The President's Daily Brief - August 27th, 2025: ESCALATION: Trump Deploys Nuclear Sub To Venezuela’s Doorstep & Chinese Student Controversy
Episode Date: August 27, 2025In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: President Trump continues to flex U.S. naval power in the Caribbean—sending both a cruiser and a nuclear-powered submarine to Venezuela’s doorst...ep. Later in the show—a controversial decision from the White House as Trump says he’ll double the number of Chinese students allowed to study in the U.S., even as tensions with Beijing remain high. Plus—behind closed doors, Israel’s top general pushes for a Gaza hostage deal, warning the window may not stay open. And in today’s Back of the Brief—a homicide in Washington, D.C. ends a rare two-week streak without a single killing in the nation’s capital. To listen to the show ad-free, become a premium member of The President’s Daily Brief by visiting PDBPremium.com.Please remember to subscribe if you enjoyed this episode of The President's Daily Brief.YouTube: youtube.com/@presidentsdailybrief Stash Financial: Don’t Let your money sit around. Go to https://get.stash.com/PDB to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase. American Financing: Disclaimer: NMLS 182334, https://nmlsconsumeraccess.org. APR for rates in the 5s start at 6.327% for well qualified borrowers. Call 866-885-1881 or visit http://www.AmericanFinancing.net/PDB, for details about credit costs and terms Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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or a 401k into a gold IRA. Again, just text PDB to the number 989-89-89. It's Wednesday,
the 27th of August, welcome to the President's Daily Brief. I'm Mike Baker, your eyes and ears
on the world stage. And yes, you're correct. I'm still on the road. All right, let's get briefed.
First up, President Trump continues to flex U.S. naval power in the Caribbean, sending both a cruiser
and a nuclear-powered submarine to Venezuela's doorstep. We'll have those details. Later in the show,
a controversial decision from the White House, as President Trump says he'll double the number of
Chinese students allowed to study in the U.S., even as tensions with Beijing remain high.
Plus, behind closed doors, Israel's top general pushes for a Gaza hostage deal,
warning that the window of opportunity may not stay open.
And in today's back of the brief, a homicide in Washington, D.C.
ends a rare two-week streak without a single killing in the nation's capital.
It's admittedly a rather strange metric. Look at us. No murders for two weeks.
But first, today's PDB spotlight.
We're beginning to learn more about the naval flotilla that President Trump has deployed to Latin American waters to combat the region's drug cartels, which includes one of the military's most advanced nuclear-powered submarines.
As we've been tracking here on the PDB, last week the White House ordered the deployment of three ages guided missile destroyers to the southern Caribbean waters off the coast of Venezuela, the Samson, the Jason Dunham, and the Gravely.
They were subsequently joined by the amphibious ship San Antonio, Iwojima, and Fort Lauderdale,
which are carrying roughly 4,500 personnel, including a marine expeditionary unit of 2,200 troops trained for rapid crisis response.
While the Pentagon has not publicly commented on the naval buildup, two U.S. officials told Reuters on Monday that the fleet of warships will be joined next week by the guided missile cruiser, USS Lake Erie,
as well as the nuclear-powered fast-attack submarine, the Newport News.
The officials, who spoke anonymously, declined to describe the fleet's exact mission.
But according to our report from the Miami Herald,
the deployment is designed to combat a wide array of threats posed by transnational gangs and cartels
that the Trump administration has formally designated as foreign terrorist organizations.
As the PDB faithful will recall, in February, Trump designated Venezuela's Trindera
the TDA, El Salvador's MS-13, and six cartels based in Mexico as foreign terrorist organizations.
It was a critical step in combating their criminal schemes as the designation gives U.S.
authorities expanded powers to freeze assets, disrupt financing, and pursue cartel leadership
with tools traditionally reserved for international counterterrorism operations.
The use of some of the U.S. military's most potent naval assets,
some of which were previously deployed in the Middle East,
to combat Iranian proxies like the Houthis
underscores the seriousness with which the Trump administration
is taking the cartel threat.
The three guided missile destroyers, for example,
are built to counter simultaneous threats from air, land, and sea.
They feature vertical launch systems,
bristling with long-range Tomahawk cruise missiles,
standard missiles for air defense,
and rocket-assisted torpedoes used in anti-submarine warfare.
Shadowing those vessels, the USS Newport News
nuclear-powered submarine is known for its advanced stealth capabilities and is armed with its own
arsenal of Tomahawk cruise missiles that can be launched from below the surface, as well as MK-48
torpedoes, which are specifically designed to sink submarines and high-performance surface ships.
The sub also boasts advanced sonar, which could prove invaluable in tracking the ships and makeshift
submarines used by the cartels to ferry drugs to American shores.
Meanwhile, the three amphibious ships carrying the detachment of Marines
offers additional options for the Naval Task Force,
allowing for the rapid deployment of forces on the ground if ordered.
A separate Pentagon source told the Miami Herald on Monday
that the White House will likely add more ships to the naval contingent
in the coming weeks and months,
marking an unprecedented show of force against the region's cartels and their political backers.
Venezuela and dictator Nicholas Maduro,
who was indicted by the DOJ in 2020
on federal charges of narco-terrorism
and conspiracy to import cocaine
is of particular interest
for the Trump administration.
The White House recently labeled Venezuela's
so-called Cartel of the Sons
as a specially designated global terrorist entity.
The trafficking network is allegedly
personally run by Maduro
and senior members of his military
and partners with violent groups like
Venezuela's TDA and Mexico's Sinaloa cartel
to flood American streets,
with cocaine. The Trump administration is currently offering a $50 million bounty for information
leading to Maduro's capture. You just have to hope that his security detail doesn't hear
about that bounty. Given the scale of the naval deployment, many observers have been left wondering
whether the Trump administration is preparing to overthrow his ruling regime in Caracas.
Now, while analysts say the regional buildup is likely more about rattling Maduro's cage,
the White House isn't exactly ruling it out. When asked,
asked point blank last week about a possible troop deployment to Venezuela,
press secretary Caroline Levitt was careful not to close the door.
In a strategically ambiguous statement, she said President Trump is, quote,
prepared to use every element of American power to stop drugs from flooding into our country
and to bring those responsible to justice, end quote.
Even if the Trump administration's moves are purely to combat drug trafficking,
the Maduro regime isn't taking it that way.
There's a surprise.
Maduro appears concerned about the possibility of a U.S. ground incursion into Venezuela and is mobilizing his military accordingly.
As we recently discussed, Maduro has ordered the deployment of more than four and a half million militia members around the country to assist their armed forces.
It probably is worth stressing, though, that these militias are primarily made up of civilian volunteers who have little or no training.
On Monday, however, Maduro did mobilize 15,000 military troops to Venezuela's western border with Colombia.
Maduro's interior minister said the border force will be supplemented with an unspecified number of boats, aircraft, and drones.
Additionally, Maduro said he's already in talks with Colombia's defense ministry about bolstering security reinforcements along their shared border,
particularly near their coastal regions where the U.S. naval buildup is occurring.
The dictator singled out U.S. Secretary of State Marker Rubio in a warning to the U.S. on Monday evening,
saying, quote, unfortunately, this gentleman, with his madness and extremism, could lead President Donald Trump to the worst possible scenario in Latin America and the Caribbean, end quote.
Maduro defiantly added, quote, we will emerge victorious from this situation.
Hmm, I don't know. I think I'll take the opposite side of that bet.
All right. And coming up next.
Trump moves to double Chinese student visas, twice the students, twice the opportunity for economic espionage.
And while Israel's top general urges a Gaza hostage deal before the chance slips away, I'll be right back.
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Have a break. Have a break. Have a Kit Kat.
Welcome back to the PDB.
I want to turn now to America's always delicate diplomatic dance with China as President Trump announces a controversial new initiative to vastly expand access to American universities for Chinese nationals.
Now, speaking at the White House on Monday, Trump said he would allow some 600,000 Chinese students to enter the country,
which would more than double the current figure of roughly 270,000 Chinese students that are enrolled at U.S. colleges.
Trump did not offer much elaboration on his thinking, in his initial remarks anyway,
but observers said it signaled a potential thaw in relations with Beijing amid ongoing trade negotiations,
that's according to our report from the South China Morning Post.
The president made the announcement less than a week after Beijing's foreign ministry criticized the treatment of Chinese students in America,
who they say have been, quote, unjustifiably questioned and harassed in recent months.
While Trump didn't address that criticism directly, he stressed Monday that his administration is going to, quote, get along good with China and reiterated that Chinese President Xi Jinping has invited him to come to China for a state visit.
Regarding opening America's floodgates to Chinese students, Trump told the press, quote,
I hear so many stories that we're not going to allow their students to come in.
We're going to allow their students to come in.
It's very important.
600,000 students.
That's very important.
We're going to get along with China, end quote.
It's a significant shift in tone from the White House and one that has much of Trump's base fired up.
As recently as May, U.S. Secretary of State Marker Rubio said the administration would be cracking down on visas for Chinese nationals,
specifically those for young college students.
At the time, Rubio said there were grave concerns about the ties that many of these students have to the Communist Chinese Party, the CCP, particularly those studying in critical technological and scientific fields that could offer Beijing an economic and military edge. There are also ongoing concerns that some of these students essentially function as spies for the CCP, gleaning insights into advanced areas of research and development at U.S. universities, and then, of course, passing that knowledge back to the communist.
regime. Now, those concerns are not wrong. Obviously, not every Chinese student is a spy that should go without
saying, but it is a fact that the CCP and the Chinese intel apparatus have used and continue to use
the academic arena aggressively to gather valuable intelligence, research and development,
economic intelligence, scientific data. So just by upping the number of visas allowed,
even if your intentions are good, well, you've upped the opportunity.
opportunities for Chinese intel.
As we covered on the PDB back in June, the Department of Justice charged three Chinese
nationals, including two that were studying at the University of Michigan, for attempting to
smuggle potentially dangerous biological materials into the U.S.
Two of the Chinese nationals, including an alleged Communist Party loyalist that worked at an
agricultural lab at the University of Michigan, were accused of trafficking a dangerous
crop-killing pathogen described as a potential agro-terrorism weapon.
In the other case, a female Chinese doctoral student at a Science and Technology University in Wuhan, China,
allegedly sent four shipments from China containing concealed biological material to staff members at the University of Michigan Laboratory.
She reportedly planned to spend a year at the University of Michigan completing a project.
In both cases, the motivations and research plans of the Chinese nationals remain somewhat shrouded in mystery.
But at the time, U.S. Attorney Jerome Gorgon warned it was a very important.
part of a, quote, alarming pattern that threatens our security. He added that the American taxpayer
should not be underwriting a China-based smuggling operation, quote, at one of our crucial public
institutions. Well, he's not wrong. Meanwhile, the backlash to Trump's statement from his base
has been swift. Representative Marjorie Taylor Green said such an influx of Chinese students
would steal opportunities from American students, while former Trump advisor Steve Bannon
slammed the decision as, quote, mind-bendingly ridiculous, end quote.
I wonder how he actually feels.
But Trump defended his position during a cabinet meeting on Tuesday,
arguing that foreign students from China were needed to help keep the American university system in business.
He stressed, however, that all prospective students would be subject to a thorough security screening process.
Hmm.
Trump stated, quote, I like that other country students come here.
And, you know, what would happen if they didn't?
our college system would go to hell very quickly, end quote.
So it appears that Trump is prepared to dig in his heels on this issue,
setting up what could turn into a highly divisive fight within the Republican Party.
The Chinese intel apparatus, of course, will be watching that fight closely.
Okay, turning to the Israel-Khamas War, the IDF chief of staff,
says a hostage deal now on the table should be accepted,
a call that squarely collides head-on with Prime Minister Netany.
and Yahoo's insistence on dismissing the proposal as irrelevant, demanding nothing less than total
victory. Speaking this week at the Haifa Naval Base, Israel's top general, A.L. Zemir, declared
that the Army's Gideon Chariot's operation has achieved its objective close enough in Gaza to uproot
Hamas from the enclave. According to his associates, Zemir was blunt, stating, quote,
there's a deal on the table. It's the improved Whitkoff framework, citing the U.S. brokered plan
advanced by Middle East envoy Steve Whitkoff earlier this year. In official remarks, the military chief
said the IDF's pressure campaign had now, quote, created the conditions for the release of the hostages.
But behind closed doors, Israel's Channel 13 reports Zemir outright warns that pushing ahead with the
IDF's planned seizure of Gaza City risks, quote, great danger to the roughly 20 hostages still believed
alive among the 50 captives remaining in the strip. That warned.
is not alone. Retired Army generals, opposition lawmakers, and families of slain hostages have
all echoed the concern, warning that Hamas could execute prisoners if Israel charges into the
city as the terror group has done before. But Netanyahu's circle isn't budging. Senior officials
told News Outlet Channel 12 that Jerusalem is, quote, moved on from Whitkoff's framework involving
phased hostage releases, temporary ceasefires, and an increase in aid into the enclave.
of this, even after Hamas, announced last week that it had supposedly accepted the Whitkoff
plan, a sharp reversal after months of rejection. One Israeli official was categorical stating,
quote, the coming agreements with Hamas will only be for all hostages and an end to the war
on conditions that Israel is willing to accept, end quote. Netanyahu insists that only a comprehensive
deal, one that secures the release of all hostages living in dead, and pairs it with Hamas
disarmament, Gaza's full demilitarization, and the rise of a new governing authority in the
strip will do. Despite the looming offensive, negotiations are expected to resume soon, though
details remain murky. As we've covered here before on the PDB, talks have collapsed repeatedly,
the most recent in Doha last month, when Hamas balked at Israel's terms, and the delegation returned
empty-handed. Mossad director, David Barnia, who played a central role in earlier rounds,
may rejoin the negotiating team, though it's unclear if Netanyahu will shovel his lineup after Doha.
What is clear is his coalition's directive. Pursue nothing short of a comprehensive deal
that ties a release of all hostages directly to the end of the war on Israel's terms.
Meanwhile, preparations for the Gaza City offensive roll on. As we discussed last week, tens of thousands of IDF
reservists have been called up with the operation likely to begin in September. And, well,
don't expect negotiations to slow it. As when Netanyahu official bluntly told Channel 12,
quote, the talks will not stop the offensive, rather the opposite. The offensive will
accelerate the talks. The hostages and missing families forum seized on Zamir's warning,
declaring, quote, the IDF chief of staff is saying what the majority of the nations demanding,
a comprehensive deal for the return of the 50 hostages and an end to the war. They warned
Netanyahu, he had, quote, no mandate to the sacrifice of the hostages.
So what we're left with is a widening rift, military leaders and the public urging caution to avoid endangering hostages
and political leadership barreling toward Gaza City with little signs of hesitation, with still no ceasefire in sight, and Hamas still operational.
Okay, coming up next in the back of the brief, D.C.'s rare two-week streak without a killing ends,
as President Trump calls for the death penalty from murderers in the D.C. capital.
More on that story when we come back.
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In today's back of the brief, President Trump's decision to federalize Washington, D.C.'s
Police Force delivered a milestone that not many mayors could ever claim, 12 straight days without a homicide before the streak broke in the early hours of Tuesday morning.
For a capital, long scarred by one of the nation's highest murder rates, the results were striking.
The law began on the 13th of August, just two days after Trump seized control of the Metropolitan Police Department and reinforced the district with National Guard troops.
For nearly two weeks, the nation's capital went silent with no recorded killings until shortly after midnight on Tuesday.
That killing snapped a run that Trump's allies seized on as proof that his hardline measures are working.
Vice President J.D. Vance pointed to D.C.'s historic average of one homicide every other day, arguing that, quote,
in two short weeks, the president and his team have saved six or seven lives.
And the data backs him up. According to the D.C. Police Union, overall crime fell 11% since the
federal takeover began. Robberies plunged to 42%, assaults with deadly weapons drop 13%, carjackings
collapsed by 85%, and violent crime overall sank by 25%. Police report more than 1,000 arrests, and over 100
illegal guns sees so far, just halfway through the 30-day crackdown.
Trump has since framed the campaign as a model to be exported nationwide.
From the Oval Office, he said, quote, people in Chicago are screaming for us to come,
so I think Chicago will be our next stop, and then we'll help New York, end quote.
And yesterday's murder, only stiffened his resolve.
Speaking at his seventh cabinet meeting of his second term,
the commander-in-chief announced he signed an executive order to seek the death penalty
for homicide cases in the nation's capital.
Trump said, quote,
if somebody kills somebody in the capital,
we're going to be seeking the death penalty.
That's a very strong preventative.
I don't know if we're ready for it in this country,
but we have no choice, end quote.
For background, capital punishment in Washington
was nullified by the Supreme Court in 1972,
then formally repealed by the D.C. Council in 1981,
with residents voting against reinstatement
in a 1992 referendum.
him. But Trump, who oversaw a record 13 federal executions in the final six months of his first term,
insists his Justice Department, is prepared to reintroduce it in the district as part of his sweeping
anti-crime agenda. So while the streak is over, Trump's push is not. As far as the White House is concerned,
12 murder-free days in D.C. showed that reestablishing order is possible in America's capital.
And that, my friends, is the president's daily brief for Wednesday.
day the 27th of August. Now, if you have any questions or comments, and I hope you do, please
reach out to me at PDB at thefirsttv.com. And to listen to the show ad-free, you can do that,
you know, become a premium member of the president's daily brief by visiting PDB premium.com.
I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today with the PDB afternoon bulletin. Until then,
stay informed, stay safe, stay cool.
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