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If you can translate a sentence into English using "will" (I go, we will see), you’re ready to use this tense.

En un mundo donde la tecnología avanza a pasos agigantados y la preocupación por el medio ambiente es cada vez mayor, la industria automotriz se encuentra en un momento de transformación sin precedentes. En este contexto, el "El Futuro P 270" emerge como un vehículo que no solo promete revolucionar la forma en que nos desplazamos, sino que también se posiciona como un referente en términos de sostenibilidad y eficiencia. En este artículo, exploraremos en detalle qué es el El Futuro P 270, sus características más destacadas, y por qué se considera un vehículo del futuro.

While the near future is great for plans, the "True Future" (the futuro próximo ) is used for: what will happen.

This obsession with the future creates a paradox of solitude. The future is an unreached destination, a horizon that recedes as we approach it. By placing our justification in what is "yet to be," we invalidate the "now" and ignore the "was." Paz suggests that this is particularly poignant in the Mexican identity, which has spent centuries oscillating between a buried indigenous past and an imported European future. The "labyrinth" is the state of being lost between these times, unable to reconcile the myths of old with the cold, rational projects of tomorrow.

The “Futuro” is designed as a saturation attack weapon. Unlike subsonic cruise missiles (e.g., Tomahawk or Harpoon), a supersonic P-270 successor reduces target reaction time to under 60 seconds. It is intended to be launched in volleys of 4–8 missiles from coastal batteries, naval vessels, or maritime strike aircraft (like the Tu-22M3 Backfire). Its primary targets are aircraft carrier battle groups, amphibious assault ships, and high-value supply vessels.