Trump says US military eliminated 'infamous' Tren de Aragua leader in lethal strike
President Donald Trump confirmed the U.S. military killed Tren de Aragua leader Niño Guerrero in a lethal kinetic strike.

This Sunday, June 14, U.S. President Donald Trump will celebrate his 80th birthday by turning the White House's South Lawn into a cage-fighting arena that is being dubbed "The Claw." Critics of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) event are warning that it will cost taxpayers a fortune, and former U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) official Miles Taylor views the event as a tragic symbol of the United States' "decline." Writing for the UK-based i Paper, Taylor — who served as DHS chief of staff during Trump's first presidency — laments, "You've been told the cage fight is an example of American excess. I think it's a gaudy symbol of something much worse: the potential end. The decay of America is symbolized by everything that had to be torn down to make room for a fight cage and a ballroom, from the South Lawn and the East Wing of the White House to the people and the principles that once stood between one man's impulses and the abuse of his power."Taylor continues, "When the lights of The Claw rise over the White House grounds on Sunday and hulking fighters walk out from the Oval Office to applause, I hope you'll understand what you are really watching. A president has deluded his people into clapping for their own decline — and for his delight."Back in September 2018, the conservative Taylor was still serving as DHS chief of staff when he anonymously wrote a New York Times op-ed headlined, "I Am Part of the Resistance Inside the Trump Administration." Taylor's op-ed detailed efforts within the federal government to dissuade Trump from following through on his worst ideas. During Trump's first presidency, Taylor recalls in the i Paper, there were a lot more people who were willing to tell him "no" — whereas now, he is surrounded by obedient loyalists. Those loyalists, Taylor laments, were happy to encourage Sunday's UFC event."If you wanted a single image to tell you where America now finds itself," the former DHS official warns, "you could not invent a more precise one. The annual extravaganza that has become the president's birthday does all the talking. We didn't previously let our presidents glorify themselves like this, as if their birth were a national holiday. Then last year, Trump arranged a first-of-its-kind military parade for himself. This year, he's building a gladiator's arena at the People's House, partly to celebrate his big day and partly for the entertainment of the masses — all of it amid unprecedented allegations of corruption and ceaseless controversies emanating from Trump's second term."Taylor recalls that during the first Trump administration, "the people who told him 'no' held the line — America wasn't going to throw him a $92m birthday party parade to feed Trump's ego.""Those folks are gone," Taylor warns. "I point that out a lot for a reason…. The men and women who once said 'no' have been fired, frightened off or converted into courtiers. Trump's gluttonous appetite runs free — a fitting symbol for what's happening to the American republic. Last year, he finally got his parade, a $45m affair on his 79th birthday that will be best remembered for a squeaky tank trundling past half-empty bleachers, and which, by several accounts, left him disappointed. This year, he gets gladiators."
President Donald Trump confirmed the U.S. military killed Tren de Aragua leader Niño Guerrero in a lethal kinetic strike.
"Balance of Power" co-host Joe Mathieu gets a first-hand look at “The Claw,” the nearly 100-foot custom structure built for Sunday’s UFC fight on the South Lawn, marking America’s 250th birthday and President Trump’s 80th. The massive production is drawing scrutiny over the logistics of staging a combat sport at the White House — and Trump’s financial stake in UFC’s parent company. (Source: Bloomberg)
A commercial airline pilot received a baffling response from the FAA after Trump's UFC lights blinded them while landing, MeidasTouch reported.The pilot spoke anonymously about how powerful lights from the UFC octagon on the White House South Lawn filled the cockpit during a landing at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. It was "10 times worse than any laser illumination event," the pilot told MeidasTouch.Landing an aircraft relies heavily on visual references, according to MeidasTouch. The pilot filed reports with the Federal Aviation Administration and NASA's Aviation Safety Reporting System.FAA personnel told the pilot to contact the White House about the safety concerns. MeidasTouch noted that the pilot's reports "raise questions" about how well the fight's organizers coordinated with aviation authorities, considering the illuminated UFC setup's proximity to the "busiest flight corridors."The FAA recently recommended blinking red lights for Trump's triumphal arch because of how close it is to busy D.C. flight corridors. MeidasTouch also brought up heightened concern ever since an American Airlines flight fatally collided with a U.S. Army helicopter last year.
Paramount Skydance's greenlight to purchase Warner Bros. Discovery will lead to a major shakeup at CNN, warned a political strategist.The upheaval coming for CNN will make recent events at CBS look like peanuts, political strategist Chai Komanduri said on MS NOW. While Paramount awaited approval from the Trump administration for the Warner Bros. deal, CBS ended "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" and ousted a slew of "60 Minutes" anchors and producers."Now, if you can replicate that on CNN, and you can diminish and downsize the voices in opposition to Trump or the criticism of moves of the administration, that gives Trump a lot more power," Komanduri said. "The stories that we have heard out of CBS News will be peanuts compared to the stories that will probably come out from CNN."He warned Kaitlan Collins, the CNN correspondent who has been the target of Trump attacks, and said the Trump administration is "very much interested in who gets to be the CNN White House correspondent."The Trump Department of Justice gave Paramount CEO and MAGA ally David Ellison the thumbs-up to acquire Warner Bros. for $110 billion. One of the most notable Warner Bros. properties is CNN, along with streaming services like HBO Max and Paramount+, and the Warner Bros. movie studio, MS NOW anchor Ari Melber noted.Komanduri added, "One thing Trump wanted was control of CNN," and "that was his entire interest in the deal. Donald Trump and the DOJ weren't interested in who was going to be the next Batman."
The Department of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin faced criticism after attacking New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani during a press conference.Mullin said neither gets along, and added, "It's shameful, and hopefully people in New York will wise up and get a true leader in there in a few years."Critics quickly highlighted the irony of an Oklahoma-based federal official attempting to influence New York City elections regarding its highly popular mayor. Reactions poured into social media. "Nothing like an Oklahoman with no ties to New York City trying to tell the city what to think about its highly popular mayor," wrote Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, senior fellow at the American Immigration Council."New Yorkers definitely want a plumber from Oklahoma telling them what to do," journalist John Harwood wrote."The leader of American Gestapo is both dumb as a rock and purely evil," Norman Ornstein, political scientist and contributing editor for The Atlantic, posted.The controversy was amplified by reports stating Trump and Mamdani maintain a friendly relationship, texting at least twice weekly.Watch the video below. Your browser does not support the video tag.
The Kennedy Center board filed an emergency appeal to block a judge's order requiring Trump's name to be removed from the building's signage and materials.
The Trump Department of Justice approved a major deal that's expected to shake up the entertainment industry, according to reporting by NBC News.Paramount Skydance now has a clearer path to acquiring Warner Bros. Discovery for $110 billion, a person familiar with the deal told NBC News. A formal announcement is expected soon, NBC added. The Trump administration had leverage over Paramount Skydance CEO and MAGA ally David Ellison, who sought to clear the deal through the DOJ. While the deal dangled in uncertainty, Paramount's networks like CBS and CBS News made controversial moves to end The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and fire "60 Minutes" correspondents like Sharyn Alfonsi and Scott Pelley. Paramount+ will also be exclusively streaming the upcoming UFC match on the White House South Lawn.
A UFC fighter on President Donald Trump's White House birthday card once allegedly called his Black opponent a "human gorilla" — and he's far from the only fighter on the bill with baggage.Trump requested veteran heavyweight Derrick Lewis for the card after watching Josh Hokit, 28, battle Lewis' future opponent at UFC 327 in April. Hokit was matched against Lewis for the event — a seven-fight card costing upwards of $60 million — and has since become one of its most talked-about fighters, for dubious reasons.Josh HokitHokit allegedly called Curtis Blaydes, who is Black, a "human gorilla" in the lead-up to their UFC 327 bout — the fight Trump watched before requesting Lewis for the White House card. Hokit is also no stranger to the N-word, has said he wished he could report his own Mexican mother to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and has repeatedly accused high-profile women of being men — including former first lady Michelle Obama and WNBA star Brittney Griner."'And P.S., Brittney Griner is a man,'" Hokit recited in a post-fight poem after his UFC debut in January. He has described himself as "100% transphobic." UFC CEO Dana White, asked about Hokit's post-fight octagon speech, said he hadn't seen it and offered only tepid pushback: "I don't love it."Sean O'MalleyThe card's bantamweight bout features former champion Sean O'Malley, who argued on a 2023 podcast that cheating on his wife was acceptable because self-described misogynist Andrew Tate — charged with rape and human trafficking in Romania — said so."'I'm a king, I pay for everything,'" O'Malley said. "'If I get a little puss on the side, what does that have to do with anything? Andrew Tate explains it well.'" More recently, O'Malley wore a surgical face mask during a face-off with Chinese fighter Song Yadong — a gesture Yadong called "totally racist." O'Malley later apologized, saying it was "a little silly joke."Ilia TopuriaIn the main event, lightweight champion Ilia Topuria returns for the first time since his ex-wife filed a domestic abuse complaint against him in December 2025. The two reached an out-of-court settlement in February; she withdrew the complaint."'These allegations are entirely unfounded,'" Topuria said in a December Instagram post, adding that he had submitted evidence to authorities to pursue legal action for "attempted extortion."White was himself filmed slapping his wife at a nightclub on New Year's Eve 2022.