Letters from an American - December 29, 2025
Episode Date: December 30, 2025Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
December 29th, 2025.
In an appearance on New York's W.A.B.C. Radio on Friday, President Donald J. Trump told
billionaire businessman John Katsimatatus and co-host Rita Cosby,
We just knocked out, I don't know if you read or you saw. They have a big plant or a big facility where they send the, you know, where the ships come from.
Two nights ago, we knocked that out, so we hit them very hard.
Officials said Trump was referring to a drug facility in Venezuela.
But as Tyler Pager and Julian E. Barnes of the New York Times reported,
the White House and the Central Intelligence Agency, or CIA, had no comment,
and military officials said they had no information to share.
Pagerin Barnes added,
U.S. officials declined to specify anything about the site.
the president said was hit, where it was located, how the attack was carried out, or what
role the facility played in drug trafficking. There has been no public report of an attack
from the Venezuelan government or any other authorities in the region. The reporters also noted
that Venezuela is not a major producer of narcotics. It primarily traffics cocaine from Colombia.
Meanwhile, Max Barrack, Simone Posada, and Christian Trebert of the New York Times reported today that in the wreckage left behind by one of the U.S. strikes on what the administration calls narco-terrorists were bodies, charred fuel containers, life jackets, and packets, most of which were empty, although a few had traces of a substance that looked and smelled like marijuana.
At Mar-a-Lago today, Trump said there was a major explosion in the dock area where they load the boats up with drugs.
They load up the boats with drugs.
So we hit all the boats and now we hit the area.
It's the implementation area.
That's where they implement.
And that is no longer around.
Trump declined to say who was responsible for the operation.
I know exactly who it was, but I don't want to say who it was, he said.
but you know it was along the shore.
Defense Secretary Pete Higgseth, who usually posts video of military strikes on social media,
posted nothing about the strike Trump mentioned.
Although at 401 this afternoon, U.S. Southern Command posted that it had struck another small boat in the eastern Pacific,
killing another two men.
The new strike means that the U.S. military has killed more than a hundred individuals in an operation
widely condemned as illegal.
Tonight, Natasha Bertrand, Zachary Cohn, and Jim Shudo of CNN reported that earlier this month,
the CIA struck a remote Venezuelan port facility with drones,
the first known U.S. attack on targets inside Venezuela.
The U.S. says the Trenragua gang was using the dock to store drugs and then to move them onto boats for reshipment.
No one was at the facility when it was hit.
Sources told the CNN journalists that U.S. Special Operations Forces provided intelligence for the operation,
but a spokesperson for U.S. Special Operations Command denied that allegation.
The CIA declined to comment.
Josh Marshall of Talking Points memo commented,
It's a good commentary on 2025 that the U.S. president announces a major military
attack on a foreign country. And even the straightest arrows think, 50% chance it's an attack,
50% chance president is on another cognition bender. Saturday morning, the day before Ukraine
President Volodomir Zelenskyy was scheduled to meet with Trump for talks on ending Russia's
war against Ukraine, Russia launched a massive attack on Ukraine's capital, Kiev. The missile and drone
strikes damaged more than 10 residential buildings, killed at least one person who burned to death,
and wounded 27 more, including two children. When Zelensky arrived in Miami for his trip to Mara Lago,
there were no U.S. officials on hand to greet the plane. This was a deliberate snub, especially when
compared to the literal red carpet Trump had U.S. military personnel rollout for Putin when he arrived
on U.S. soil in August, followed by Trump greeting him while clapping, a military flyover,
and a ride with Trump in the presidential limousine. Trump's preference for Putin was evident
yesterday, too, when he posted on social media. I just had a good and very productive telephone
call with President Putin of Russia prior to my meeting at 1 p.m. today with President Zelensky
of Ukraine. He later told reporters,
that he and Putin talked for more than two hours.
At the meeting itself, Trump later told reporters,
the negotiating teams covered,
somebody would say 95%, I don't know what percent,
but we have made a lot of progress on ending that war.
He once again referred to his fictional claims of being a peacemaker,
adding, I've settled eight wars and this is the most difficult one.
But as Luke Harding of the Guardian noted,
there is no sign that Putin is backing off from his extreme demands,
including that Ukraine must give Russia much of its eastern territory.
Trump's negotiators suggest that such a concession would satisfy Putin,
but skeptics doubt it.
As White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles told Chris Whipple in August
in an interview for Vanity Fair,
the experts think that if he could get the rest of Donetsk,
then he would be happy.
But, she said, Donald Trump thinks he,
wants the whole country. Russia's second invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 has lasted
almost four years. And as Russian troops have routinely attacked civilian areas and civilian
infrastructure, the damage to the country has been extreme. After meeting with Zelensky,
Trump answered a reporter who asked whether Trump had spoken to Putin about the reconstruction
of Ukraine. I did. I did. They're going to be helping.
Russia is going to be helping.
Russia wants to see Ukraine succeed.
Once, it sounds a little strange,
but I was explaining it to the president.
President Putin was very generous
in his feeling toward Ukraine succeeding,
including supplying energy, electricity,
and other things at very low prices.
So a lot of good things came out of that call today.
Quite literally, Russia invaded Ukraine and continues to smash it.
As former Representative Adam Kinzinger, a Republican of Illinois, posted on social media,
with all this talk of how to end Russia's war against Ukraine and a ceasefire, keep this in mind.
If Ukraine ceases firing, Ukraine will cease to exist.
If Russia ceases firing, the war will cease to exist.
In his comments to reporters, one passage perhaps shed more light on events than Trump intended.
Defending the idea that Putin, who is bombing Ukraine in an unprovoked assault, wants peace,
Trump said, I saw a very interesting President Putin today.
I mean, he wants to see it happen. He wants to see it.
He told me very strongly. I believe him.
Don't forget, we went through the Russia, Russia, Russia hoax together.
And he'd call me. I'd call him.
I'd say, can you believe the stuff that they're making up?
And it turned out we were right. They made it all up. And despite that, we didn't get into wars or we didn't get into problems, but we weren't able to trade very much or any of that, which was a shame because you know a lot of success could have been had by trading with Russia. They have great land, great minerals and other things, and we have things that they want very badly. But the Russia, Russia, Russia hoax, which was a terrible, made up, fictional thing by Crooked Hillary and by Adam Schifty Schiff and bad people, sick people. They made it up. It was all a
made up hoax. But of course the idea that Russian operatives worked to put Trump into the White
House in 2016 wasn't a hoax. The Senate Intelligence Committee, chaired by a Republican,
unanimously concluded that the Russian government engaged in an aggressive, multifaceted effort
to influence the outcome of the 2016 presidential election. Further, Trump campaign share Paul Manafort's
close relationship with Russia-aligned oligarchs in Ukraine meant that his proximity to Trump created
opportunities for Russian intelligence services to exert influence over and acquire confidential
information on the Trump campaign. Taken as a whole, Manafort's high-level access and willingness to
share information with individuals closely affiliated with the Russian intelligence services represented a
grave counterintelligence threat. In 2016, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton
would not consider lifting the sanctions placed on Russia after its 2014 invasion of Ukraine's
Crimea. Although Republicans at the time supported those sanctions, it was not clear that
Trump was as firm. Lifting sanctions was part of the story of Russian support for Trump in
2016. The Senate committee and special counsel Robert Mueller put more of the story together,
explaining that in summer 2016, Manafort and Russian operatives discussed a plan to resolve the
ongoing political problems in Ukraine by creating an autonomous republic in its more industrialized
eastern region of Donbos, and having Russian-backed Viktor Yanukovych, the Ukrainian president, ousted
in 2014, elected to head that republic. The Mueller report continued, that plan, Manafort later
acknowledged, constituted a backdoor means for Russia to control eastern Ukraine. All that is required
to start the process is a very minor wink or slight push from Donald Trump, saying he wants
peace in Ukraine and Donbos back in Ukraine and a decision to be a special representative
and manage this process, wrote a Russian operative. According to the Senate Intelligence Committee,
the men continued to work on what they called the Mariupil Plan until at least 2018.
Trump has continued to pressure Zelensky into accepting that plan, so far without success.
But Trump's statement to reporters also suggests that with Russia's economy crumpling
under the weight of four years of war, Putin is desperate to grab Ukraine's industrial regions
and get rid of the sanctions under which his country has staggered since 2014, and especially
since his second invasion of Ukraine in 2022. In late November, Russia began to sell its gold reserves
in order to fund its budget. Trump told reporters he had had another very good talk with Putin this
morning, after his Sunday meeting with Zelensky.
Whether because of Trump's or Putin's weakening position, or both, both Trump and Putin appear
to be eager to close the deal.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dead in Massachusetts, recorded with music
composed by Michael Moss.
