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Israel will receive 25 state-of-the-art fighter jets funded by the United States

Israel will receive about 25 state-of-the-art F-15IA fighter jets manufactured by Boeing, after signing an agreement with the Israeli Ministry of Defense for 5.2 billion dollars financed with US military aid.

According to the agreement, the aircraft will be supplied in batches of four to six a year, starting in 2031.

This $5.2 billion item is part of a broader aid package approved by the Joe Biden administration and the US Congress earlier this year and which includes an option for 25 additional aircraft.

Waiting for Trump’s position

The new F-15IA aircraft is equipped with state-of-the-art weapons systems that will allow the Army to “maintain its strategic superiority to face current and future challenges in the Middle East,” according to the Ministry of Defense in a statement.

“This F-15 squadron, along with the third F-35 squadron acquired earlier this year, represents a historic improvement in our air power and strategic scope, capabilities that were crucial during the current war,” said the director general of the Ministry of Defense, Eyal Zamir.

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Since the outbreak of the war in Gaza, Joe Biden’s administration has not stopped supplying weapons to Israel, despite the fact that at some times throughout this 2024 the US president raised the tone and threatened to withdraw this military aid if the Government of Benjamín Nentayahu did not protect the Gaza civilian population.

Now, with Trump’s return to the White House, after his electoral victory, a new stage opens between the two allied countries.

His triumph was celebrated by the entire Israeli Executive, although it remains to be seen what position the US president-elect on the Israeli offensive in Gaza and Lebanon will adopt from January – when the investiture will take place.

“We don’t want wars. I’m not going to start a war, I’m going to stop them,” Trump said yesterday in his first speech after confirming the results.

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International

Dominican court postpones hearing in deadly nightclub collapse case

10 reported dead after explosion in Dominican Republic

A Dominican court on Monday postponed until March a preliminary hearing against the owners of a nightclub that collapsed last year, killing more than 200 people.

The roof of the Jet Set nightclub collapsed in the early hours of April 8, 2025, during a concert by popular merengue singer Rubby Pérez, who died along with 235 other people.

Jet Set owner and manager Antonio Espaillat and his sister Maribel, who served as the club’s administrator, were arrested on charges of involuntary manslaughter but were later released on bail after posting approximately $842,500.

Both appeared at the Palace of Justice, where they were met by a small protest from relatives and friends of the victims.

“Thirty years in prison is not enough” and “President, we want JUSTICE,” read signs held by demonstrators.

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The preliminary hearing determines whether there is sufficient evidence to send the case to trial. The court decided to reschedule the hearing for March 16.

“We don’t want money and we’re not demanding anything else, only justice for those who died,” said Secundino Pérez, a 75-year-old shopkeeper who lost 12 friends in the Jet Set tragedy.

“Antonio and his family celebrated Christmas sitting at a table, celebrating their freedom,” said Edgar Gómez, who lost his daughter in the collapse.

The Dominican Republic’s Public Prosecutor’s Office maintains that the defendants “significantly altered” the structure of the nightclub. Prosecutors filed formal charges in November and requested that the case proceed to trial.

The charge of involuntary manslaughter carries a sentence of three months to two years in prison.

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“May your conscience never let you sleep. I lost my son,” a woman shouted through tears before the hearing, while others chanted, “Murderers, murderers, murderers.”

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International

Venezuelan opposition leader dedicates Nobel Prize to Trump

U.S. President Donald Trump said last week that he was “eager” to welcome the opposition leader, who left Venezuela clandestinely with U.S. assistance, to receive her Nobel Prize in Oslo.

Machado dedicated her Nobel Prize to Trump, who nevertheless showed a very cautious attitude toward including her in any potential political transition in Venezuela.

The opposition leader said on Monday, after an audience with Pope Leo XIV, that “the defeat of evil is closer” in Venezuela following the U.S. military operation that overthrew and removed President Nicolás Maduro and his wife from the country.

Trump has claimed that he is now in control of the South American nation, stating that the primary objective at this stage is to stabilize the country before considering elections.

Venezuelan oil is Washington’s main objective, Trump added after Maduro’s overthrow.

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Police hunt gunmen after fatal shooting in Corsica

A man was shot dead on the French Mediterranean island of Corsica, local media reported. The victim was identified as Alain Orsoni, former president of local football club AC Ajaccio, according to sources close to the investigation cited by French news channel BFMTV.

Orsoni, 71, was killed in the town of Vero, near Ajaccio, the island’s capital, while attending his mother’s funeral.

He was also a former member of the National Liberation Front of Corsica (FLNC), a nationalist organization that has long sought independence for the island, reports said.

BFMTV reported that the gunmen fled the scene and remain at large. Local police have opened an investigation into the shooting.

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