Argentina, Brazil, and Guyana are experiencing oil export booms. Argentina paid off a $4.3 billion chunk of its foreign debt last week, defying doubters of President Javier Milei’s economic overhaul. Environmentalists are calling on the left-leaning government to use fossil fuels to help fund the green energy transition.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday that the United States is looking into whether Cuba is stockpiling Iranian drones. Experts say it's probable that Cuba has such drones, but they emphasize that it's unlikely that Havana is planning on taking offensive actions against the U.S., which is trying to topple the Cuban government.
Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara was released from prison on 7 July after serving a five-year sentence. He has been detained since 2021 on charges of contempt and insult to national symbols. He is the co-founder of the San Isidro movement against government censorship of the arts. Friends believe he is being held in a "protocol house" before being exiled to another country.
Since its founding in 1922, Foreign Affairs magazine has been the leading forum for serious discussion of American foreign policy and global affairs. The magazine has featured contributions from many leading international affairs experts since its founding. It is published by Simon & Schuster, a division of Penguin Books.
U.S. forces struck Iranian military sites for a fifth straight day. House Republicans released their $95 billion plan to fund the Iran war, subsidize farmers, and revive parts of Trump’s stalled SAVE America Act. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche faced five hours of bipartisan questioning over the Justice Department's handling of the Epstein files and the settlement shielding Trump and his family from IRS audits. Trump ordered ICE to resume most traffic stops one day after the agency temporarily suspended the practice following two fatal shootings by agents. The Pentagon will start screening the testosterone levels of soldiers 30 and up.
The organization Las Voces del Secuestro Universal requested an audience with the president-elect, Abelardo De La Espriella, for this July 17. The purpose of the meeting is to hear the families of the Public Force and CTI officials who remain kidnapped in different regions of the country. On the same day, relatives of kidnapped people from departments such as Arauca, Cauca, Huila, Nariño, Cesar and Caquetá will arrive in Bogotá to participate in the Commemoration of the Heroes of the Homeland and their Families. The organization shared a list with the names of people who are currently in captivity.
Abelardo De La Espriella will take office on August 7 at zero hours before the Congress of the Republic, in Bogotá D.C. Then he will swear in his ministers and senior government officials at Casa de Nariño and present his institutional greeting to the Military and Police Forces. On August 7, in the afternoon he will meet with the departmental governors and the mayors of the capital cities.
Colombian president Carlos E. Restrepo came to power in 1912 as a candidate of the so-called Republican Union. In 1912, the Minister of Public Works asked the Colombian ambassador in Bolivia to send him data on the cultivation of coca in Bolivia and some seeds of the best Bolivian qualities. In 1932, the ambassador sent a study on coca and a drum of it to the minister.
Argentina, Brazil, and Guyana are experiencing oil export booms. Argentina paid off a $4.3 billion chunk of its foreign debt last week, defying doubters of President Javier Milei’s economic overhaul. Environmentalists are calling on the left-leaning government to use fossil fuels to help fund the green energy transition.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday that the United States is looking into whether Cuba is stockpiling Iranian drones. Experts say it's probable that Cuba has such drones, but they emphasize that it's unlikely that Havana is planning on taking offensive actions against the U.S., which is trying to topple the Cuban government.
Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara was released from prison on 7 July after serving a five-year sentence. He has been detained since 2021 on charges of contempt and insult to national symbols. He is the co-founder of the San Isidro movement against government censorship of the arts. Friends believe he is being held in a "protocol house" before being exiled to another country.
Since its founding in 1922, Foreign Affairs magazine has been the leading forum for serious discussion of American foreign policy and global affairs. The magazine has featured contributions from many leading international affairs experts since its founding. It is published by Simon & Schuster, a division of Penguin Books.
U.S. forces struck Iranian military sites for a fifth straight day. House Republicans released their $95 billion plan to fund the Iran war, subsidize farmers, and revive parts of Trump’s stalled SAVE America Act. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche faced five hours of bipartisan questioning over the Justice Department's handling of the Epstein files and the settlement shielding Trump and his family from IRS audits. Trump ordered ICE to resume most traffic stops one day after the agency temporarily suspended the practice following two fatal shootings by agents. The Pentagon will start screening the testosterone levels of soldiers 30 and up.
The organization Las Voces del Secuestro Universal requested an audience with the president-elect, Abelardo De La Espriella, for this July 17. The purpose of the meeting is to hear the families of the Public Force and CTI officials who remain kidnapped in different regions of the country. On the same day, relatives of kidnapped people from departments such as Arauca, Cauca, Huila, Nariño, Cesar and Caquetá will arrive in Bogotá to participate in the Commemoration of the Heroes of the Homeland and their Families. The organization shared a list with the names of people who are currently in captivity.
Abelardo De La Espriella will take office on August 7 at zero hours before the Congress of the Republic, in Bogotá D.C. Then he will swear in his ministers and senior government officials at Casa de Nariño and present his institutional greeting to the Military and Police Forces. On August 7, in the afternoon he will meet with the departmental governors and the mayors of the capital cities.
Colombian president Carlos E. Restrepo came to power in 1912 as a candidate of the so-called Republican Union. In 1912, the Minister of Public Works asked the Colombian ambassador in Bolivia to send him data on the cultivation of coca in Bolivia and some seeds of the best Bolivian qualities. In 1932, the ambassador sent a study on coca and a drum of it to the minister.