The President's Daily Brief - April 7th, 2026: Top IRGC Commander Eliminated & Hormuz Traffic Rises
Episode Date: April 7, 2026In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: Israel delivers another major blow to Iran’s leadership, killing the head of IRGC intelligence along with a top Quds Force commander in a targeted... strike inside Tehran. What this means for the regime—and what could come next. Even as Iran maintains its grip on the Strait of Hormuz, shipping traffic is rising, suggesting quiet deals may be keeping oil flowing through one of the world’s most critical chokepoints. Meanwhile, Ukraine presses ahead with strikes on Russian oil infrastructure, despite growing pressure to ease off amid rising global energy concerns. And in today’s Back of the Brief—North Korea may be preparing its next leader, as Kim Jong Un’s teenage daughter takes on a more prominent public role, fueling speculation about a fourth-generation dynasty. To listen to the show ad-free, become a premium member of The President’s Daily Brief by visiting https://PDBPremium.com. Please remember to subscribe if you enjoyed this episode of The President's Daily Brief. YouTube: youtube.com/@presidentsdailybrief DeleteMe: Get 20% off your DeleteMe plan when you go to https://joindeleteme.com/PDBand use promo code PDB at checkout. Sundays for Dogs: Upgrade your dog’s food without the hassle—try Sundays for Dogs and get 50% off your first order at https://sundaysfordogs.com/PDB50 or use code PDB50 at checkout. Goldbelly: Make Mother’s Day unforgettable with iconic foods delivered—get free shipping and 20% off your first order at https://GOLDBELLY.com with code PDB. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Kayak gets my flight, hotel, and rental car right, so I can tune out travel advice that's just plain wrong.
Bro, Skycoin, way better than points.
Never fly during a Scorpio full moon.
Just tell the manager you'll sue. Instant room upgrade.
Stop taking bad travel advice.
Start comparing hundreds of sites with kayak and get your trip right.
Bad advice? You talking to me?
Kayak, got that right.
It's Tuesday, the 7th of April. 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. First up, another major blow
to Iran's leadership, as Israel terminates the head of IRGC intelligence and the top Quds Force
commander as well, I'll have the details. Later in the show, even as Iran keeps its grip on the
Strait of Hormuz, the number of vessels transiting the waterway is increasing, pointing to
two behind-the-scenes deals, likely evolving payments to the Iranian regime in order to keep
the oil moving. Plus, a growing energy crisis has not slowed Ukraine's campaign, as Kiev
targets Russian oil infrastructure despite international pressure to ease off. And in today's back of the
brief, North Korea appears to be preparing for its next leader, and, no surprise, they're keeping
it all in the family. But first, today's PDB spotlight. Even as ceasefire talks stall and another
White House deadline approaches, Israel is continuing a very different type of campaign, systematically
removing Iran's leadership. The latest example came yesterday when Israel announced that
Majid Khademi, the head of intelligence for Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the IRGC,
was killed in a targeted strike in Tehran. He wasn't alone. Kuds Force Special Operations
Commander Ascar Bulgaria was also killed in the strike. Now, Bulgaria had led that unit since 2019,
overseeing covert operations, targeting Israeli forces along the Syrian border and helping
coordinate the transfer of weapons from Iran to its proxies. Cademi wasn't just another name on a long
list of casualties. He ran the most powerful intelligence organization in Iran, responsible for
domestic surveillance, counter-espionage, and monitoring foreign threats. In many ways,
This was the regime's internal shield, the system that is designed to detect infiltration and prevent attacks and protect the leadership.
What makes this strike especially notable is that Khademi had only been in the role since 2025,
after his predecessor was killed during Israel's Operation Rising Lion in June of last year.
Since the start of the latest war, several of Iran's top intelligence and security posts have turned over,
as there's lots of headroom as Israel continues targeting senior officials and command.
And there's another detail here that stands out. According to Israeli officials,
Kademi had been moving constantly, relocating in an effort to avoid detection. Well, apparently that
didn't work. He was tracked and eliminated. While headlines are focused on whether this war is
escalating, whether diplomacy might reemerge, or whether there's an off-ramp at all, this campaign,
targeting Iran's command and control, has continued at a steady pace. Strike after strike and
senior figure after senior figure. The goal appears clear, degrade Iran's ability to operate by dismantling
the people who run the system, not just the military, but the intelligence infrastructure that keeps
the regime informed, coordinated, and secure. And you can get a sense of just how significant this latest
strike was by the reaction coming out of Tehran. In a statement following Cademius' death,
the Revolutionary Guard vowed what they called a, quote, major retaliatory strike under an operational
that they have named Creshing Revenge. Well, that's catchy. That threat is coming specifically
from the intelligence arm that just lost its chief. Meanwhile, as President Trump's deadline looms,
Iran is pushing back with what U.S. officials are calling a maximalist response to a potential
ceasefire deal. As we reported yesterday, the U.S., Iran, and a group of regional mediators led by
Pakistan have been working toward a two-phase agreement, a 45-day ceasefire, followed by
broader negotiations aimed at ending the war. But now, we're getting a clearer picture of why that
deal appears out of reach. According to U.S. officials and Iranian state media, Tehran's response
includes a series of sweeping demands, starting with a permanent end to the war, not just a temporary
pause. That's a key sticking point, and one that mediators are now scrambling to resolve.
Iran is also reportedly tying any agreement to wider regional conditions, including an end to his
military operations in places like Lebanon. And there are additional demands on the table,
guaranteed safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz, reconstruction payments, and the lifting of
sanctions imposed by the U.S. and its allies. Taken together, it's a package that one U.S.
official described as maximalist and one that President Trump says simply isn't good enough.
Speaking to reporters, Trump said it's, quote, highly unlikely. He'll extend his deadline,
warning that if no deal is reached, he could order major strikes on Iranian civilian infrastructure,
including power plants and bridges. Iran, for its part, is already signaling how it might respond,
warning of retaliatory strikes targeting energy and water infrastructure across the Gulf.
All right, coming up next. Iran still controls the Strait of Hormuz, but more ships are passing
through the waterway. And Ukraine is pressing ahead with strikes on Russian energy total.
targets, despite growing global concern over global energy supplies and pricing.
I'll be right back.
Hey, Mike Baker here.
Let me take just a moment of your time to talk about security, specifically your online security,
and to tell you about Delete Me.
It's a great company out there working to make people safer online.
Delete Me makes it easy, quick, and safe to remove your personal data online at a time
when surveillance and data breaches are common enough to make everyone vulnerable.
Look, it's easier than ever to find personal information about people online.
Having your address, your phone number, and your family members information just hanging out on the internet,
well, that can have actual consequences in the real world and can make you vulnerable to all sorts of scams.
If you like me, privacy and protecting your online presence is important.
We all want to stay protected from identity theft or harassment or doxing,
and you can do that with the help of Delete Me.
Take control of your data and keep your private life private by signing up for Delete Me.
Now at a special discount for PDB listeners.
Get 20% off your DeleteMe plan when you go to join deleteme.com slash PDB
and use the promo code PDB at checkout.
Again, to get 20% off, just go to join deleteme.com slash PDB and enter the code PDB at checkout.
That's joineddeletme.com slash PDB, code PDB.
Welcome back to the PDB.
We're watching traffic through the Strait of Homoos climbed to its highest level in weeks.
But before we call that progress, it's worth taking a close.
closer look at how those ships are actually getting through. Because right now, every transit depends on
Iran. Over the weekend, 21 ships made it through the strait, including 15 on Sunday alone. That's the
highest level we've seen since the early days of this conflict. But let's take a closer look. Traffic is still
down more than 90% from pre-war levels when roughly 135 vessels were moving through the waterway
every single day. So yes, more ships are moving, but it's nowhere close to normal. And more importantly,
it's not a reopening. It's a system that's being tightly controlled. What we're saying is
countries negotiating directly with the Iranian regime just to move ships out of the Gulf. Iraq was
granted an exemption for a shipment of crude. India has managed to move several LPG tankers,
including some tide to Iranian supply. Even vessels linked to China and Japan are getting through, but often
only after multiple attempts and behind-the-scenes coordination.
In total, ships from a range of countries, including China, which has probably received the most
largesse from the Iranian regime, Turkey, Greece, and Thailand have made the crossing under
these conditions.
And that tells you something important, because it's not about freedom of navigation.
This is Iran inserting itself directly into the flow of global commerce.
In many cases, ships are being routed along paths that appear to be dictated by the regime,
often hugging Iran's coastline. Some vessels have started testing alternative routes, but the reality
hasn't changed. Passage still depends on Iranian approval, and the terms of those approvals are often
unclear. In a handful of cases, governments are going even further to secure access. Pakistan, for example,
has reportedly been offered 20 transit slots, more than the number of its ships currently stuck in the
Strait and is now weighing options such as reflagging vessels to secure critical supplies like
fertilizer and oil. And while some of these agreements are acknowledged publicly, many of the
details do remain opaque, negotiated quietly behind closed doors. At the same time, Iran is still moving
to formalize this control over the Strait. Regime officials are advancing legislation that would
regulate transit through the Strait and codify fees for passage, turning one of the world's most
important shipping lanes into a toll system. Ship owners say that in practice some of these payments
are already happening, with Iran framing them as compensation for war-related damages. Now, as our regular
PDB listeners know, the Strait of Hormuz is one of the most critical choke points in the global economy,
carrying roughly 20% of the world's oil and gas supply. And instead of open access, what's emerging is a
system where a single regime can influence who gets through when they get through and under what
conditions. The U.S. is signaling that it will not accept that situation indefinitely.
President Trump warned of severe consequences if Iran doesn't fully reopen straight, because at the
end of the day, allowing a hostile actor to control a critical transit route so important to the
global energy markets carries serious economic and strategic risks. But for now, Iran holds the
leverage. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy, or I suppose what's left of it, has made
clear that the strait will, quote, never return to its previous condition, particularly when it
comes to access for the U.S. So, yes, more ships are moving, but this isn't stability. It's now a tollway
operated by an authoritarian regime. An authoritarian regime that's extorting the international
community in order to move oil and gas through the strait. Turning now to the war in Ukraine,
Kiev is doubling down on its campaign against the Kremlin's energy infrastructure,
hitting oil facilities inside Russia, despite allied calls to ease off amid constricting global markets.
This week, Ukrainian drones again pushed deep into Russian territory, hitting a luke oil refinery
roughly 800 kilometers from the Ukrainian border, and an oil terminal near the Baltic border
one of Moscow's most critical export hubs.
Now, local officials are acknowledging damage, citing fires at fuel storage sites and disruptions
at refining facilities.
videos and pictures posted to social media reveal massive explosions.
Ukrainian officials, including Kiev's unmanned systems forces commander,
say the strikes were ultimately successful.
The Russian defense ministry did claim it intercepted 87 drones across the western part of the country
and in occupied Crimea, including 19 over the Leningrad region,
where key oil export terminals like Primorsk and Usluga are located.
But despite those defenses, Ukrainian drones are still getting through.
The governor of Russia's Nizny Novgorod region said debris from intercepted drones
damaged facilities at the luke oil refinery.
In the Leningrad region, the governor initially reported a strike on an oil pipeline near Primorsk,
then clarified that fuel storage tanks at the site had caught fire.
Either way, the outcome is the same.
Critical energy infrastructure that drives Moscow's war machine was hit.
For those of you who are unfamiliar, Primorsk has been targeted repeatedly in recent weeks.
with Ukrainian forces striking the site on multiple consecutive nights at the end of March.
Now, we're seeing a sustained campaign, one that's reaching deeper into Russian territory,
and focusing squarely on the infrastructure that keeps oil moving to global markets.
Oil exports remain one of the Kremlin's most important sources of income, of course,
and right now, with global prices rising, those exports are even more valuable.
So Keeve is making a calculated decision to continue these strikes,
even as allies, including Washington, urge restraint, aiming to deny Moscow the windfall that comes
with higher energy prices. As mentioned, the conflict in Iran, now in its sixth week, has disrupted
supply, driven energy prices higher, and left allies increasingly concerned that continued
strikes on Russian infrastructure could push oil prices even higher than they already are.
Still, Ukraine is pressing ahead anyway. At the same time, the Trump administration sanctioned,
Russian energy companies like Luke oil and Ross Neff in late 2025, targeting a vital source of
Moscow's war funding. But that was then, this is now. After the outbreak of war in Iran,
the Treasury Department issued a temporary license, allowing certain Russian oil shipments to
proceed in an effort to stabilize global markets and prevent even sharper price spikes.
So on the one hand, Washington's moves to ease the sanctions on Russian oil in order to contain
the market shock and keep prices from spiraling, well, those moves served to put more money into Putin's
war chest. On the other, Ukraine is actively working to cut off Russia's ability to benefit from those
rising oil prices. It is, to use a fancy word, a conundrum. All right, coming up in the back of the
brief, North Korea's next leader may already be in training as Kim Jong-un's teenage daughter takes on a
growing public role. Oh, good. A teenager in charge of a nuclear nuclear.
arsenal. What could go wrong? We'll have the details. Hey, Mike Baker here with a message for dog lovers
everywhere. Now, if you're like me, dogs are an important part of family life, right? We've got two of
around you, heard me talk about them. This 14-year-old Hendricks, he's a great old boy. He's
slowing down, though. And then, of course, there's our very cute, but somewhat dim King Charles
Spaniel, Monty. But as you probably know, as a dog lover, when it comes to your dog food,
well, there always seems to be a compromise, right? It's either fresh.
and healthy, or it's easy to store and serve. Well, that's why we love Sundays for dogs. With the
Sundays for Dogs brand, you get both, fresh and healthy dog food that's easy to store and serve.
It's founded by veterinarian, Dr. Tori Waxman. Sundays is created with air-dried, real food made in a
human food-grade kitchen using the same ingredients that you'd use to cook for your family. Every bite is
clean, it's packed with real meat, fruit, and veggies. There's no weird, unpronounceable ingredients,
and no fillers. Compared to other brands, Sundays and
invests 50 times more in its ingredients for true premium quality. There's no cost cutting here.
Just scoop and serve, no freezer, no thawing, no prep, no mess, no fuss, no must, come on.
Make the switch to Sundays. Go right now to Sundaysfordogs.com slash PDB50 and get 50% off
off your first order, or you can use code PDB50 at checkout. That's 50% off your first order at
Sundaysforogs.com slash PDB50. Once again, Sundaysforogs.com slash PDB50.
or just use the code PDB50 at checkout.
Hey, Mike Baker here.
Now, you have probably heard me talk about Goldbelly, right?
It's the amazing company that brings iconic foods
from America's greatest chefs straight to your doorstep.
It's that simple.
Well, as you may be aware, because you probably looked at the calendar
or maybe your mom told you, Mother's Day is fast approaching.
Don't forget that, kids.
Come on.
And what better way to make Mom feel special
than to order up food she's going to love?
Gold Belly celebrates the best of America
by shipping the country's most celebrated foods from legendary eateries straight to your door.
And they'll ship anywhere across the country for free in time for Mother's Day.
Everything I've ordered from Goldbelly shows a perfectly packed and delicious.
As an example, you can celebrate your mom with Ina Garton's coconut cupcakes.
Come on, these things are ridiculously good.
And how about Loveless Cafe's Southern Biscuit brunch from Goldbelly?
Okay, likewise.
Deccant, delicious.
Come on, what's not the like?
So if you're looking to make Mother's Day perfect
or you just want to impress your friends and family
with an epic meal next time you host
and who doesn't want to do that,
go to goldbelly.com and get free shipping
and 20% off your first order with promo code PDB.
That's goldbelly.com, code PDB,
for free shipping and 20% off your first order.
This is Euphoria Calvin Klein,
the new elixir collection,
featuring three perfume intense scents,
inspired by a unique orchid accord,
paired with vanilla, each with its own distinct
attitude, each with its own universe.
Bold elixir. Sensual,
woody, addictive, magnetic elixir,
sweet and romantic like a lingering
touch. Solar elixir, a radiant
expression of joy. Ultra-concentrated
for amplified impact and lasting
power. Find your euphoria. Discover
the euphoria elixir collection by
Calvin Klein. Ryan Reynolds
here from Mint Mobile, the message for
everyone paying big wireless way too
much. Please for the love of everything
good in this world, stop. With
Mint, you can get premium wireless for just
$15 a month. Of course, if you enjoy overpaying, no judgments, but that's weird. Okay, one judgment.
Anyway, give it a try at mintmobile.com slash switch. Up front payment of $45 for three-month plan,
equivalent to $15 per month required. Intro rate first three months only, then full price plan options
available. Taxes and fees extra. See full terms at mintmobile.com. In today's back of the brief,
North Korea may be preparing its next leader, and it is all in the family. According to South
Korea's intelligence agency, it's now fair to view Kim Jong-un's young teenage daughter as his
likely successor. That's the strongest language that we've heard yet, and it marks a clear shift
from earlier assessments that she was simply being groomed behind the scenes. Over the past few years,
she's been stepping into the spotlight in ways that feel anything but accidental, first appearing
alongside her father at a ballistic missile launch back in 2022 every teenager's idea of a great day out,
and she's since been featured at a growing number of high-profile events,
military inspections, weapons factories, even climbing into the driver's seat of a tank during a training exercise.
Okay, to be fair, if I was a teenager, I would find that very cool.
In one recent appearance, she was photographed, firing a pistol under her father's watchful eye, not literally.
The message here is pretty clear.
This isn't just a child tagging along.
This is a carefully managed rollout.
State media has already begun laying the groundwork, referring to her.
her as Kim's, quote, most beloved and, quote, respected child.
That's going to cause some sibling rivalry.
And according to South Korean officials, those public appearances are designed to build up
her military credentials and, importantly, soften resistance to the idea of a female
leader in one of the most rigidly male-dominated regimes on the planet.
That would be a historic shift.
Since its founding in 1948, North Korea has been ruled exclusively by men from the Kim family.
First, there was Kim, Kim, there was Kim, Kim.
then Kim Jong-il and now Kim Jong-un.
A daughter stepping into that role would mark the first break in that pattern,
while still preserving what really matters to the regime.
That would be their dynasty.
And speaking of internal dynamics, there's another interesting detail here.
Kim's sister, Kim Yo-Zong, long believed to be the second most powerful figure in the country,
is now being described by South Korean intelligence as having no substantial independent authority.
In other words, no real obstacle to a fourth-general.
generation handoff. Now, there are still plenty of unknowns. Kim Jong-un is only in his early 40s,
and North Korea remains deeply secretive. Even basic details about his daughter, including her age
and name, haven't been officially confirmed. Has anybody looked on TikTok? Some analysts remain skeptical
that a female successor would be accepted by the regime's inner circle. And, as we mentioned,
with the hermit kingdom, there are always plenty of unknowns. And that, my friends, is the president's
Daily Brief for Tuesday the 7th of April. If you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me
at pdb at thefirsttv.com. And finally, I hope you'll take a few minutes to check out our YouTube
channel. Just head on over to YouTube, of course, and search up at President's Daily Brief. I'm
Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today with the PDB afternoon bulletin. Until then, stay informed. Stay safe.
Stay cool.
