economy and continue to threaten our region’s stability,” State Department deputy spokesperson Tommy Pigott said in a statement. “The Trump Administration is committed to disrupting the network of individuals who prop up Maduro and his regime.”

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