US carries out first known strike on alleged drug boat since Maduro’s capture

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. military said Friday that it has carried out a deadly strike on a vessel accused of trafficking drugs in the eastern Pacific Ocean, the first known attack since the raid that captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro earlier this month.

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U.S. Southern Command said on social media that the boat was “engaged in narco-trafficking operations” and that the strike killed two people and left one survivor. It said it notified the Coast Guard to launch search and rescue operations for that person.

A video accompanying the post shows a boat moving through the water before exploding in flames. The U.S. military has focused lately on seizing sanctioned oil tankers with connections to Venezuela since the Trump administration launched an audacious raid to capture Maduro and bring him to New York to face drug trafficking charges.

The last boat strikes occurred in late December, when the military said it struck five alleged drug-smuggling boats over two days, killing a total of eight people while others jumped overboard. Days later, the Coast Guard suspended its search.

Dick Bremer set for induction in Twins Hall of Fame

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Longtime Minnesota Twins broadcaster Dick Bremer is joining the club’s Hall of Fame. The St. Paul native will be officially inducted before the Twins’ game against the Los Angeles Angels at Target Field on July 11.

Bremer will be the 42nd member of the team’s hall, which includes players, managers coaches and front office personnel that “contributed to the organization’s growth and success since Minnesota broke into the major leagues in 1961,” the team said in a release.

“For 40 seasons Dick Bremer wasn’t just the voice of Twins baseball, he was woven into the fabric of it,” Twins president of baseball and business operations Derek Falvey said in a statement. “His love for the game, this team, and his home state of Minnesota came through every night in a way fans could feel.”

Bremer began his Twins play-by-play career with Spectrum Sports from 1983-85. He rejoined the club’s broadcast team in 1987 and was the Twins’ television play-by-play voice through the 2023 season.

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FACT FOCUS: As cold hits, Trump asks, where’s global warming? Scientists say it’s still here

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By SETH BORENSTEIN, AP Science Writer

As much of the United States faces numbing cold, treacherous ice and heavy snow from an enormous winter storm, President Donald Trump used social media to dispute that the world is warming.

In a 25-word post on his Truth Social account, the president Friday questioned how the world can be warming when it is so cold, and called the temperatures nearly unprecedented. He also called advocates and scientists “environmental insurrectionists.”

More than a dozen scientists Friday told The Associated Press the president’s claims were wrong. They point out that even in a warmer world, winter and cold occur, and they never said otherwise. They note that even as it is cold in the eastern United States, more of the world is warmer than average. They also stressed the difference between daily and local weather and long-term, planetwide climate change.

Meteorologists also said that global warming over the past couple of decades may make this cold seem unprecedented and record-smashing. But government records show it has been much colder in the past.

“This social media post crams a remarkable amount of inflammatory language and factually inaccurate assertions into a very short statement,” said climate scientist Daniel Swain of the California Institute for Water Resources. “First of all, global warming continues —and has in fact been progressing at an increased rate in recent years.”

Here’s a closer look at the facts:

Climate change is still here

TRUMP: “WHATEVER HAPPENED TO GLOBAL WARMING???”

US President Donald Trump attends the Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

THE FACTS: “Global warming hasn’t gone anywhere, it’s here,” Princeton University climate scientist Gabriel Vecchi said.

The last three years have been the warmest on record, increasing at significantly faster rate than they had been, data shows.

Globally, winter temperatures — December, January and February — have increased by 1.3 degrees Fahrenheit since 1995, with the previous two winters the warmest on record, according to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration records. The United States has warmed slower than the rest of the world, about half a degree Fahrenheit since 1995. Last month was the fifth-hottest December on record globally and in the United States.

Local cold differs from longer, global warming

Scientists note they talk about “global” when it comes to warming. The United States is only 2% of Earth’s area — and west of the Rockies isn’t that cold for this time of year. Global temperature maps show two-thirds of the United States is many degrees colder than normal and same for Russia. But Australia, Africa, the Arctic, Antarctica, Asia, Canada, much of Europe and even Greenland are warmer than normal.

“Even as the Earth warms, cold days and cold winters are not projected to disappear, just become fewer in number,” said Princeton University climate scientist Michael Oppenheimer. “In addition, what happens in the U.S. during a brief period of days is not an indication of what’s happening to the U.S. as a whole or the Earth as a whole over the long term.”

There is even a theory among many scientists — but it is not yet a consensus — that the American East is getting more extreme winter outbreaks because of a warming Arctic, which is part of climate change.

“This is an active research area with uncertainty,” said Northern Illinois University meteorology professor Victor Gensini. “One hypothesis is that Arctic warming reduces the temperature contrast between the pole and mid-latitudes, which can sometimes weaken or distort the jet stream and allow cold Arctic air to spill south. That said, not every cold outbreak can or should be attributed to climate change. Weather still has large natural variability.”

It has been colder in the past

TRUMP: “Record Cold Wave expected to hit 40 States. Rarely seen anything like it before.”

THE FACTS: Yes we have.

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The National Weather Service forecasts Minneapolis to be minus-11 degrees on Saturday and minus-13  on Sunday, but that is nowhere near the records of minus-33 and minus-31 set in 1904 there. Chicago is supposed to drop to 2 degrees Saturday and 8 degrees Sunday, but the record for those days are minus-15 and minus-20 from 1897 and as recently as Jan. 30, 2019 it hit minus-23 in Chicago. Fargo, North Dakota and Washington, D.C. are forecast to not come within a dozen degrees of the coldest day on record.

“Truly historic cold waves, like those in 1978–79, 1983–85, or earlier decades, were often colder and more persistent over large regions,” Gensini said. “We are also less accustomed to severe cold now because winters overall are warmer than they were several decades ago.”

Don’t expect too many broken records

Kristina Dahl, vice president of science at Climate Central, said a check of U.S. weather stations with at least 50 years of data finds 45 record lows set in January of this year — compared to 1,092 record highs.

While some daily records may fall, especially in the Plains, Texas and Louisiana, it will be “very hard to break long-period (100 years+) records with this cold blast,” said Ryan Maue, who was NOAA’s chief scientist in the end of Trump’s first term. Maue forecast that on Monday the Lower 48 states will average a low of 10 degrees Fahrenheit with more than 90% of the country below freezing. But in January 1985, the Lower 48 averaged a low of 4.1 degrees, Maue tweeted.

Maue lauded Trump for “appropriately raising alarm about the impending severe cold. In a roundabout way, while he is trolling about global warming it seems to be on his mind.”

Find AP Fact Checks here: https://apnews.com/APFactCheck.

The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

Shipley: Are you an angry Twins fan? Leave your message after the beep

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Tom Pohlad was officially announced as the Twins executive chair on Dec. 17, meaning not just that he’s the face of the team’s ownership, but in charge of, and ultimately responsible for, the team’s financial and competitive success.

It’s a plum gig, but it came with immediate feedback for the newest public face of the family that has owned the Twins since 1984.

“I did get a lot of voicemails,” Pohlad said, and the overall tenor of those calls wasn’t, let’s say, congratulatory.

That’s what happens when you’re named the captain of a listing ship; your first job is to get it back into seafaring shape. Until that happens, fan anger and skepticism will remain.

Since winning World Series in 1987 and 1991, the Twins have really only flirted with postseason relevance. After winning the American League Central and advancing to the AL Championship Series in 2002, they fell into a pattern of regular-season competitiveness and postseason incompetence. When the Twins won a three-game wild-card series in 2023, it snapped an 18-game postseason skid, the longest in major league history.

Because the Twins tanked down the stretch in 2024 and 2025, that skid remains the leading indicator of the team’s recent success. It was exacerbated last July when the Twins used the trade deadline to ship 11 veterans — 10 playing major roles on a team that still had a chance of making the playoffs — to other teams for prospects.

Fans were swift in relaying their displeasure, and nearly five months later, Pohlad — who took over from his brother, Joe, as the team’s executive chair — got a fresh earful. It wasn’t just voicemails, either. One of his first decisions was to call all 50 season-ticket holders who hadn’t renewed for the 2026 season.

“I had one guy hang up because they thought it was a hoax,” Pohlad said Friday as the Twins kicked off their annual TwinsFest fan event at Target Field. “I had to call him back and say, ‘This is Tom Pohlad.’ And let’s say, the response wasn’t necessarily kind.”

Tom Pohlad

Another responded with a text message that Pohlad characterized as “probably like, ‘Until I see a bigger investment in payroll, I’m not taking your call.’”

Pohlad isn’t giving up, though.

During TwinsFest on Saturday, he’ll sit down with 40 to 50 season ticket holders for what he called a “town hall” event.

He also traveled to Georgia to talk with longtime center fielder Byron Buxton and California to meet with veteran starting pitcher Joe Ryan. He was scheduled to meet with starter Pablo Lopez later Friday.

Those three are the undisputed veteran leadership in what has become a young clubhouse. Reaching out to them in person, Lopez said, is “a really professional move.”

“If that’s our leader, then I think we have to follow suit and keep those values in mind — connecting, making sure everyone is taking care of, making sure that you are meeting expectations … that you are turning things around,” Lopez said. “So, it starts at the top.”

But it’s going to take a village, of course.

New manager Derek Shelton inherits a strong, deep rotation that stretches into the Triple-A roster with Mick Abel and Taj Bradley — some of the spoils of the trade-deadline purge — but also a lot of young position players who struggled to score runs in August and September.

The trade deadline moves, and subsequent sacking of manager Rocco Baldelli after seven years, serves as a reset. “Not a rebuild, a reset,” Pohlad insisted, although offseason acquisitions have been few and uninspiring, so far.

The team brought on some minority investors for the first time this offseason in an effort to bolster coffers that were in the red, in part because of COVID-19 and the quick collapse of a broadcast model that relied on cable. Pohlad also acknowledged missteps, as well, such as not investing in the roster after winning a playoff series for the first time since 2002.

“We kind of tripped over ourselves, if you will,” he said. “And we certainly didn’t do a good job of communicating what we were going through, and what we were trying to accomplish.”

“We had a lot of time where we’ve had one good season, one bad season, one good season, one bad season,” he added. “That’s frustrating to a fan base, and it doesn’t communicate, in my opinion, that we have a strategy, that we’re just scattershot.

“We’re trying to build something different, something sustainable.”

If you don’t like what you see this summer, leave a message after the beep.

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