Tag: combat

  • Shattering the ‘iron’ ceiling: New series ‘Guerrera’ explores vital role of US female troops in combat

    Shattering the ‘iron’ ceiling: New series ‘Guerrera’ explores vital role of US female troops in combat

    Women in combat broke the “iron” ceiling more than a decade ago when female soldiers volunteered to throw themselves into some of the toughest operations carried out during the War on Terror, deploying with elite military units under a task force known as the Cultural Support Team (CST).

    A new three-part documentary series, “Guerrera,” which bowed Saturday on Amazon, YouTube and Google TV, reveals the indispensable role women have played in combat. 

    “We did it — females in combat arms. The legacy is we broke the ceiling, the hard ceiling, not even a glass ceiling,” said retired Sgt. First Class Jeramy Neusmith, Army Ranger, who helped train the women of the CST program at Fort Bragg. “[It] was f—ing iron. We breached it.”

    SHOULD WOMEN SERVE IN COMBAT? MILITARY EXPERTS WEIGH IN

    Veteran Alex Holton is depicted amid her deployment as part of the Army’s Cultural Support Team (CST) questioning a woman. (Dulcinea Productions)

    The series uncovers little-known details about the female troops who were successfully paired with elite special operations units like Delta Force and the Army Rangers. Their goal was to address intelligence gaps in Afghanistan and Iraq by speaking with local women and children who had in-depth knowledge of active terrorist movements. 

    Though the documentary series was years in the making by producer and director Will Agee and executive producer Jessica Yahn — who served in the CST program — the timing of its release coincides with a moment in the U.S. where some in top positions are once again questioning whether women should have the right to fight with America’s elite.  

    “I’m straight up just saying we should not have women in combat roles. It hasn’t made us more effective, hasn’t made us more lethal, it has made fighting more complicated,” then-nominee and now confirmed Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said during a November 2024 interview with “The Sean Ryan Show.” Later in an interview on “The Megyn Kelly Show,” he appeared to have shifted his position and said, “If we have the right standard and women meet that standard, roger. Let’s go.”

    Hegseth did not repeat his previously stated beliefs when pressed about it during his January confirmation and has said he does not plan to reverse the 2013 Combat Exclusion Policy, which allowed women to vie for elite positions.

    Female US soldier in Afghanistan as part of Army's CST program

    Master Seg. Mary Matthews is seen deployed as part of the Army’s Cultural Support Team (CST). (Dulcinea Productions)

    But his comments renewed an old debate about the effectiveness of women in combat — despite more than a decade of evidence proving capability and operational efficacy.

    ‘GREATEST WARRIORS’: HEGSETH RAILS AGAINST ‘MISCONSTRUED’ NARRATIVE THAT HE’S AGAINST WOMEN IN MILITARY

    “Regardless of what side of the political spectrum you’re on — which there’s plenty of Republicans, plenty of Democrats in “Guerrera” — every single one of them, man and woman, want a high standard, and that is such a unifying point,” Yahn told Fox News Digital. “I hope what comes out of the film is just the essence that more unites us than divides us. 

    “And it’s just a matter of getting down to that rich discourse and breaking through some of those things that we immediately may perceive the other side is thinking.” 

    Ret. Army Maj. Jessica Yahn deployed with Army's CST program in Afghanistan

    Special Operations Veteran Jessica Yahn, center, is pictured with interpreter Habiba Webb, left, and Sara Dlawar of the Female Tactical Platoon, right, during a deployment with the Army’s Cultural Support Team (CST) program. (Dulcinea Productions)

    In the series, Neusmith argues the turning point in what would become a major shift in American policy for women in combat started after 1st Lt. Ashley White was killed alongside Ranger forces during an operation in Afghanistan in 2011.

    White became the first CST member to be killed in combat after she and the team of Rangers she was attached to entered a compound booby-trapped with Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs). White and two other Rangers were killed on Oct. 22, 2011. 

    “Ashley died — she died in combat. No Rangers stopped, no Rangers turned around, cried, no one wept, right on target,” Neusmith highlights in the series. “They did their job, and then they went back and handled the death of their comrade. We beat the stigma.

    “All the stigmas they put out there — bone density, you know, men are going to be susceptible, you know, they’ll pay attention to women. No,” he continued. “I mean, they cared, but they couldn’t care at that time. They had to do their job.”

    Female US soldiers in Afghanistan as part of Army's CST program

    Veterans Rachel Washburn and Rose Mattie are pictured during a deployment as part of the Army’s Cultural Support Team (CST). (Dulcinea Productions)

    Though the CST women were assigned to elite units, they were not special forces, and technically it was still illegal for women to serve in combat roles when the first batch of CSTs deployed in 2011. However, they were trained to not only keep up with the special forces, but to engage enemy combatants alongside America’s best-of-the-best. 

    ‘ATTITUDE SHIFT’: HOW COVERT TEAMS OF FEMALE US AND AFGHAN SOLDIERS OPENED THE DOOR FOR WOMEN IN COMBAT

    “One of my pet peeves is when people try to blame something on a gender or a race or a sexual preference or anything but the human standing in front of you, who can or cannot do something,” said retired Seg. Major George Fraser, Special Forces, who also received four Purple Hearts and six Bronze Stars for Valor. “That’s the end of it for me.”

    The series is dedicated to Capt. Jennifer Moreno, the second woman in the CST program to die in combat while out with her team of Rangers on Oct. 5, 2013, during a raid on a compound in Afghanistan. 

    Capt. Jennifer Moreno laughs alongside retired First Sgt. Catherine Harris

    Capt. Jennifer Moreno, left, laughs alongside retired Master Sgt. Catherine Harris in Afghanistan during a deployment with the Army’s Cultural Support Team (CST) in 2011. (Dulcinea Productions)

    Moreno and the team she was with were ambushed after combatants lured the unit into a deactivated minefield, before the IEDs were then activated by the terrorists they were pursuing.

    The situation was akin to “teleporting yourself into the middle of a minefield,” explained Special Operations Veteran Luke Ryan, Army Ranger, who was there that night. 

    The operation, which was expected to be a “quick snatch and go,” became one of the most brutal nights of the war, which saw four American soldiers killed and 30 others wounded.

    Moreno, a trained nurse, was killed after she ran across the IED-embedded compound in an attempt to reach a fallen comrade.

    “She was going to save a life come hell or high water,” said retired Sgt. Tom Block, Army Ranger, who was severely wounded by a suicide bomber that night, permanently costing him his right eye. “She embodied heroism that night.”

    Capt. Jennifer Moreno in Afghanistan

    From left: Special Operations Veteran Jessica Yahn, Capt. Jennifer Moreno and Maj. Talisa Dauz are pictured during a deployment with Army’s Cultural Support Team (CST) program in Afghanistan in 2011. (Dulcinea Productions)

    Sgt. Joseph Peters, Special Agent; Sgt. Patrick Hawkins, Army Ranger; and Pfc. Cody Patterson, Army Ranger, were also killed in the IED ambush.

    The CST program, along with others like Lioness and Female Engagement Teams, contributed to the U.S. Department of Defense’s decision in 2013 to officially open up combat roles to women.

    Women would not be permitted to vie for the elite slots until 2015, which would see the first two women to graduate from the infamous Army Ranger school. Since then, over 140 women have graduated from the program alongside their male peers. 

    Though the Army in 2022 lowered general physical standards for women and older troops completing annual physical exams, it did not alter the standards required from graduates of its elite programs like the Rangers or Green Berets. 

    Capt. Kristen Griest becomes one of the first women to graduate Army Ranger School in 2015

    Army Capt. Kristen Griest participates in training at the U.S. Army Ranger School at Fort Benning, Georgia, on April 20, 2015. Griest and 1st Lt. Shaye Haver were the first female soldiers to graduate from Ranger School. (Scott Brooks/U.S. Army via Getty Images)

    The women of the CST program have championed calls to maintain universal standards for males and females in arms, but they flat reject the argument that women shouldn’t be allowed in combat.

    When asked what Agee hopes viewers will take away from the series, he said first and foremost the “recognition of unsung heroes in our midst” and the “sacrifices that our men and women who serve in the military take day in and day out.”

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    Agee quoted a comment made by Ryan in the series in which he said, “There is a mechanism of dialogue that is broken in the United States right now.”

    “I really would love ‘Guerrera’ to go a small step in fixing that mechanism of dialogue,” he said. “I hope we can watch a documentary film that deals with complicated concepts, that we will discuss them respectfully.”

    “We can differ in terms of opinion, but we can all come back at the end of the day to understand and to underline the unity… [the] thing that we need the most of in this country,” Agee added. “It’s what makes a military unit thrive, and it’s also what I think makes a society thrive.”

    The series “Guerrera” will also be released on Apple in the coming weeks.

  • House Dem expects first DOGE subcommittee meeting to be ‘full-on combat’

    House Dem expects first DOGE subcommittee meeting to be ‘full-on combat’

    Sparks are expected to fly at Congress’ first Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) subcommittee meeting Wednesday, according to one Democratic lawmaker in the House of Representatives.

    Democrats have blasted billionaire Elon Musk, who President Donald Trump tapped to lead DOGE, over the past week for trying to eliminate waste, fraud and abuse in federal spending and trim the more than 2-million-person federal workforce.

    Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, told Axios that she plans to use the hearing to “clarify for the American people” why DOGE’s actions are “illegal” and why “Elon Musk has no official role to do this.” 

    “I think it’s going to be a sh–show. I don’t really anticipate anything productive coming out of this,” Crockett said. “I don’t anticipate that it’s going to be nice. I anticipate full-on combat, because DOGE is clearly the devil right now.”

    DOGE SLASHES OVER $100M IN DEI FUNDING AT EDUCATION DEPARTMENT: ‘WIN FOR EVERY STUDENT’

    Rep. Jasmine Crockett speaks during the We Choose To Fight: Nobody Elected Elon rally at the U.S. Department of the Treasury on Feb. 4, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Jemal Countess/Getty Images for MoveOn)

    DOGE subcommittee chair Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., told the outlet she has “high hopes” that Republicans and Democrats will engage productively during the hearing, which she said will focus on “Medicaid improper payments.”

    “We’re going to be talking about solutions, there are going to be big savings,” she said, adding that she feels the issue is bipartisan.

    ‘THIS HAS TO STOP’: HOUSE DEM FACES BACKLASH FOR ‘PROMOTING PHYSICAL VIOLENCE’ AT DOGE PROTEST

    On Tuesday, Musk appeared with Trump in the Oval Office as the president prepared to sign an executive order concerning the billionaire’s work leading DOGE.

    Musk, in some of his first public comments on leading DOGE, told reporters that there are some good people in the federal bureaucracy, but that they need to be accountable, and the budget deficit needs to be addressed.

    Musk and Trump in Oval Office

    President Donald Trump speaks with reporters as Elon Musk listens in the Oval Office at the White House on Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025, in Washington. (Photo/Alex Brandon)

    He also pushed back against critics who have accused him of mounting a hostile takeover of the government, saying he wants to add “common-sense controls” to federal spending and that cutting government waste is not “draconian.”

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    “The people voted for major government reform, and that’s what the people are going to get,” Musk said. “That’s what democracy is all about.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

  • House Dems organize rapid response task force and litigation group to combat Trump agenda

    House Dems organize rapid response task force and litigation group to combat Trump agenda

    House Minority Leader Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., sent House Democrats a letter Monday announcing the formation of a rapid response team and litigation group to “push back against the far-right extremism” since President Donald Trump took office. 

    In the “Dear Colleague” letter, Jeffries wrote, “I write with respect to our ongoing effort to push back against the far-right extremism that is being relentlessly unleashed on the American people.”

    Jeffries characterized the political landscape as “a multifaceted struggle to protect and defend everyday Americans from the harm being inflicted by this administration.”

    The letter states House Democrats have as a result officially established a Rapid Response Task Force and Litigation Working Group chaired by Colorado Democratic Rep. Joe Neguse. 

    DEMS FLIRT WITH GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN THREAT DESPITE PAST FUROR OVER SPENDING CLIFF

    House Minority Leader Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, right, sent House Democrats a letter Monday announcing the formation of a rapid response team and litigation group to “push back against the far-right extremism” since President Donald Trump took office. (Getty Images)

    Jeffries said that Democrats would continue to be “committed to driving down the high cost of living for everyday Americans.” He criticized House Republicans for continuing to “launch far-right attacks on Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, public safety and the education of our children,” saying the American people were “counting” on Democrats to stop them. 

    Fox News Digital reached out to the White House, Jeffries’ office and Neguse’s office for comment but did not immediately hear back. 

    SPEAKER JOHNSON SAYS HOUSE WILL MATCH TRUMP’S PACE AS DEMOCRATS ARE LEFT ‘FLAILING’

    Jeffries responded to a Fox News inquiry about the task force, saying, “It’s been an ongoing effort to push back against far-right extremism.”

    Jeffries told Fox that “not a single thing that [Republicans have] actually done is a matter of law right now” and said such actions suggest Republicans are “in disarray.”

    Rep. Joe Neguse speaks at a press conference

    The letter states House Democrats have as a result officially established a Rapid Response Task Force and Litigation Working Group chaired by Colorado Democrat Rep. Joe Neguse, pictured here. (Getty)

    Jeffries, along with House Democrat colleagues, have unveiled efforts to resist the president’s agenda since Trump took office in mid-January. 

    Just last week, House Democrats announced legislation that seeks to secure the personal data of Americans amid the Department of Government Efficiency’s (DOGE) spending sweep.

    HOUSE DEMOCRAT LEAVES CONGRESSIONAL DOGE CAUCUS, SAYING MUSK IS ‘BLOWING THINGS UP’

    The legislation, titled the Taxpayer Data Protection Act, was revealed Thursday to “shield the American people from this out-of-control power grab, permanently, and make sure that the financial, personal, medical, and confidential information of the American people is protected.”

    Elon Musk’s DOGE team has spent the last several weeks identifying “wasteful” spending within various governmental agencies. 

    Elon Musk and DOGE Caucus logo

    Elon Musk’s DOGE team has spent the last several weeks identifying “wasteful” spending within various governmental agencies. (House of Representatives/Getty)

    DOGE became the target of various lawsuits in the weeks following its establishment. A federal New York judge on Saturday ruled to block DOGE officials from accessing personal data such as social security numbers and bank account numbers. 

    Trump’s Justice Department railed against the order, calling it an “anti-Constitutional” ruling. 

    Vice President JD Vance also called the ruling unconstitutional on X, saying it was an example of judicial overreach.

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    “If a judge tried to tell a general how to conduct a military operation, that would be illegal. If a judge tried to command the attorney general in how to use her discretion as a prosecutor, that’s also illegal. Judges aren’t allowed to control the executive’s legitimate power,” Vance wrote Sunday.

    Fox News’ Kelly Phares, Tyler Olson, Aubrie Spady, and Anders Hagstrom contributed to this report. 

  • ‘Integrity of the Court’: Cruz reintroduces amendment to combat court expansion efforts

    ‘Integrity of the Court’: Cruz reintroduces amendment to combat court expansion efforts

    FIRST ON FOX: Sen. Ted Cruz, R-TX, is reintroducing a constitutional amendment to cap the number of Supreme Court Justices at nine, amid calls to expand the court. 

    Cruz, now joined by 15 cosponsors including Republican Sens. Bill Cassidy (LA), Chuck Grassley (IA), Mike Crapo (ID), Thom Tillis (NC) and John Cornyn (TX), previously introduced the amendment in 2021 and in 2023. 

    In a statement to Fox News Digital, Cruz said Democrats are seeking to “use the Court to advance policy goals they can’t accomplish electorally.”

    SUPREME COURT TO CONSIDER AN EFFORT TO ESTABLISH THE NATION’S FIRST PUBLICLY FUNDED RELIGIOUS CHARTER SCHOOL

    “Such a move would be a direct assault on the design of our Constitution, which is designed to ensure the Supreme Court remains a non-partisan guardian of the rule of law,” Cruz said. “This amendment is a badly-needed check on their efforts to undermine the integrity of the Court.” 

    Sen. Ted Cruz, R-TX, is reintroducing a constitutional amendment to cap the number of Supreme Court Justices at nine, amid calls to expand the court. (Reuters)

    Likewise, Grassley said the amendment would ensure the Court’s independence from political pressures. 

    “Democrats’ radical court packing scheme would erase the legitimacy of the Supreme Court and destroy historic precedent,” Grassley said in a statement. “The Court is a co-equal branch of government, and our Keep Nine Amendment will ensure that it remains independent from political pressure.”

    The nine-justice court currently has a conservative supermajority. Following various landmark decisions in recent years, including the overturning of Roe v. Wade in 2022, Democrats have re-upped calls to impose court reforms, including expanding and packing the court as well as imposing term limits. 

    TRUMP’S ‘TWO SEXES’ EXECUTIVE ORDER COMES ON HEELS OF SCOTUS ACCEPTING ANOTHER CHALLENGE TO LGBT AGENDA

    In October, then-Vice President Kamala Harris entertained the notion of imposing court reforms during a CNN town hall. Harris was asked if she would support expanding the number of justices from the current nine to 12. 

    “There is no question that the American people increasingly are losing confidence in the Supreme Court and, in large part, because of the behavior of certain members of that court and because of certain rulings, including the Dobbs decision and taking away a precedent that had been in place for 50 years, protecting a woman’s right to make decisions about her own body,” Harris said during the event.

    Kamala Harris CNN town hall

    In October, then-Vice President Kamala Harris entertained the notion of imposing court reforms during a CNN town hall. (Screenshot/CNN)

    “So, I do believe that there should be some kind of reform of the court, and we can study what that actually looks like.” 

    PORN CASE IN THE SUPREME COURT THIS WEEK IS ABOUT PROTECTING CHILDREN, SAYS REPUBLICAN AG

    Rep. Ilhan Omar, a Democrat from Minnesota, also called for reforming the Court that same month, saying in social media posts, “We need to radically reform the broken Supreme Court.”

    Democrats have consistently proposed legislation to expand the Supreme Court to a 13-justice bench. 

    US Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh arrive for the inauguration ceremony

    Sen. Ted Cruz’s amendment reintroduction comes in light of calls from the left to expand the Supreme Court as well as impose term limits on the justices. (Saul Loeb//Pool via REUTERS)

    In May 2023, Georgia Democrat Rep. Hank Johnson joined Democratic Sens. Ed Markey of Massachusetts, Tina Smith of Minnesota, and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, as well as Democratic Reps. Jerry Nadler of New York, Cori Bush of Mississippi, and Adam Schiff of California, in reintroducing the Judiciary Act of 2023.  

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    “We want to prevent this kind of rot and decay from ever overtaking a Supreme Court again,” Johnson told Fox News Digital in October. 

  • Famed NFL agent Leigh Steinberg looking to combat concussion dangers with new foundation

    Famed NFL agent Leigh Steinberg looking to combat concussion dangers with new foundation

    American sports agent Leigh Steinberg has represented some of the biggest stars in football history, and now he’s taking another step in his long-time side passion of combating one of the sports’ biggest dangers – concussions.

    Steinberg recently launched the Leigh Steinberg Foundation, which aims to educate parents and fund research for concussion treatment in sports. 

    “It’s our effort to raise money for research to promote awareness, prevention and cures, to put money aside for at-risk kids who have neurological problems or concussion that can’t get treatment, and to fund research,” Steinberg said. “We have a doctor’s committee with 10 doctors on it, and we’ll be raising money to try and bring more healing to this.”

    The veteran agent is also set to throw a Super Bowl party in New Orleans, and is inviting several neurologists from across the country to educate the attendees on concussions as well.

    And as Super Bowl LIX marks the final game of the 2024 football season, the country will look to turn the page on one of the scariest years for brain injuries in recent history. 

    SIGN UP FOR TUBI AND STREAM SUPER BOWL LIX FOR FREE

    In Alabama, Morgan Academy junior quarterback Caden Tellier received an injury to the head during the third quarter of his team’s 30-22 win against Southern Academy in Selma, Alabama, in late August. 

    Just days after that, a 13-year-old in West Virginia died after suffering a head injury at a middle school football practice. Eighth-grader Cohen Craddock, who played defensive line for Madison Middle School in Madison, suffered severe brain bleeding and swelling after making a tackle.

    Months after that, Alabama A&M University football player Medrick Burnett Jr. died after sustaining a serious head injury in a game in late November. 

    Steinberg says his inspiration to pursue this cause came when he saw many of his own quarterback clients get repeatedly hit in the head during the late 1980s. 

    “They kept getting hit in the head, and when we went to the doctor and we asked, ‘How many is too many hits, and when should they contemplate retiring?’ The doctors had no answer because the brain is the last frontier of medical research,” Steinberg told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview. 

    HOW TO WATCH SUPER BOWL LIX BETWEEN CHIEFS, EAGLES STREAMED ON TUBI

    Steinberg started hosting panels with players to promote awareness for brain health in the 1990s. At one of those panels, an appearance by neuropathologist Bennet Ifeakandu Omalu, the subject of the movie “Concussion,” convinced Steinberg of how many concussions are too many. 

    Steinberg was told that three or more was the magic number. After that, Omalu said, there’s an “exponentially” higher rate of Alzheimer’s, Parkinsons, premature cynicity, horno traumatic encephalopathy and depression. 

    But Steinberg has seen players play after suffering a third concussion. 

    “Part of the problem with players is they’re in a state of denial when it comes to their physical health,” Steinberg said. “Since they were in pop culture, little league they believe that real men play this play every circumstance. The concept of long-term health is an abstraction. So, it’s hard to get them to protect themselves, and it’s just very difficult.” 

    Steinberg even admits that he has seen some of his very own clients suffer at least three concussions, and it gave him reservations about encouraging them to keep playing afterward.

    “I would talk about with them privately, because ultimately it’s their decision, but I try to be a voice that would interject into the dialogue the fact that traumatic brain injury is real, it has long-term consequences,” Steinberg said, adding that those conversations took place before recent advancements in medical technology that give clearer pictures and treatments of a person’s brain health. 

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    Leigh Steinberg speaks on stage during The Buoniconti Fund to Cure Paralysis’ 39th Annual Great Sports Legends Dinner, at the Hilton Midtown on September 30, 2024, in New York City. The event raises the much-needed funds for The Buoniconti Fund, the fundraising arm of The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, a designated Center of Excellence at the University of Miami Miller School of medicine and the world’s premier spinal cord injury research center.  (Mike Coppola/Getty Images for The Buoniconti Fund To Cure Paralysis)

    Steinberg has specialized in representing star quarterbacks as an agent. He presented the No. 1 overall pick in the NFL draft eight times, while representing 62 total first-round picks. His client list includes NFL legends like Troy Aikman and Steve Young. 

    This past NFL season was a particularly bad year for quarterback brain injuries.

    Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts, who is set to lead his team in the Super Bowl in New Orleans, suffered a concussion in the first half against the Washington Commanders in Week 16. It ended his regular season, but he returned in time for the playoffs. 

    Tubi promo

    Super Bowl LIX will be streamed on Tubi. (Tubi)

    But prior to the playoffs, Hurts said that he didn’t remember an incident that happened on the sideline, just moments after he suffered the concussion. 

    “It’s so far long ago, I don’t really remember,” Hurts said to reporters on Jan. 10. “Been out of routine, you go through a routine everyday, and being out of that is challenging. I’m obviously dealing with different symptoms, ain’t fun either.”

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    Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa suffered a concussion – the third of his NFL career – in an early-season tilt with the Buffalo Bills, on a nationally televised game. Tagovailoa had previously suffered multiple concussions within the span of just weeks in the 2022 season. The third of his career sparked national controversy, as some former players and media pundits called on him to retire. 

    Tagovailoa returned to play this past season anyway. 

    Jacksonville Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence suffered a concussion when he was the victim of an illegal hit by Houston Texans linebacker Azeez Al-Shaair during a game in early December. The hit ended Lawrence’s season, as Al-Shaair was suspended for three games and heavily criticized by the public and even an NFL executive. 

    As the country now turns its attention to New Orleans for Super Bowl LIX between the Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs, Steinberg will have a presence as he looks to counter the danger that comes with championship-level football.

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  • Colombia president decrees emergency powers to restore order in coca region wracked by rebel combat

    Colombia president decrees emergency powers to restore order in coca region wracked by rebel combat

    Colombia’s president issued a decree Friday giving him emergency powers to restore order in a coca-growing region bordering Venezuela that has been wracked in recent days by a deadly turf war among dissident rebel groups.

    President Gustavo Petro’s decree, which can be extended, gives him 90 days to impose curfews, restrict traffic and take other steps that would normally violate Colombians’ civil rights or require congressional approval.

    AT LEAST 80 PEOPLE KILLED IN NORTHEAST COLOMBIA AS PEACE TALKS FAIL, OFFICIAL SAYS

    It is the first time in more than a decade that a Colombian president has used such an extreme measure and underscores the seriousness of the current conflict in a country that for decades was paralyzed by political violence.

    However, it applies only to the rural Catatumbo region near the border with Venezuela, where the Colombian state has struggled for decades to gain a foothold. In the past week, at least 80 people have been killed and an estimated 36,000 more displaced as fighting intensifies between the National Liberation Army, or ELN, and holdouts from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.

    Police patrol in Tibu, Colombia, Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025, following guerrilla attacks that have killed dozens of people and forced thousands to flee their homes in the Catatumbo region.  (AP Photo/Fernando Vergara)

    Petro’s conservative opponents have criticized the move, accusing the former guerrilla of riding roughshod over the constitution. But some activists have celebrated it, saying they are hopeful the move translates into better infrastructure, health care and schools in the traditionally lawless region.

    “Why are the armed groups here? Because the last government hasn’t made investments. They’ve abandoned us,” Jaime Botero, an activist in the town of Tibu, told The Associated Press.

    Earlier this week Petro reactivated arrest orders against 31 top ELN commanders that had been suspended as part of an effort to woo the the Cuban revolution-inspired insurgency into a peace deal to end its 60 year war against the state. Petro also suspended all peace talks, which have advanced slowly since he took office in 2022.

    The ELN has traditionally dominated in Catatumbo but has been losing ground to holdouts from the FARC, a guerrilla group that largely disbanded after signing a peace deal in 2016 with the government.

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    The current conflict is spilling across the border into Venezuela, where some of those fleeing the violence have sought refuge.

    The current whereabouts of the ELN peace negotiators is unknown. But Cuba’s government this week said they are not there, leading some to speculate they may be hiding in Venezuela, which is one of the sponsors of Petro’s peace initiative with the ELN.