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The largest federal workers union says ‘untrained, armed’ ICE agents should not replace TSA

America’s largest federal employee union says ICE agents are unqualified to replace TSA officers at US airports.

“ICE agents are not trained or certified in aviation security. TSA officers spend months learning to detect explosives, weapons, and threats specifically designed to evade detection at checkpoints — skills that require specialized instruction, hands-on practice, and ongoing recertification,” Everett Kelley, president of American Federation of Government Employees, said on Sunday in a statement posted online.

“You cannot improvise that. Putting untrained personnel at security checkpoints does not fill a gap. It creates one,” he added.

The statement came one day after President Donald Trump said he would tap ICE agents to help with airport security as the partial government shutdown drags on.

“Likewise, I look forward to moving ICE in on Monday, and have already told them to,”GET READY.” NO MORE WAITING, NO MORE GAMES!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

White House Border Czar Tom Homan said Sunday that the administration was actively working on a plan to integrate ICE agents into airports.

“We’ll have a plan by the end of today on what airports we’re starting with and where we’re sending them,” Homan said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

The partial government shutdown has left the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the TSA, unfunded as Congress debates its immigration enforcement policies.

TSA officers haven’t received a paycheck in five weeks, and more than 400 have quit since mid-February, according to The White House, compounding a staffing shortage. As a result, long wait times and massive lines are clogging airport security checkpoints.

On Sunday, Kelley said that many TSA agents have continued to show up to work despite the lack of pay. “They deserve to be paid, not replaced by untrained, armed agents who have shown how dangerous they can be,” he said.

ICE has been at the center of Trump’s immigration crackdown. Fatal shootings sparked widespread protests against the agency earlier this year and contributed to the removal of former DHS Secretary Kristi Noem.

Kelley called on Congress to “stop playing politics and do their jobs.”

During an interview on Sunday, US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said TSA officers, whose salaries start around $40,000 annually, can’t live on $0 paychecks.

“They’re going to take other jobs to put food on the table and pay the rent,” Duffy said on “This Week with George Stephanopoulos.” “I do think it’s going to get much worse, and as it gets worse, I think that puts pressure on Congress to come to a resolution.”

Disruptions to air travel were what ultimately pushed Congress to end the previous full government shutdown.




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Armed with longer-range missiles, a top Russian fighter jet is posing a bigger threat, analyst says

Russia’s Su-35 fighter jets are increasingly flying with longer-range air-to-air missiles that make them a potentially greater threat to NATO air operations, a leading airpower expert assessed in a recent report.

Justin Bronk, a researcher at the UK-based Royal United Services Institute, said in his assessment of Russian air power that regularly arming Su-35 and Su-30SM2 jets with R-37M missiles “has significantly contributed to increasing the threat that they can theoretically pose to NATO air operations.”

The R-37M missile, which NATO calls the RS-AA-13, is “much more capable at long range” than the R-77-1 missiles the Su-35 had previously relied on, Bronk told Business Insider in a discussion of his recent report.

R-77-1 missiles have a range of about 62 miles, while R-37M missiles are understood to have a range of around 200 miles. Real-world kills at range depend on a mix of factors, but reach still matters.

Bronk told Business Insider that the longer-range R-37M missiles had been “very much a specialist weapon” for a limited selection of Russian jets. But “now you see absolutely routine employment” of the weapon on Russia’s Su-35S.

The Su-35 fighter is “the primary air superiority aircraft for the Russians,” he added. The jet is key for Russia’s air force, with the UK Ministry of Defence in 2023 describing it as Russia’s “most advanced combat jet in widespread service.”

Bronk told Business Insider that for the NATO alliance, the regular arming of Su-35s and Su-30SM2s with the R-37M is “a problem” because it puts “more credible long-range air-to-air missiles at play from the Russian side.”

Those missiles used to be contained within a smaller part of the force, mainly Russia’s MiG-31s. Now, Bronk said, having them on more jets “is obviously a significant growth in the potential threat that they can pose to NATO aircraft in a direct conflict.”


A grey fighter jet in a light blue sky with fire visable in its two engines

The R-37M was previously concentrated on Russia’s MiG-31 jets.

Mikhail Svetlov/Getty Images



Additionally, he said, Russia’s Su-35 crews are “generally more highly selected, better trained, more capable than the crews on the MiG-31s.” Russia’s better pilots tend to fly its top jets, and those will be the pilots operating these missiles.

Having them routinely carry long-range air-to-air missiles, rather than the “really pretty limited” R77-1 that they used to carry, Bronk said, “is a significant shift.”

A missile with a longer reach

The R-37M’s combat effectiveness has been spotlighted by Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which began in February 2022.

Late that year, a RUSI report said the R-37M, combined with Russia’s MiG-31BM interceptor aircraft, was proving to be “highly effective and difficult for Ukrainian pilots to evade due to its speed, very long range, and specialized seeker for low-altitude targets.”

At that time, it said Russia was just starting to put them on Su-35S jets.

A newer report from RUSI in November highlighted how much more the R-37M missile was being used, saying that this missile “in particular, has been used to destroy several Ukrainian aircraft at long range,” including one kill recorded at more than 109 miles.

“This is significantly beyond the engagement range of most NATO air-to-air munitions,” the report said. But it also said that the missiles’ success was “heavily determined by Ukraine’s lack of effective radar warning receivers,” something NATO has fielded far more robustly across its air forces.

The Su-35 threat

Making the Su-35 more powerful is a big move for Russia. In 2022, analysts at the RAND Corporation described the Su-35 as Russia’s “signature heavy fighter.”

Ukraine has shot down multiple Su-35s in its fight against Russia’s invasion, but Bronk said that despite reported losses, the fleet has “marginally increased since the start of the full-scale war.”

He estimated that in late 2020, Russia had about 90 Su-35s. Between eight and 10 have been lost in combat or accidents, he said, but 55 to 60 new aircraft have since been delivered — leaving Russia with roughly 135 to 140 Su-35s overall, a net increase despite the attrition.

Bronk’s analysis was based on interviews with Western air forces and ministries, data from Ukraine’s armed forces, and open-source information.

He said that the Russian air force has gained so much valuable combat experience against Ukraine that its air force is now “a significantly more capable potential threat for Western air forces than it was in 2022.”

He said that in air-to-air combat, where Russian aircraft take on Western ones, the West still has a strong advantage, but longer-range air-to-air missiles complicate the picture.

And any fight would not only be in the air. The West would face not only Russia’s air force but also its vast ground-based air defense network, which the war has also made more formidable.

Bronk told Business Insider that Su-35 crews are typically “much better at working with the ground-based air defenses,” meaning the jets can operate more effectively under the umbrella of Russian surface-to-air missile systems and are therefore “more credible as an air-to-air threat.”

He said that the improvement of those ground-based defenses throughout the war — combined with the fielding of more powerful missiles on Su-35s that are increasingly integrated with them — is one reason why Russian airpower “represents a greater threat to Western air power capabilities in Europe” than it did before the full-scale invasion.




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Nancy Guthrie update: Authorities release images of ‘armed individual’ from surveillance footage

Authorities investigating the mysterious disappearance of “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie’s mother, Nancy Guthrie, have released surveillance images of a person of interest in the case.

The photos, released to the public by the FBI on Tuesday, shows a masked person captured on the Nest doorbell camera on Nancy Guthrie’s home.

Up until this point, law enforcement officials have not identified any persons of interest or suspects in the case.

Authorities believe 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie was taken from her Arizona home against her will 10 days ago.

The elderly woman, who has limited mobility, a pacemaker, and depends on daily medication for a heart condition, was reported missing by her family on February 1 after she was last seen the night before when they dropped her off at home following a dinner.

Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos has said that Nancy Guthrie’s doorbell camera had been removed and that blood discovered on her porch matched back to her.

The case has captured national attention amid reports of purported ransom notes and emotional video pleas by Savannah Guthrie and her siblings.

On Monday, the famed NBC anchor posted a new Instagram video, telling her nearly two million followers: “We are at an hour of desperation, and we need your help.”

“Law enforcement is working tirelessly around the clock trying to bring her home, trying to find her. She was taken, and we don’t know where,” Savannath Guthrie said as she called the situation a “nightmare.”

The FBI, which is assisting in the case, has offered a reward of up to $50,000 for information related to Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance.




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