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  • ULA Vulcan火箭在发射机密太空部队有效载荷时助推器出现问题


    2026年2月12日 / 美国东部时间上午6:59 / CBS新闻

    联合发射联盟(ULA)的Vulcan火箭在周四发射时,其捆绑式固体燃料助推器的喷管处或附近似乎发生了烧穿,但该公司表示,火箭其余部分似乎仍进行了“正常”的太空上升。

    这枚两级Vulcan火箭于美国东部时间凌晨4:22点火升空,在290万磅推力(由双甲烷燃烧的蓝色起源BE-4发动机和四个诺斯罗普·格鲁曼公司的固体燃料助推器提供)的推动下,从卡纳维拉尔角太空部队站的41号发射台壮丽升空。

    联合发射联盟Vulcan火箭在一项主要为机密的太空部队任务中发射,将一颗太空监视卫星送入地球高轨道。该火箭还搭载了一系列较小的有效载荷。联合发射联盟

    飞行的初始阶段似乎进展顺利,但在发射后约20秒,其中一个捆绑式GEM 63XL助推器的喷管处似乎发生了烧穿,一股火焰突然喷出并向一侧射出。

    ULA在X平台(原推特)上发布消息称:“我们在飞行早期观察到四个固体火箭发动机中的一个出现了问题。团队目前正在分析数据。”该公司表示,Vulcan火箭的芯级、上面级和航天器继续“正常”运行。

    在上升过程中,助推器被抛离前不久,跟踪摄像机显示火箭开始绕其纵轴进行相当快速的滚动。

    这种意外运动是由故障喷管的侧向推力还是其他问题引起的目前尚不清楚。但一旦助推器被抛离,这种异常运动就减缓并停止了。

    太空飞行新闻摄影师亚当·伯恩斯坦(Adam Bernstein)拍摄到了Vulcan火箭发射的火焰,显示出固体燃料捆绑式助推器底部(Vulcan火箭第一级底部四个助推器之一)的喷管似乎发生了烧穿。

    无论如何,与以往机密军事任务一样,ULA在第二级发动机点火后不久就结束了发射直播。预计在计划的10小时任务结束后才会有进一步更新。

    这是ULA新型Vulcan火箭的第四次发射,这是一枚采用全美国制造组件的重型运载火箭,旨在取代该公司的Atlas 5(部分使用俄罗斯制造的第一级发动机)和已退役的Delta 4系列发射器。

    2024年进行了两次“认证”飞行,以确保火箭能够携带高价值国家安全有效载荷。第二次认证飞行期间的喷管故障引发了长时间调查和纠正措施。

    2025年Vulcan的第三次飞行成功发射了该火箭的首个太空部队有效载荷。周四的发射是其第二次机密任务,也是第四次整体发射。

    ULA官员在发射前表示,该公司计划今年进行超过20次发射,包括2-4次Atlas 5任务和16-18次Vulcan任务,利用东西海岸的发射台。目前尚不清楚解决明显喷管故障的工作是否会影响这一计划。

    艺术家对两颗GSSAP卫星在赤道上空22,300英里处同步轨道上的印象,它们可以监控其他航天器的移动。美国太空部队

    周四的主要有效载荷是一颗由诺斯罗普·格鲁曼公司建造的地球同步太空态势感知计划(GSSAP)卫星,旨在监控赤道上空22,300英里高轨道上其他卫星的行为和运动。

    在这个高度,卫星与地球自转同步绕地球运行,因此在天空中看起来是静止的。地球同步轨道受到大量民用和军用通信卫星、电子监听航天器等的青睐。

    ULA Atlas和Vulcan项目副总裁加里·文茨(Gary Wentz)表示,GSSAP卫星旨在“提高国家快速探测、识别、表征和归因于地球同步环境中太空系统干扰的能力”。

    在周四的发射之前,ULA已部署了六个GSSAP太空监视站,分别在2014年、2016年和2022年使用两枚Delta 4火箭和一枚Atlas 5火箭成对发射。在发射前的新闻发布会上,ULA管理人员拒绝透露此次Vulcan飞行中可能搭载的GSSAP卫星数量。

    在Vulcan火箭鼻锥下方的GSSAP卫星下方安装了另一颗被称为ESPAStar的航天器,这是一个太阳能可展开平台,“能够容纳最多六个托管有效载荷和12个可分离(即插即用)有效载荷的任意组合”,诺斯罗普·格鲁曼公司表示。周四发射的所有ESPAStar有效载荷均为机密。

    任务管理人员在发射前表示,这次飞行将是ULA火箭迄今为止最长的一次飞行,需要10小时到达近地球同步轨道的多个点。

    文茨表示:“这正是我们设计这枚运载火箭以支持的任务类型。这是将重要有效载荷送入非常复杂的轨道,是多任务的国家安全太空任务,直接进入地球同步轨道。因此,这枚火箭非常适合此类任务。”

    联合发射联盟是波音公司与洛克希德·马丁公司各持股50%的合资企业。

    ULA Vulcan rocket suffers booster problem while launching classified Space Force payloads

    February 12, 2026 / 6:59 AM EST / CBS News

    A United Launch Alliance Vulcan rocket carrying a suite of classified Space Force payloads suffered what appeared to be a burn-through at or near the nozzle of a strap-on solid-fuel booster Thursday but apparently made an otherwise “nominal” ascent to space, the company said.

    The two-stage Vulcan rocket thundered to life at 4:22 a.m. EST and majestically climbed away from pad 41 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station atop 2.9 million pounds of thrust from twin methane-burning Blue Origin BE-4 engines and four Northrop Grumman solid-fuel boosters.

    A United Launch Alliance Vulcan rocket blasts off on a mostly-classified Space Force mission to put a space surveillance satellite in high Earth orbit. It also carried a suite of smaller payloads. United Launch Alliance

    The initial moments of the flight appeared to go smoothly, but about 20 seconds after liftoff, one of the strap-on GEM 63XL boosters suffered what appeared to be a burn-through in its nozzle, with a jet of flame suddenly appearing and shooting out to one side.

    “We had an observation early during flight on one of the four solid rocket motors,” ULA said in a post on X. “The team is currently reviewing the data.” The company said the Vulcan core stage, upper stage and spacecraft continued to perform “nominally.”

    Later in the ascent, shortly before the boosters were jettisoned, tracking cameras showed the rocket began a fairly rapid roll about its long axis.

    Whether that unexpected motion was caused by the sideways thrust from the failed nozzle or by some other problem was not known. But once the boosters were jettisoned, the unusual motion slowed and stopped.

    A Spaceflight Now photographer tracking the Vulcan launch captured the jet of flame from an apparent nozzle burn-through at the base of a solid-fuel strap-on booster, one of four attached to the base of the Vulcan rocket’s first stage. Adam Bernstein / Spaceflight Now

    In any case, as usual with classified military missions, ULA ended its launch broadcast shortly after the second stage engine ignition. No further updates were expected until after the planned 10-hour mission concluded.

    It was the fourth launch of ULA’s new Vulcan, a heavy-lift rocket with all-American components intended to replace the company’s Atlas 5, powered in part by Russian-built first-stage engines, and its already-retired Delta 4 family of launchers.

    Two “certification” flights were launched in 2024 to clear the rocket for use carrying high-value national security payloads. A nozzle failure during the second certification flight triggered a lengthy investigation and corrective action.

    The Vulcan’s third flight in 2025 successfully launched the the rocket’s first Space Force payload. Thursday’s launch was the rocket’s second classified mission and its fourth overall.

    ULA officials said before launch that the company planned to launch more than 20 flights this year, two to four Atlas 5 missions along with 16 to 18 Vulcan flights, utilizing launch pads on both coasts. Whether work to resolve the apparent nozzle failure might cut into that schedule is not yet known.

    An artist’s impression of two GSSAP satellites in geosynchronous orbit 22,300 miles above the equator, where they can monitor the movements of other spacecraft. USSF

    The primary payload Thursday was a Geosynchronous Space Situational Awareness Program (GSSAP) satellite, built by Northrop Grumman and designed to keep tabs on behavior and movement of other satellites in a 22,300-mile high orbit above the equator.

    At that altitude, satellites circle the globe in lockstep with Earth’s rotation and thus appear stationary in the sky. Geosynchronous orbit is favored by scores of civilian and military communications satellites, electronic eavesdropping spacecraft and others.

    The GSSAP satellites are intended “to improve the country’s ability to rapidly detect, learn, characterize and attribute disturbances to space systems in the geosynchronous environment,” said Gary Wentz, ULA vice president of the company’s Atlas and Vulcan programs.

    Going into Thursday’s launch, ULA had put up six GSSAP space surveillance stations, launching them in pairs in 2014, 2016 and 2022 using two Delta 4 rockets and an Atlas 5. During a pre-launch news conference, ULA managers declined to say how many GSSAPs might have been aboard the Vulcan for Thursday’s flight.

    Mounted below the GSSAP in the Vulcan’s nose cone was another spacecraft known as an ESPAStar, a solar-powered deployable platform “capable of accommodating any combination of up to six hosted and 12 separable (fly-away) payloads,” according to Northrop Grumman. All of the ESPAStar payloads launched Thursday were classified.

    Mission managers said before launch the flight would mark the longest yet for a ULA rocket, a 10-hour trip to multiple points in near-geosynchronous orbit.

    “This is the type of mission that the team actually designed this launch vehicle to support,” Wentz said. “It’s significant payloads to very complex orbits, multi-manifested national security space, direct-to-geo. So this is tailor-fit for that mission.”

    The United Launch Alliance is a 50-50 Boeing-Lockheed Martin joint venture.

  • RFK Jr’s vaccine agenda faces Boston judge who has handed Trump setbacks


    February 12, 2026 11:10 AM UTC / Reuters

    Item 1 of 2 U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attends a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., January 29, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo

    [1/2]U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attends a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., January 29, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo [Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab]

    • Summary
    • Judge Murphy has ruled against other Trump initiatives
    • Biden appointee joined federal bench in Boston in 2024
    • Medical groups call vaccine policy changes unlawful

    BOSTON, Feb 12 (Reuters) – Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s sweeping efforts to upend U.S. immunization policies are set to go before a federal judge in Boston who already has drawn President Donald Trump’s ire for impeding his administration’s policies on multiple fronts.

    U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy on Friday is due to hold a hearing in a legal challenge by medical groups that assert that Kennedy and the agencies he oversees are unlawfully reshaping federal policies in ways that will increase barriers to getting vaccinated, fuel distrust in shots and lower immunization rates.

    Jumpstart your morning with the latest legal news delivered straight to your inbox from The Daily Docket newsletter. Sign up here.

    Kennedy, a longtime anti-vaccine activist who has cast doubt on the safety and efficacy of vaccines contrary to scientific evidence, was appointed by the Republican president last year as the U.S. government’s top health official. His critics have said Kennedy’s actions on vaccines and other areas will undermine public health.

    APPOINTED BY BIDEN


    Murphy was appointed by Democratic President Joe Biden, confirmed by the U.S. Senate and joined the federal bench in Massachusetts in December 2024, the month before Trump returned to the presidency.

    Murphy has earned the scorn of Trump’s administration after issuing a series of rulings that blocked core parts of his hardline immigration agenda, prevented it from gutting funding for federal research and halted its efforts to prevent the further development of offshore wind energy.

    The judge is a former public defender who previously ran a small criminal defense law firm based in Worcester, Massachusetts. He told lawyers at an event last week he “had not anticipated some of the more nationwide cases that have been a part of the practice, here in Massachusetts especially.”

    Cases with national significance have been piling up on the dockets of Massachusetts-based judges like Murphy, as Trump opponents strategically funnel litigation into the federal court in Boston now dominated by the judicial appointees of Democratic presidents.

    VACCINE PANEL OVERHAUL


    At Friday’s hearing, the American Academy of Pediatrics and other plaintiffs are expected to ask Murphy to issue a preliminary injunction that would prevent the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from implementing a revised childhood immunization schedule and block Kennedy’s handpicked vaccine advisory panel from holding its February 25-26 meeting.

    They argue the CDC acted unlawfully when on January 5 it reduced the number of routinely recommended childhood vaccinations to 11 and downgraded the immunization recommendations for six diseases, including rotavirus, influenza and hepatitis A.

    They also are challenging Kennedy’s decision last year to remove and replace all 17 independent experts who previously had served on the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, whose recommendations shape U.S. vaccine practices.

    The plaintiffs said that resulted in a panel dominated by vaccine skeptics appointed solely because their views aligned with those of Kennedy.

    Murphy in a ruling last month allowing the case to proceed said those allegations were “sufficient to plausibly suggest the committee is neither fairly balanced nor free of inappropriate influence,” in violation of the requirements for such panels set out in a U.S. law called the Federal Advisory Committee Act.

    Justice Department lawyers argue that the plaintiffs are seeking a court-ordered ban on the Department of Health and Human Services “receiving and giving advice on vaccines.” They say the CDC’s guidance on vaccines is a matter of agency discretion, and that Congress in requiring “balance” for the panel meant employment status and background, making it irrelevant if most of its members now hold anti-vaccine views.

    The reconstituted ACIP panel voted in September in favor of abandoning the U.S. government’s broad recommendation for COVID-19 shots, essentially recommending patients consult their doctors first. It then voted in December to remove the broad recommendation that all newborns receive a hepatitis B vaccine. The plaintiffs want those votes and others voided.

    Global health experts have said vaccines are vital for controlling infectious diseases, preventing millions of deaths annually and lowering healthcare costs. Kennedy has called vaccine safety data flawed and has claimed vaccines are responsible for various health issues.

    The public health groups argued that the newly adopted U.S. changes will depress vaccination rates for shots that have long depended on clear and population-wide guidance, particularly in busy primary-care settings where default recommendations drive uptake.

    ‘OUT OF CONTROL’


    Another major Trump-related case Murphy has handled involved a lawsuit by immigrant rights advocates seeking to prevent the U.S. Department of Homeland Security from rapidly deporting migrants to countries other than their own without letting them raise any concerns about potential persecution or torture.

    Murphy issued and enforced a court order to restrict the administration’s efforts to deport migrants of other nationalities to countries such as South Sudan, Libya and El Salvador.

    Trump derided Murphy as “out of control,” and White House advisor Stephen Miller called the judge a “lunatic.” At the administration’s urging, the Supreme Court intervened twice, lifting Murphy’s injunction and clearing the way for the deportation of several men to South Sudan.

    Murphy has signaled he is open to ruling against this “third country” deportation policy again as the case proceeds, and he has continued to deal the Trump administration other courtroom setbacks.

    In October, Murphy ruled that the Pentagon’s steep cuts to federal research funding for universities were unlawful.

    In January, the judge allowed the Vineyard Wind joint venture to resume its Massachusetts offshore wind project, one of five judicial rulings nationwide that blocked the administration from halting wind projects on national security grounds.

    Days later, Murphy issued an order temporarily blocking the administration from ending temporary deportation protections covering more than 5,000 Ethiopians living in the United States.

    “I’m sure when you imagined your first months on the bench, you expected a quiet start, where you’d learn the ropes,” Democratic U.S. Senator Ed Markey said in video remarks played at Murphy’s formal swearing-in ceremony in September. “But as the saying goes, sometimes the judiciary has plans for you.”

    Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Will Dunham

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

    RFK Jr’s vaccine agenda faces Boston judge who has handed Trump setbacks

    February 12, 2026 11:10 AM UTC / Reuters

    Item 1 of 2 U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attends a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., January 29, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo

    [1/2]U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attends a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., January 29, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo [Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab]

    • Summary
    • Judge Murphy has ruled against other Trump initiatives
    • Biden appointee joined federal bench in Boston in 2024
    • Medical groups call vaccine policy changes unlawful

    BOSTON, Feb 12 (Reuters) – Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s sweeping efforts to upend U.S. immunization policies are set to go before a federal judge in Boston who already has drawn President Donald Trump’s ire for impeding his administration’s policies on multiple fronts.

    U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy on Friday is due to hold a hearing in a legal challenge by medical groups that assert that Kennedy and the agencies he oversees are unlawfully reshaping federal policies in ways that will increase barriers to getting vaccinated, fuel distrust in shots and lower immunization rates.

    Jumpstart your morning with the latest legal news delivered straight to your inbox from The Daily Docket newsletter. Sign up here.

    Kennedy, a longtime anti-vaccine activist who has cast doubt on the safety and efficacy of vaccines contrary to scientific evidence, was appointed by the Republican president last year as the U.S. government’s top health official. His critics have said Kennedy’s actions on vaccines and other areas will undermine public health.

    APPOINTED BY BIDEN


    Murphy was appointed by Democratic President Joe Biden, confirmed by the U.S. Senate and joined the federal bench in Massachusetts in December 2024, the month before Trump returned to the presidency.

    Murphy has earned the scorn of Trump’s administration after issuing a series of rulings that blocked core parts of his hardline immigration agenda, prevented it from gutting funding for federal research and halted its efforts to prevent the further development of offshore wind energy.

    The judge is a former public defender who previously ran a small criminal defense law firm based in Worcester, Massachusetts. He told lawyers at an event last week he “had not anticipated some of the more nationwide cases that have been a part of the practice, here in Massachusetts especially.”

    Cases with national significance have been piling up on the dockets of Massachusetts-based judges like Murphy, as Trump opponents strategically funnel litigation into the federal court in Boston now dominated by the judicial appointees of Democratic presidents.

    VACCINE PANEL OVERHAUL


    At Friday’s hearing, the American Academy of Pediatrics and other plaintiffs are expected to ask Murphy to issue a preliminary injunction that would prevent the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from implementing a revised childhood immunization schedule and block Kennedy’s handpicked vaccine advisory panel from holding its February 25-26 meeting.

    They argue the CDC acted unlawfully when on January 5 it reduced the number of routinely recommended childhood vaccinations to 11 and downgraded the immunization recommendations for six diseases, including rotavirus, influenza and hepatitis A.

    They also are challenging Kennedy’s decision last year to remove and replace all 17 independent experts who previously had served on the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, whose recommendations shape U.S. vaccine practices.

    The plaintiffs said that resulted in a panel dominated by vaccine skeptics appointed solely because their views aligned with those of Kennedy.

    Murphy in a ruling last month allowing the case to proceed said those allegations were “sufficient to plausibly suggest the committee is neither fairly balanced nor free of inappropriate influence,” in violation of the requirements for such panels set out in a U.S. law called the Federal Advisory Committee Act.

    Justice Department lawyers argue that the plaintiffs are seeking a court-ordered ban on the Department of Health and Human Services “receiving and giving advice on vaccines.” They say the CDC’s guidance on vaccines is a matter of agency discretion, and that Congress in requiring “balance” for the panel meant employment status and background, making it irrelevant if most of its members now hold anti-vaccine views.

    The reconstituted ACIP panel voted in September in favor of abandoning the U.S. government’s broad recommendation for COVID-19 shots, essentially recommending patients consult their doctors first. It then voted in December to remove the broad recommendation that all newborns receive a hepatitis B vaccine. The plaintiffs want those votes and others voided.

    Global health experts have said vaccines are vital for controlling infectious diseases, preventing millions of deaths annually and lowering healthcare costs. Kennedy has called vaccine safety data flawed and has claimed vaccines are responsible for various health issues.

    The public health groups argued that the newly adopted U.S. changes will depress vaccination rates for shots that have long depended on clear and population-wide guidance, particularly in busy primary-care settings where default recommendations drive uptake.

    ‘OUT OF CONTROL’


    Another major Trump-related case Murphy has handled involved a lawsuit by immigrant rights advocates seeking to prevent the U.S. Department of Homeland Security from rapidly deporting migrants to countries other than their own without letting them raise any concerns about potential persecution or torture.

    Murphy issued and enforced a court order to restrict the administration’s efforts to deport migrants of other nationalities to countries such as South Sudan, Libya and El Salvador.

    Trump derided Murphy as “out of control,” and White House advisor Stephen Miller called the judge a “lunatic.” At the administration’s urging, the Supreme Court intervened twice, lifting Murphy’s injunction and clearing the way for the deportation of several men to South Sudan.

    Murphy has signaled he is open to ruling against this “third country” deportation policy again as the case proceeds, and he has continued to deal the Trump administration other courtroom setbacks.

    In October, Murphy ruled that the Pentagon’s steep cuts to federal research funding for universities were unlawful.

    In January, the judge allowed the Vineyard Wind joint venture to resume its Massachusetts offshore wind project, one of five judicial rulings nationwide that blocked the administration from halting wind projects on national security grounds.

    Days later, Murphy issued an order temporarily blocking the administration from ending temporary deportation protections covering more than 5,000 Ethiopians living in the United States.

    “I’m sure when you imagined your first months on the bench, you expected a quiet start, where you’d learn the ropes,” Democratic U.S. Senator Ed Markey said in video remarks played at Murphy’s formal swearing-in ceremony in September. “But as the saying goes, sometimes the judiciary has plans for you.”

    Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Will Dunham

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

    节点运行失败

  • 俄罗斯袭击乌克兰城市敖德萨 近30万人断电断水


    2026年2月12日 17:52 / 联合早报

    2月12日,俄罗斯袭击乌克兰敖德萨南部地区,致一人受伤。消防员奋力扑灭袭击引发的大火。 (法新社)

    俄罗斯袭击乌克兰南部城市敖德萨(Odesa),导致近30万人断电断水。

    路透社引述乌克兰副总理库列巴星期四(2月12日)发布的消息说,袭击也致敖德萨近200栋建筑没有暖气,东南部城市第聂伯罗(Dnipro)也有1万户居民没有暖气。

    基辅遭受“大规模袭击”

    乌克兰首都基辅星期四凌晨也遭到俄罗斯导弹“大规模袭击”,多栋建筑物被击中。

    新华社引述基辅市长克利奇科在社交媒体上发布的消息说:“大规模袭击仍在继续。请留在掩体中!”克利奇科称,包括住宅楼在内的多栋建筑物遭袭。

    基辅市军事管理局局长特卡琴科同日在社交媒体上说,基辅当天凌晨遭到俄罗斯导弹袭击,伤亡情况正在核实。

    乌军袭击俄一个军械库

    据《乌克兰真理报》星期四报道,乌克兰军队日前袭击了俄罗斯伏尔加格勒州(Volgograd Region)科特卢班地区的一座俄军军械库并引发爆炸。

    据俄罗斯卫星通讯社消息,俄罗斯伏尔加格勒州州长博恰罗夫在社交媒体上说,位于科特卢班(Kotluban)的俄国防部一处设施遭乌克兰导弹攻击后起火,存在燃爆危险,附近居民已紧急撤离。

    俄罗斯袭击乌克兰城市敖德萨 近30万人断电断水

    2026年2月12日 17:52 / 联合早报

    2月12日,俄罗斯袭击乌克兰敖德萨南部地区,致一人受伤。消防员奋力扑灭袭击引发的大火。 (法新社)

    俄罗斯袭击乌克兰南部城市敖德萨(Odesa),导致近30万人断电断水。

    路透社引述乌克兰副总理库列巴星期四(2月12日)发布的消息说,袭击也致敖德萨近200栋建筑没有暖气,东南部城市第聂伯罗(Dnipro)也有1万户居民没有暖气。

    基辅遭受“大规模袭击”

    乌克兰首都基辅星期四凌晨也遭到俄罗斯导弹“大规模袭击”,多栋建筑物被击中。

    新华社引述基辅市长克利奇科在社交媒体上发布的消息说:“大规模袭击仍在继续。请留在掩体中!”克利奇科称,包括住宅楼在内的多栋建筑物遭袭。

    基辅市军事管理局局长特卡琴科同日在社交媒体上说,基辅当天凌晨遭到俄罗斯导弹袭击,伤亡情况正在核实。

    乌军袭击俄一个军械库

    据《乌克兰真理报》星期四报道,乌克兰军队日前袭击了俄罗斯伏尔加格勒州(Volgograd Region)科特卢班地区的一座俄军军械库并引发爆炸。

    据俄罗斯卫星通讯社消息,俄罗斯伏尔加格勒州州长博恰罗夫在社交媒体上说,位于科特卢班(Kotluban)的俄国防部一处设施遭乌克兰导弹攻击后起火,存在燃爆危险,附近居民已紧急撤离。

  • 特朗普政府表示 打击重点仍为”最恶劣罪犯” 同时维持更广泛驱逐使命


    By Emma Colton
    Fox News
    Published February 12, 2026 6:00am EST

    特朗普政府重申,只要居住在美国的非法移民符合条件就会被驱逐,其打击行动最初侧重于驱逐”最恶劣的暴力非法移民”。

    “总统的整个团队,包括边境负责人汤姆·霍曼和诺姆部长,在实施其议程方面目标一致——该议程始终侧重于优先处理最恶劣的犯罪非法外国人——而成功的驱逐行动和历史上最安全的边境证明了这一点,”白宫发言人阿比盖尔·杰克逊周二告诉福克斯新闻数字版。

    “一如既往,任何在该国非法居留的人都有被驱逐的资格,”她补充道。”特朗普总统正在兑现他的承诺,开展历史上规模最大的大规模驱逐行动。”

    作为唐纳德·特朗普总统对拜登政府执政期间席卷美国的移民危机采取的打击行动的一部分,政府(最值得注意的是国土安全部内的部门)正在进行持续的逮捕和驱逐工作。

    联邦机构转向明尼阿波利斯针对移民的有针对性执法行动(霍曼主导)

    [image_1]

    “总统的整个团队,包括边境负责人汤姆·霍曼和诺姆部长,在实施其议程方面目标一致,”一位白宫发言人表示。(Alex Brandon/The Associated Press)

    官员们越来越聚焦于暴力非法移民是优先逮捕对象的信息,而针对所有非法移民的更广泛大规模驱逐行动已从前沿位置退居次要。

    例如,边境负责人汤姆·霍曼在6月接受全国广播公司新闻采访时(该采访周一才公布)表示,如果不优先逮捕和驱逐”犯罪非法外国人”而不是其他非法移民,就有失去”美国人民信任”的风险。

    利维特称特朗普将不因民主党反对而动摇非法移民打击行动

    [image_2]

    白宫新闻秘书卡罗琳·利维特周二再次确认,驱逐所有非法移民仍然是政府的任务,其中暴力犯罪者将首先被驱逐。(Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    “我认为绝大多数美国民众认为犯罪非法外国人需要离开,”霍曼在6月接受全国广播公司新闻采访时表示。”如果我们坚持这种优先次序,我认为我们能继续获得美国民众的信任。”

    “而且我认为,我们做得越多,美国民众就会越支持特朗普总统的做法。我们必须这样做,而且必须以人道的方式进行。”

    霍曼在其他公开讲话中表示,”对犯罪外国人的优先处理并不意味着我们忘记其他人”,并且”如果你非法居留在美国,你就不会被排除在外。”

    白宫新闻秘书卡罗琳·利维特周二再次确认,驱逐所有非法移民仍然是政府的任务,其中暴力犯罪者将首先被驱逐。

    [image_3]

    2025年8月31日星期日,在得克萨斯州哈林根谷国际机场,戴着手铐的移民下飞机后登上一辆运输车辆。(Michael Gonzalez/The Associated Press)

    “特朗普政府将继续专注于驱逐所有在我国境内的非法外国人,重点是最恶劣的罪犯,”她周二表示。

    特朗普政府和竞选团队历史上一直将驱逐暴力非法移民作为首要任务,但此类言论往往伴随着这样的信息:在特朗普任下所有非法移民都将面临驱逐。

    从奥巴马奖到明尼苏达行动:特朗普为何选择汤姆·霍曼负责实地打击行动

    例如,特朗普在2024年12月的一次采访中表示,如果整个家庭非法居留,”我们将把他们全部送回原国家”,这次采访中还包括当时的总统当选人抨击那些从”发送杀人犯”和”精神病人”到美国的国家。

    [image_4]

    美国移民和海关执法局(ICE)特工于2026年1月28日继续在明尼阿波利斯开展移民执法行动。(Madison Thorn/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    “第一,我们在处理罪犯,而且会非常迅速地处理他们,”特朗普在2024年12月的另一次采访中表示,为其政府的移民政策铺路。”我们正在打击最恶劣的帮派,可能包括MS-13组织,而委内瑞拉帮派是世界上最恶劣的。他们是凶残、暴力的人。”

    2025年,从华盛顿特区到洛杉矶再到明尼阿波利斯,移民突袭和行动在多个城市展开后,政府面临来自民主党人和其他批评者的越来越多的审查。

    2026年初,在 agitators(煽动者)走上双城街头抗议并对抗联邦执法人员的情况下,明尼阿波利斯的抗议活动达到高潮,这尤其发生在1月移民官员开枪打死两名美国人之后。

    点击此处下载福克斯新闻应用程序

    政府多次表示不会在明尼阿波利斯退缩。

    官员们扩大了与当地执法部门(特别是监狱)的协调,以接管已被拘留的非法移民,允许在设施内而非社区中进行逮捕,从而减少了实地所需的警员数量。

    Trump administration says focus remains on ‘worst of the worst’ criminals while maintaining broader deportation mission

    By Emma Colton
    Fox News
    Published February 12, 2026 6:00am EST

    The Trump White House reiterated that anyone residing in the U.S. illegally is eligible for deportation as its crackdown continues to initially focus on removing “the worst of the worst” violent illegal immigrants.

    “The president’s entire team, including border czar Tom Homan and Secretary Noem, are on the same page when it comes to implementing his agenda — which has always focused on prioritizing the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens — and the successful deportations and historically secure border proves that,” White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson told Fox News Digital Tuesday.

    “As always, anyone in the country illegally is eligible to be deported,” she added. “President Trump is keeping his promise to carry out the largest mass deportation operation in history.”

    The administration, most notably offices within the Department of Homeland Security, are in the midst of ongoing arrest and deportation efforts as part of President Donald Trump’s crackdown on the immigration crisis that rocked the U.S. under the Biden administration.

    FEDS SHIFT TO TARGETED IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT IN MINNEAPOLIS UNDER HOMAN

    [image_1]

    “The President’s entire team, including border czar Tom Homan and Secretary Noem, are on the same page when it comes to implementing his agenda,” a White House spokeswoman said.(Alex Brandon/The Associated Press)

    Officials increasingly have zeroed in on messaging that violent illegal immigrants are the top priority for apprehension, while broader mass-deportation efforts targeting all illegal immigrants have faded from the forefront.

    Border czar Tom Homan, for example, told NBC News in June in an interview only released Monday that failure to prioritize arresting and deporting “criminal illegal aliens” over other illegal immigrants risks losing the “faith of the American people.”

    LEAVITT SAYS TRUMP WILL NOT ‘WAVER’ ON ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION CRACKDOWN DESPITE DEMOCRATIC BACKLASH

    [image_2]

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt reaffirmed Tuesday that deporting all illegal immigrants continues to be the mission of the administration, with violent criminals first up for deportation.(Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    “I think the vast majority of the American people think criminal illegal aliens need to leave,” Homan said in an interview with NBC News in June. “And if we stick to that prioritization, I think we keep the faith of the American people.”

    “And I think the more we do that, the more the American people will support what President Trump’s doing. We got to do it and we’ve got to do it in a humane manner.”

    Homan has said in other public remarks that the “prioritization of criminal aliens doesn’t mean we forget about everyone else,” and that “If you are in the country illegally, you are not off the table.”

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt reaffirmed Tuesday that deporting all illegal immigrants continues to be the mission of the administration, with violent criminals first up for deportation.

    [image_3]

    Shackled migrants board a transport van after getting off a plane at the Valley International Airport, Sunday, Aug. 31, 2025, in Harlingen, Texas.(Michael Gonzalez/The Associated Press)

    “The Trump administration will continue our focus on deporting all illegal aliens present in our country, with a focus on the worst of the worst criminals,” she said Tuesday.

    The Trump administration and campaign historically focused on deporting violent illegal immigrants as the first order of business, but such comments were often coupled with messaging that all illegal immigrants would face deportation under Trump.

    FROM OBAMA AWARD TO MINNESOTA OP: WHY TRUMP TAPPED TOM HOMAN FOR ON-THE-GROUND CRACKDOWN

    Trump, for example, said in December 2024 that “we will send the whole family back to the country” if they were illegal in an interview that also included the then president-elect railing against countries who sent “murderers” from and “people from mental institutions” to the U.S.

    [image_4]

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents continue to conduct immigration enforcement operations in Minneapolis, Jan. 28, 2026.(Madison Thorn/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    “Number one, we’re doing criminals and we’re going to do them really rapidly,” Trump said in another interview in December 2024, teeing up his administration’s immigration policies. “We’re getting the worst gang probably with MS-13 and the Venezuelan gangs are the worst in the world. They’re vicious, violent people.”

    The administration has faced growing scrutiny from Democrats and other critics following the launch of immigration raids and operations in cities from Washington, D.C., to Los Angeles to Minneapolis in 2025.

    The protests hit a fever pitch in Minneapolis earlier in 2026 as agitators took to the streets of the Twin Cities to speak out against and confront federal law enforcement officers, most notably following the fatal shootings of two Americans by immigration officials in January.

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    The administration has repeatedly said it is not backing down in Minneapolis.

    Officials have expanded coordination with local law enforcement — particularly jails — to take custody of illegal immigrants already detained, allowing arrests at facilities rather than in neighborhoods and requiring fewer officers on the ground.

  • 俄罗斯袭击乌克兰城市敖德萨 近30万人断电断水 | 联合早报


    发布/2026年2月12日 17:52

    俄罗斯袭击乌克兰南部城市敖德萨(Odesa),导致近30万人断电断水。

    路透社引述乌克兰副总理库列巴星期四(2月12日)发布的消息说,袭击也致敖德萨近200栋建筑没有暖气,东南部城市第聂伯罗(Dnipro)也有1万户居民没有暖气。

    基辅遭受“大规模袭击”

    乌克兰首都基辅星期四凌晨也遭到俄罗斯导弹“大规模袭击”,多栋建筑物被击中。

    新华社引述基辅市长克利奇科在社交媒体上发布的消息说:“大规模袭击仍在继续。请留在掩体中!”克利奇科称,包括住宅楼在内的多栋建筑物遭袭。

    基辅市军事管理局局长特卡琴科同日在社交媒体上说,基辅当天凌晨遭到俄罗斯导弹袭击,伤亡情况正在核实。

    乌军袭击俄一个军械库

    据《乌克兰真理报》星期四报道,乌克兰军队日前袭击了俄罗斯伏尔加格勒州(Volgograd Region)科特卢班地区的一座俄军军械库并引发爆炸。

    据俄罗斯卫星通讯社消息,俄罗斯伏尔加格勒州州长博恰罗夫在社交媒体上说,位于科特卢班(Kotluban)的俄国防部一处设施遭乌克兰导弹攻击后起火,存在燃爆危险,附近居民已紧急撤离。

    俄罗斯袭击乌克兰城市敖德萨 近30万人断电断水 | 联合早报

    发布/2026年2月12日 17:52

    俄罗斯袭击乌克兰南部城市敖德萨(Odesa),导致近30万人断电断水。

    路透社引述乌克兰副总理库列巴星期四(2月12日)发布的消息说,袭击也致敖德萨近200栋建筑没有暖气,东南部城市第聂伯罗(Dnipro)也有1万户居民没有暖气。

    基辅遭受“大规模袭击”

    乌克兰首都基辅星期四凌晨也遭到俄罗斯导弹“大规模袭击”,多栋建筑物被击中。

    新华社引述基辅市长克利奇科在社交媒体上发布的消息说:“大规模袭击仍在继续。请留在掩体中!”克利奇科称,包括住宅楼在内的多栋建筑物遭袭。

    基辅市军事管理局局长特卡琴科同日在社交媒体上说,基辅当天凌晨遭到俄罗斯导弹袭击,伤亡情况正在核实。

    乌军袭击俄一个军械库

    据《乌克兰真理报》星期四报道,乌克兰军队日前袭击了俄罗斯伏尔加格勒州(Volgograd Region)科特卢班地区的一座俄军军械库并引发爆炸。

    据俄罗斯卫星通讯社消息,俄罗斯伏尔加格勒州州长博恰罗夫在社交媒体上说,位于科特卢班(Kotluban)的俄国防部一处设施遭乌克兰导弹攻击后起火,存在燃爆危险,附近居民已紧急撤离。

  • 飞机迫降索马里首都 幸无人伤亡


    2026年2月12日 17:55 / 联合早报

    东非国家索马里首都摩加迪沙发生飞机迫降事故。一架福克50飞机星期二(2月10日)起飞后不久发现机件出现故障,被迫返回摩加迪沙国际机场,不料降陆时飞机滑出跑道,最终在海边附近停了下来,幸好机上人员安然无恙。

    搭客形容,迫降前,机舱内人人担惊受怕。迫降后,机长担心起火,叫搭客赶快下机。航空公司赞扬机师的机智反应和冷静应对,从而避免了伤亡。(路透社)

    飞机迫降索马里首都 幸无人伤亡

    2026年2月12日 17:55 / 联合早报

    东非国家索马里首都摩加迪沙发生飞机迫降事故。一架福克50飞机星期二(2月10日)起飞后不久发现机件出现故障,被迫返回摩加迪沙国际机场,不料降陆时飞机滑出跑道,最终在海边附近停了下来,幸好机上人员安然无恙。

    搭客形容,迫降前,机舱内人人担惊受怕。迫降后,机长担心起火,叫搭客赶快下机。航空公司赞扬机师的机智反应和冷静应对,从而避免了伤亡。(路透社)

  • “这不是真人秀” 民主党女议员推动克林顿相关证词需录像记录 | 美国有线电视新闻网(CNN)政治版


    作者:马修·拉利(Matthew Lally),美国有线电视新闻网(CNN)

    发布时间:美国东部时间2026年2月12日星期四上午7:26

    国会众议员悉尼·坎莱格-多夫(Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove)向美国有线电视新闻网的奥迪·科尼什(Audie Cornish)表示,邦迪(Bondi)的众议院听证会“像野兽一样”(feral)

    6:25 • 消息来源:美国有线电视新闻网

    美国有线电视新闻网政治版最新报道 15个视频

    查看更多视频

    ‘This is not a reality TV show’ Democratic congresswoman pushes for Clinton depositions to be videotaped only | CNN Politics

    By Matthew Lally, CNN
    Published 7:26 AM EST, Thu February 12, 2026

    Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove tells CNN’s Audie Cornish that Bondi’s House hearing was “feral”

    6:25 • Source: CNN

    Latest News from CNN Politics 15 videos

    See more videos

  • 飞机迫降索马里首都 幸无人伤亡 | 联合早报


    发布/2026年2月12日 17:55 | 联合早报

    东非国家索马里首都摩加迪沙发生飞机迫降事故。一架福克50飞机星期二(2月10日)起飞后不久发现机件出现故障,被迫返回摩加迪沙国际机场,不料降陆时飞机滑出跑道,最终在海边附近停了下来,幸好机上人员安然无恙。

    搭客形容,迫降前,机舱内人人担惊受怕。迫降后,机长担心起火,叫搭客赶快下机。航空公司赞扬机师的机智反应和冷静应对,从而避免了伤亡。(路透社)

    飞机迫降索马里首都 幸无人伤亡 | 联合早报

    发布/2026年2月12日 17:55 | 联合早报

    东非国家索马里首都摩加迪沙发生飞机迫降事故。一架福克50飞机星期二(2月10日)起飞后不久发现机件出现故障,被迫返回摩加迪沙国际机场,不料降陆时飞机滑出跑道,最终在海边附近停了下来,幸好机上人员安然无恙。

    搭客形容,迫降前,机舱内人人担惊受怕。迫降后,机长担心起火,叫搭客赶快下机。航空公司赞扬机师的机智反应和冷静应对,从而避免了伤亡。(路透社)

  • 联邦调查局在佐治亚州查扣选票事件进展如何?


    2026年2月12日美国东部时间凌晨5:00 / 《华盛顿邮报》

    一些选举专家警告称,这可能预示着未来选举结果被操纵的企图。

    image(Mike Stewart/AP)
    美国国家情报局局长图尔西·加巴德(左)与联邦调查局副局长安德鲁·贝利在1月28日于亚特兰大郊外查扣富尔顿县2020年选举选票时登上指挥车。

    安珀·菲利普斯分析

    联邦调查局最近从亚特兰大地区查扣了数百张选票;本周我们得知,此次查扣是基于对2020年选举的不实指控。

    佐治亚州发生的事件令许多选举专家感到震惊,他们担心这可能是唐纳德·特朗普总统推动未来联邦干预选举结果的一部分。在选票被查扣几天后,特朗普表示联邦政府应该“接管某些地区的投票工作”。

    What’s happening with the FBI seizure of ballots in Georgia?

    February 12, 2026 at 5:00 a.m. EST / The Washington Post

    Some election experts warn it could portend attempts to muddle future election results.

    Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, left, and FBI Deputy Director Andrew Bailey enter a command vehicle as the FBI takes Fulton County 2020 election ballots on Jan. 28 outside Atlanta. (Mike Stewart/AP)

    Analysis by Amber Phillips

    The FBI recently seized hundreds of ballots from the Atlanta area; we learned this week the seizure was based on debunked claims about the 2020 election.

    What happened in Georgia has alarmed many election experts, who worry it could be part of a push by President Donald Trump to open the door to future federal interference in election results. Days after the ballots were taken, Trump said the federal government should“take over the voting” in certain places.

  • 法国发布国家战略 推动健康饮食


    发布时间 / 来源: 2026年2月12日 18:11 / 联合早报

    法国政府发布《国家食品、营养与气候战略》,计划通过14项具体行动,让所有法国人到2030年都能获得更健康和可持续、更本土化的饮食,同时增强农业系统韧性与粮食主权。

    14项具体行动包括围绕健康和可持续饮食开展宣传与公众动员;通过立法强制零售商与商业餐饮企业公开年度采购中可持续和优质产品的占比;减少儿童与青少年能在媒体上看到的高脂、高糖、高盐食品广告等。

    新华社引述法国健康、家庭、自治与残障人士部星期三(2月11日)发布的公报说,饮食是法国提升民众健康水平、增强农业系统韧性与粮食主权、减少温室气体排放、保护生物多样性等目标的核心。在此背景下,法国政府的战略首次将营养、食品与气候政策纳入一个统一、连贯且具有雄心的框架中。

    法国生态转型、生物多样性、国际气候和自然谈判部长巴尔比说,吃得更好,就是为地球、为自身健康采取行动,也是对优质农业的支持。通过这项战略,生态理念将以具体方式进入法国人的餐盘。

    法国计划通过14项具体行动,提升民众健康水平,图为法国西南部巴约讷的一家酒吧和餐厅。 (法新社)

    法国计划通过14项具体行动,提升民众健康水平,图为法国西南部巴约讷的一家酒吧和餐厅。 (法新社)

    法国发布国家战略 推动健康饮食

    发布时间 / 来源:2026年2月12日 18:11 / 联合早报

    法国政府发布《国家食品、营养与气候战略》,计划通过14项具体行动,让所有法国人到2030年都能获得更健康和可持续、更本土化的饮食,同时增强农业系统韧性与粮食主权。

    14项具体行动包括围绕健康和可持续饮食开展宣传与公众动员;通过立法强制零售商与商业餐饮企业公开年度采购中可持续和优质产品的占比;减少儿童与青少年能在媒体上看到的高脂、高糖、高盐食品广告等。

    新华社引述法国健康、家庭、自治与残障人士部星期三(2月11日)发布的公报说,饮食是法国提升民众健康水平、增强农业系统韧性与粮食主权、减少温室气体排放、保护生物多样性等目标的核心。在此背景下,法国政府的战略首次将营养、食品与气候政策纳入一个统一、连贯且具有雄心的框架中。

    法国生态转型、生物多样性、国际气候和自然谈判部长巴尔比说,吃得更好,就是为地球、为自身健康采取行动,也是对优质农业的支持。通过这项战略,生态理念将以具体方式进入法国人的餐盘。

    法国计划通过14项具体行动,提升民众健康水平,图为法国西南部巴约讷的一家酒吧和餐厅。 (法新社)

    法国计划通过14项具体行动,提升民众健康水平,图为法国西南部巴约讷的一家酒吧和餐厅。 (法新社)