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Mike Baker
Foreign 10 January welcome to the President's Daily Brief. I'm Mike Baker, your eyes and ears on the world stage. All right, let's get briefed. Today we start in the Middle east with a bold accusation from a top Iranian general. Now, he claims that Russia turned on its allies in Syria's final days, faking airstrikes by bombing empty deserts while bragging about targeting rebels. Later in the show, the US Military launches its first strikes against the Houthis of the new year, targeting an underground weapons storage facility in Yemen. Plus the latest from Venezuela, where opposition leaders are calling for mass protests ahead of President Maduro's inauguration for a third term. And in today's Back of the Brief, the president of Mexico is pushing back against President Trump after he proposed changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. But first, today's PDB spotlight. We'll begin with an update on Syria as a top Iranian general issues a rare rebuke of their Russian allies, putting partial blame on the Putin regime for the sudden downfall of their ally Assad last month at the hands of Islamist rebels. Brigadier General Behrouz Esbadi, Iran's senior ranking general in Syria before Assad's overthrow, made the remarks during a surprisingly candid speech last week at a mosque in Tehran. He accused the Kremlin of directly lying to leaders in Tehran as the HTS led offensive got underway back in late November, according to an exclusive report from the New York Times. Now, the Kremlin apparently told Iranian officials that Russian jets were conducting a bombing campaign to blunt the advances of the rebels, including strikes on HTS's headquarters. But it turned out the Russians were just putting on an elaborate show for their supposed allies in both Iran and Syria. I mean, seriously, if you can't trust Putin and his minions, well, what's the world coming to? In reality, his body said that Russia was simply bombing the empty desert to make it look like they were standing in Assad's corner. But his body implied that Russia's treachery was, frankly, hardly a surprise. He further accused Russia of turning off critical radars inside Syria throughout 2024 when Israel launched airstrikes targeting Iranian military officials and militant infrastructure stationed in the country. By standing down the radars, he said, Russia had enabled Israel's forces to attack much more effectively. The remarks come as a former senior aide to Assad said Monday that the Kremlin had stalled critical military assistance during the rebel uprising. The official said Assad had personally asked Vladimir Putin to approve airlifting military aid to Syria, and that was a request Putin reportedly agreed to. But when Syrian officials asked the Iranian regime about the aid, which was supposed to be transported via Iranian aircraft, well, they said they never received any such request from Moscow. Assad then tried to follow up with the Kremlin, but received no answer. Sorry, nobody's home. The accounts from Ezbadi and former members of Assad's inner circle offer a rare peek behind the curtain of Russia's Middle east alliances and how damaged they've become as a result, frankly, of their war on Ukraine. Still, his body put the lion's share of blame for the situation in Syria on the Assad regime itself, which he said had become marred by internal corruption. Well, I mean, it does sound like the Iranian regime is blaming everyone except, well, for the Iranian regime. The general added that relations between Damascus and Tehran became significantly strained over the past year after Assad refused multiple Iranian requests to facilitate attacks by Iranian backed militias on Israel through Syria. But he also put some blame on his own country. Oh well, look at that. Breaking with Iran's diplomatic line regarding Assad's ouster, Hezbody reportedly said, I don't consider losing Syria something to be proud of. Well, here's an understatement. We were defeated and defeated very badly. We took a very big blow and it's been very difficult, end quote. The comments stand in stark contrast to the statements of Iran's president, foreign minister and other top leaders who have all attempted to downplay the magnitude of Iran's strategic loss. But as we discussed earlier this week on the pdb, the collapse of the Assad regime is really nothing short of a catastrophe for Iran's regional ambitions. We learned this week that the Mullahs have pulled out nearly all of their forces from Syria in the aftermath of the rebel victory marking the collapse of a years long effort to use Syria as a central hub for their activities of their once powerful axis of resistance. The Iranian regime and its IRGC had poured billions of dollars into this effort, sending some 10,000 military personnel and allied fighters to Syria after the civil war broke out in 2011. At the height of their activity, the IRGC's elite Quds Force reportedly controlled at least 55 military bases throughout the country, using them to coordinate the activities of their proxy groups. Now their forces have all but fled, their militia groups have disbanded, and most of their military equipment and weapons have either been seized or destroyed. Still, despite the losses, his body said the regime plans to re establish its operations in Syria. He said, quote, we can activate all the networks we have worked with over the years, we can activate the social layers that our guys lived among for years, we can be active in social media and we can form resistance cells. The general ominously added, we have already started, end quote. All right, coming up next, the US Military kicks off the new year with airstrikes on Houthi weapons facilities in Yemen, while Venezuela braces for mass protests as opposition leaders challenge Maduro's third term inauguration. I'll be right back.
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Mike Baker
Welcome back to the PDB Sticking with the Middle East, Yemen's Houthi rebels, the last Iranian proxy group of any rail capability left in the region, are back in America's sights. On Wednesday, U.S. central Command, or Centcom, announced they had carried out their first precision strikes of the year, hitting weapons depots used by the Houthi terrorists to target naval warships and commercial vessels in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. Notably, the targets included the militant group's underground advanced conventional weapons storage facilities. That's according to a report from the Jerusalem Post. Officials at centcom, who declined to specify where in Yemen the strikes took place, said they're part of their ongoing efforts to, quote, degrade Iranian backed Houthi attempts to threaten regional partners and military and merchant vessels in the region, end quote. It was the fourth US Strike on Houthi targets over the past month by the outgoing Biden administration, which is responding to the group's increased targeting of US Naval vessels since November. Last month alone, the US Military managed to thwart two separate attempted strikes on naval and merchant ships by the Iranian backed terrorists. It's worth noting that the latest strikes came less than 24 hours after Centcom's deputy commander met with the Israeli military's deputy chief of staff to discuss a unified approach to dealing with the ongoing Houthi threat. Sounds like they came up with a unified approach. Past meetings of this nature have almost exclusively focused on Gaza, Lebanon or Iran, suggesting that Israel is now ready to make the Houthis one of their primary focuses as the new year gets underway. Over the past few weeks, the Houthis have also escalated their attacks on Israel, firing ballistic missiles at Tel Aviv and the surrounding region on a number of occasions, including one this past Sunday. And some have managed to slip through Israel's missile defenses. While there have been no fatalities from Houthi attacks since last July, a ballistic missile struck a school in tel Aviv on December 19, causing some $3 million in damage. Several days later, a Houthi missile barrage injured 16 people at a park in Jaffa, near Tel Aviv. Israeli leaders have warned that if the attacks continue, the Houthis will suffer the same fate as Hamas and Hezbollah. Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu also recently vowed to eradicate the last remnants of what he called the Iranians axis of evil. As a reminder, the Houthis began relentlessly attacking Israel in the wake of last year's 7th of October attacks by Hamas. To date, they have fired more than 200 missiles and 170 drones at the Jewish state. The militants have also targeted more than 80 merchant vessels, with hundreds of missile attacks in the Red Sea, significantly disrupting international trade. Okay, Shifting to Venezuela Opposition forces called for protests Thursday as socialist dictator Nicolas Maduro prepares to solidify his grip on power with a third term inauguration following last summer's heavily disputed election. Despite the opposition's request for mass demonstrations from the public to disrupt the inauguration, the streets of Caracas were eerily subdued on Thursday morning, reflecting the climate of fear under Maduro's increasingly repressive regime. Since New Year's Day, the city has been blanketed with security forces and armed pro government groups known as colectivos. Their presence a warning, of course, to deter any uprising ahead of today's swearing and ceremony. In a rare show of defiance, a small group of protesters cautiously gathered in one Caracas neighborhood, chanting freedom. Their numbers slowly swelled as others joined, emboldened by the unexpected appearance of opposition leader Maria Corina Machado emerging from hiding for the first time since August of this past year. Her presence is a show of defiance against Maduro's efforts to eliminate dissent. Even as she faced the imminent threat of arrest, Maduro's regime deployed a familiar playbook of suppression, blocking streets and blaring loud music to drown out other potential Protests, mass arrests and other repressive measures have become hallmarks of the government's response since the disputed 28 July election, which saw Maduro declared the winner by a national electoral council packed not surprisingly with loyalists. However, the council failed to provide detailed vote counts. That's surprising. And by that I mean it's not surprising. A stark departure from past elections and a blow to Venezuela's fragile democracy. The opposition countered with evidence publishing tally sheets from some 85% of electronic voting machines. They claimed retired diplomat Edmundo Gonzalez had decisively won, securing twice as many votes as Maduro. Lending weight to their claims, the US Backed Carter center, invited by Maduro's regime to observe the election, verified the opposition's tally sheets as legitimate. Undeterred, the national assembly, firmly under Maduro's control, is set to oversee his inauguration on Friday, signaling a further entrenchment of authoritarian power. Despite credible evidence of election fraud, Maduro stranglehold on Venezuela was further on full display Tuesday during a televised address where he announced the capture of two Americans, labeling them as, quote, very high level and, quote, mercenaries in an alleged plot against his regime. The socialist dictator provided no evidence. Shocking. To substantiate his allegations, Maduro stated, quote, just today we've captured seven foreign mercenaries, including two important ones from the United States, naming Colombians and Ukrainians among the group. The U.S. state Department swiftly dismissed these accusations as baseless, citing Venezuela's history of detaining Americans without cause. A spokesperson from the State Department reiterated Washington's support for a democratic resolution to the country's crisis, calling Maduro's claims of U.S. involvement to overthrow Venezuela as categorically false. The identities of the detained Americans remain undisclosed. Opposition candidate Gonzalez, recognized by the Biden administration as Venezuela's legitimate president elect, was in Washington meeting with US Officials when Maduro announced the arrests. President Biden doubled down on Washington's stance, reiterating that Gonzalez was the rightful winner of the July election and condemning Maduro's grip on power. Okay, coming up in today's Back of the Brief, a war of words as Mexico's president fires back at President Trump over his surprising proposal to rename the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. More on that when we come back.
Tucker Carlson
Hey, it's Tucker Carlson. It was five years ago this month that people started to drop dead in the central Chinese city of Wuhan. Five years since the beginning of COVID Tens of millions dead, societies reordered completely, economies destroyed. And yet, for some reason, we still don't know answers to the most basic questions and one man knows those answers. His name is Dr. Tony Fauci and now a documentary filmmaker called Jenner first is out with a new film explaining exactly what happened. The film was called thank you Dr. Fauci. We are proud to host that documentary here on TCN from December 20th to January 19th. You will see it exclusively here on Tucker Carlson.com again is called thank you Dr. Fauci and it's worth it.
Mike Baker
In today's Back of the Brief, Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum delivered a theatrical rebuttal on Wednesday when she mockingly proposed renaming North America America Mexicana, a sarcastic response to President Elect Trump's suggestion to rebrand the Gulf of Mexico as, quote, the Gulf of America. Standing before a 1607 map during a press conference, looking like a smug history teacher, Sheinbaum gestured toward the swath of land encompassing present day Mexico, the US and parts of Canada. She asked, quote, why don't we call it America Mexicana? It sounds pretty. Isn't that true? End quote. Her words were not just a satirical cab at the president elect, but also a historical reference made earlier in the press conference by a former cultural secretary who explained that America Mexicana was once used to describe the region on a map commissioned by the Dutch East India Company. Sheinbaum added that the name also appeared in the constitution drafted during Mexico's independence movement against Spain in 1814. While the reference predates Mexico's modern constitution by more than a century, she used it to underscore the historical ties of the term to the region. Trump's Tuesday announcement of the Gulf of America drew both support and backlash, with the president elect justifying the name change by citing the U.S. s economic and industrial footprint along the Gulf. He claimed the US Quote, does most of the work there, referencing the region's role in petroleum refining and natural gas processing. But the announcement wasn't just about territorial rebranding. The president elect used the moment to slam Mexico for its ongoing stream of illegal immigration and drug trafficking into the U.S. adding that Mexico is run by the cartels. In his wide ranging news conference, Sheinbaum, while still standing in front of the map, dismissed Trump's assertion that Mexico was overrun by drug cartels, stating, quote, trump Trump must think Calderon is still president. Now. That's a reference to former Mexican President Felipe Calderon, whose administration ended over a decade ago. Her response did little to divert attention from Mexico's ongoing struggles with cartel violence. It's a glaring challenge facing her during her presidency as Trump readies himself for office, his remarks and Sheinbaum's unsolicited history lesson underscore the tensions currently in U. S Mexico relations. And that, my friends, is the President's Daily brief for Friday 10th January. Now if you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me@pdbhefirsttv.com now it's been brought to my attention that today is Friday. And Fridays, of course. Well, they mean new episodes of our extended weekend show, the PDB Situation Report. This week's excellent guests include George Barrows from the Institute for the Study of War and retired colonel and man about town, Colonel John Mills. Smart guests, insightful analysis, catchy theme music. Don't miss the latest episode of the Situation Report. New episodes at the airwaves every Friday at 10pm on the First TV and are also available on our YouTube channel at PresidentsDaily, Brief, and of course, all podcast platforms throughout podcast land. I'm Mike Baker and I'll be back later today with the PDB Afternoon Bulletin. Until then, stay informed, stay safe, stay cool.
The President's Daily Brief: January 10th, 2025
Hosted by Mike Baker
At the outset of today's briefing, former CIA Operations Officer and host Mike Baker delves into a significant development in the Middle East. Brigadier General Behrouz Esbadi, Iran's senior-ranking general in Syria, has publicly accused Russia of betraying its alliance during Syria's tumultuous final days. Speaking at a mosque in Tehran, Esbadi made these bold claims that have sent ripples through international diplomatic circles.
Key Points:
Accusations Against Russia: Esbadi alleges that the Kremlin deceived Iranian and Syrian leaders by conducting fake airstrikes. Instead of targeting rebel strongholds, Russian jets reportedly bombed empty desert areas to portray support for Assad's regime.
Impact on Assad's Downfall: Esbadi partially attributes the collapse of Bashar al-Assad's regime to Russian actions. He stated, "We were defeated and defeated very badly. We took a very big blow and it's been very difficult" (06:15).
Strained Alliances: The general highlighted that Russia had deliberately turned off critical radars in Syria during Israeli airstrikes, thereby aiding Israel in targeting Iranian military officials and infrastructure.
Internal Corruption: Esbadi also pointed fingers at the Assad regime's internal corruption, suggesting that these issues exacerbated the regional instability.
Implications:
Regional Power Dynamics: The fallout from these accusations underscores the fragility of Russia’s alliances in the Middle East, especially in the context of its ongoing conflict in Ukraine.
Iran's Strategic Retreat: Following the rebel victory in Syria, Iran has significantly reduced its military presence, signaling a retreat from its long-term strategic ambitions in the region. Despite these setbacks, Esbadi indicated plans to reestablish Iranian operations through social media and resistance cells.
Transitioning to another critical development in the Middle East, Baker reports on the U.S. military's recent actions targeting the Houthi rebels in Yemen. These strikes mark the first of the year and signify a continued effort to counter Iranian-backed threats in the region.
Key Points:
Precision Strikes: On Wednesday, U.S. Central Command (Centcom) executed precision attacks on Houthi weapons depots, specifically targeting underground advanced conventional weapons storage facilities in Yemen (07:37).
Strategic Objectives: Centcom officials stated that the strikes aimed to "degrade Iranian-backed Houthi attempts to threaten regional partners and military and merchant vessels" in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.
Collaboration with Israel: Notably, these strikes followed discussions between Centcom's deputy commander and the Israeli military's deputy chief of staff, indicating a unified approach to addressing the Houthi threat.
Houthi Escalations: The Houthis have intensified their attacks on Israel, including ballistic missile strikes on Tel Aviv and increased targeting of naval and commercial vessels, disrupting international trade routes.
Notable Quote: Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu has vowed to "eradicate the last remnants of what he called the Iranians axis of evil," reflecting the heightened resolve against Iranian influence in the region.
Shifting focus to Latin America, Venezuela is on the brink of political upheaval as opposition leaders mobilize for mass protests against President Nicolás Maduro's controversial bid for a third term.
Key Points:
Opposition Mobilization: Despite calls for large-scale demonstrations, Caracas remained largely subdued on inauguration day due to the pervasive climate of fear fostered by Maduro's regime.
Security Measures: The capital city was heavily fortified with security forces and pro-government colectivos, aimed at suppressing any potential uprisings.
Symbolic Defiance: A small group of protesters gathered, chanting "freedom," and opposition leader María Corina Machado emerged from hiding, signaling a bold challenge to Maduro's authority.
Election Controversies: The July 28th election, which Maduro claimed victory, was marred by allegations of fraud. The opposition presented tally sheets showing retired diplomat Edmundo González as the rightful winner, a claim supported by the US-backed Carter Center.
International Response: The U.S. State Department dismissed Maduro's accusations of American involvement, reaffirming support for González and condemning Maduro's authoritarian hold on power.
Notable Quote: Maduro declared, "Just today we've captured seven foreign mercenaries, including two important ones from the United States," though no evidence was provided to substantiate these claims (11:20).
In a diplomatic spat across North America, Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum responded sharply to President-elect Donald Trump's proposal to rename the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America.
Key Points:
Public Rebuttal: During a press conference, Sheinbaum sarcastically suggested renaming North America to "America Mexicana," referencing historical usages of the term (14:46).
Historical Context: Sheinbaum highlighted that "America Mexicana" was once used in maps commissioned by the Dutch East India Company and appeared in Mexico's 1814 independence constitution.
Trump's Justification: Trump proposed the renaming to emphasize the U.S.'s economic and industrial contributions to the region, particularly in petroleum refining and natural gas processing.
Accusations Against Mexico: The proposal was accompanied by Trump’s criticism of Mexico's handling of illegal immigration and drug trafficking, which Sheinbaum dismissed by referencing former President Felipe Calderón, stating, "Trump must think Calderón is still president."
Bilateral Tensions: Sheinbaum's responses underscore the existing tensions between the U.S. and Mexico, particularly regarding immigration and security issues.
Notable Quote: Sheinbaum rhetorically asked, "Why don't we call it America Mexicana? It sounds pretty. Isn't that true?" (15:10), effectively mocking Trump's initiative while highlighting historical claims.
Today's episode of The President's Daily Brief provided a comprehensive overview of critical geopolitical developments affecting the Middle East and Latin America. From Iran's internal critiques of its Russian allies in Syria to the U.S. military's strategic strikes against Houthi rebels, and from Venezuela's fragile political landscape to Mexico's diplomatic counterattacks, host Mike Baker delivered insightful analysis on the pressing challenges facing America's regional partnerships and global standing.
For more detailed analyses and updates, listeners are encouraged to subscribe to The President's Daily Brief podcast available on all major platforms.