The President's Daily Brief - December 18th, 2025: China Accused of Accessing Sensitive U.S. Nuclear Research & A European Ukraine Force
Episode Date: December 18, 2025In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: A troubling congressional report reveals Beijing may be quietly tapping into American taxpayer-funded research programs, potentially funneling sens...itive nuclear technology to the Chinese military. European leaders discuss a possible multinational force following a ceasefire, as Germany’s chancellor suggests Western troops could be authorized to push back Russian forces if necessary. An MIT professor is killed in his Massachusetts home, and Israeli officials are now reviewing intelligence that may point to Iranian involvement. New surveillance footage is released as the manhunt continues in the Brown University shooting, with a person of interest now identified. 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 Debt Relief Advocates: Learn what debt reduction you may qualify for. Go online and visit https://DRA.com/podcast Birch Gold: Text PDB to 989898 and get your free info kit on gold Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Thursday the 18th of December.
And for those of you keeping score at home, we only have one.
one week until Christmas.
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, a new report outlines further Chinese regime efforts to acquire sensitive technology.
Shocking.
Lawmakers say China is quietly tapping into U.S.-funded research programs,
potentially funneling sensitive nuclear technology straight to the Chinese military.
I'll have the details.
Later in the show, European leaders are discussing a multinational force for Ukraine after a ceasefire,
if, well, if there is a ceasefire, and Germany's chancellor says Western troops might be empowered
to push back Russian forces in the event of future aggression.
Plus, an MIT professor is murdered in his Massachusetts home,
and now Israeli officials are examining intelligence that suggests Iran may be connected.
And in today's back of the brief,
The manhunt continues after the Brown University shooting, as authorities release new footage tied to a person of interest.
But first, today's PDB spotlight.
A new report out of Washington says U.S. taxpayers may have unknowingly helped fund China's military modernization and nuclear programs.
Now, do you get the sense that the stewardship of U.S. citizens' tax dollars might be lacking?
Ah, but I digress.
Anyway, that's the conclusion of a new congressional investigation that says Beijing has been
quietly exploding partnerships with American researchers, many of them funded by the Department of Energy
to gain access to sensitive nuclear-related and advanced technologies with clear military
and national security applications.
Now, for years, U.S. officials have warned about Chinese espionage, cyber theft, and intellectual
property theft, but this report points to something more uncomfortable.
In some cases, China didn't have to steal anything.
The door may already have been open.
According to the report, investigators identified more than 4,000 academic papers published over the past year
that involved collaboration between Department of Energy-funded scientists and Chinese researchers.
Roughly half of those collaborations involve Chinese institutions tied directly to China's military or defense industrial base.
And that's where the National Security alarm bells start going on.
The Department of Energy doesn't just fund basic science, of course.
It oversees 17 national laboratories and pours hundreds of millions of dollars into research,
funding everything from nuclear energy and weapon stewardship to quantum computing,
material science, and advanced physics.
These are not obscure academic fields.
These are technologies that sit at the core of modern military power.
Investigators found that U.S. federal funds flowed to research,
collaborations with Chinese state-owned laboratories and universities that work directly with the
People's Liberation Army. Some of those institutions are even listed in a Pentagon database of
Chinese military-linked companies operating in the U.S. Sounds like somebody hasn't been doing
their due diligence. In other words, American taxpayers may have been funding research that directly
benefited the military build-up of the U.S.'s primary strategic competitor. Of course, after learning
just a few years back that the U.S. had been funding Chinese labs involved in gain of function
research that, in all likelihood, led to the COVID-19 pandemic, there should be no surprise
that the U.S. taxpayer is also paying to upgrade the Chinese military. The report also flagged
collaborations with Chinese entities linked to cyber operations and human rights abuses,
raising further concerns about whether the U.S. government has been paying close enough
attention to who it partners with and why.
And here's a hint.
The U.S. government has not been paying close enough attention.
Now, to be clear, this wasn't presented as a case of rogue scientists or secret back-channel deals.
Much of this collaboration happened in plain sight, through academic partnerships that were approved, funded, and renewed over many years.
Trolling through academia, accessing conferences, enlisting unwitting researchers and professors for academic collaboration,
these are all favored tactics used by the PLA and the Chinese Intel apparatus.
to gather intel of interest.
They essentially use every tool in the toolbag when it comes to hoovering up the West's R&D
and proprietary data and sensitive technology.
And according to the report's authors, that's the real problem.
The investigators concluded that the Department of Energy failed over decades to put in place
basic safeguards to ensure that taxpayer-funded research didn't end up strengthening China's
defense research and industrial base.
There was no standardized system for assessing national security risks, limiting information sharing
with other government agencies, and handling oversight of foreign research ties.
As the report reads, quote, longstanding policy failures and inaction left U.S. research vulnerable
to exploitation by state-directed Chinese technology transfer efforts, end quote.
Well, I cannot spot the lie in that statement.
Now, this investigation is part of a broader push on Capitol Hill to build a stronger firewall
between American research and China's military ambitions, especially as the two countries
remain locked in a long-term technological and strategic rivalry that will shape, of course,
the global balance of power.
Representative John Moulinard of Michigan, who chairs the House Select Committee on the Chinese
Communist Party, has introduced legislation aimed at blocking federal research funding from flowing
to collaborations involving entities controlled by foreign adversaries. The bill passed the House,
but it ultimately failed to make it into the annual defense policy package. And that's where this
story gets more complicated. The proposed restrictions have faced strong opposition from scientists and
university leaders, and of course, they're lobbyists who argue that sweeping bans could chill
legitimate research collaboration and undermine America's ability to compete globally for top scientific talent.
In an October letter, more than 750 faculty members and senior university officials warned lawmakers
that the U.S. is already in a global competition for researchers and innovators.
They urged Congress to adopt targeted, risk-based safeguards rather than broad prohibitions
that could drive talent elsewhere.
So the debate now isn't whether China is trying to exploit American research.
It is.
It's how to stop it without crippling the very innovation ecosystem.
that gives the U.S. its edge. The Department of Energy has not yet responded publicly to the report
or its recommendations, and China's embassy in Washington has also declined to comment. There's a surprise.
But the broader takeaway here is hard to ignore. As Washington talks more openly about strategic
competition with China, this report suggests the U.S. may need to spend just as much time
securing its own systems as it does calling out Beijing's behavior. Because when it comes to
sensitive research tied to national security, well, openness without safeguards equals vulnerability.
And I believe that's a well-known scientific equation.
All right.
Coming up after the break, talk of Western troops in Ukraine as European leaders consider a
multinational force.
And a chilling murder in the U.S. state of Massachusetts prompts Israeli officials to examine
a possible Iranian link.
I'll be right back.
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Welcome back to the PDB.
As talk of securing a ceasefire continues, although without meaningful input from the invading party,
European leaders are already sketching out what enforcement could look like,
unveiling a far-reaching set of security commitments for Ukraine that include multinational forces
and in extreme cases, Western troops possibly confronting Russian incursions.
In a joint statement released in Brussels, EU leaders in 10 European countries,
laid out what they described as, quote,
sustained and substantial support for rebuilding Ukraine's armed forces,
envisioning a peacetime military of up to 800,000 personnel.
The idea, they argue, is to lock in deterrence once the fighting stops,
making it far more challenging for Russia to ever attempt another invasion down the road.
At the heart of the framework is a new security architecture for Ukraine.
European leaders say they would help stand up multinational forces,
coordinated by European partners with American support,
assist keeps military recovery and strengthened security in the air and at sea.
Those forces would not be confined to operating outside Ukraine
and could also carry out missions inside the country.
Alongside that, the plan includes a U.S.-led ceasefire monitoring mechanism
with international participation,
designed to provide early warnings if Russia renews attacks
and to ensure rapid responses to any ceasefire violations.
European leaders are going further than past pledges, committing themselves to legal obligations
that would require action, including military measures if Ukraine were again subjected to armed
Russian aggression. That question of enforcement moved into sharper focus this week with comments
from German Chancellor Friedrich Mertz, who outlined what post-seas fire guarantees could look
like in practice. Speaking to reporters, Mertz said a demilitarized zone between the warring parties
would be established, and Western peacekeepers could be required to repel Russian forces if the ceasefire
were breached, though, as the fighting remains ongoing, such a scenario does appear to be distant.
Not to mention, the Kremlin has stated repeatedly that they would not agree to any peacekeeping
multinational force inside Ukraine.
Mertz also pointed to what he described as a notable shift in Washington's position, saying that
the U.S. indicated they would protect Ukraine in the event of a ceasefire,
as if it were a NATO territory.
He called that a, quote, remarkable new position for the U.S.
in light of President Trump's America First ideology.
And looking beyond the military dimension, the framework also folds in long-term commitments
to Ukraine's economic recovery and reconstruction, while reiterating Europe stands that
Russia must compensate Ukraine for war-related damages.
Support for Ukraine's eventual accession to the European Union is reaffirmed as part of that
longer-term vision.
The announcement comes as Brussels takes a parallel step on the financial front.
EU ambassadors approved a procedural change that allows Russian assets to remain frozen indefinitely,
which is a significant move that brings the bloc closer to potentially using those assets to fund reparations for Ukraine.
Still, as longtime listeners of the PDB know, nothing related to this conflict is straightforward.
Merch said there is a, quote, 50-50 chance that Europe will ultimately reach an agreement
on using immobilized Russian assets to help fund Ukraine's defense.
He argues the country will need substantial financial support for at least two more years
after current EU funding expires in the new year.
But all this post-war planning is contingent on achieving a ceasefire,
which, of course, Russia has yet to agree to.
And as mentioned, the Kremlin also continues to strongly oppose the presence of Western troops
on Ukrainian soil in a post-war scenario.
Moscow is still insisting on its maximalist territorial concessions from Ukraine and dismissing
Western security guarantees as illegitimate, all while its military operations show no signs of
slowing.
Okay, shifting to the U.S., what first appeared to be a local homicide in suburban Boston is taking
on a more complicated shape.
Investigators are weighing whether the killing of an MIT fusion professor was connected
to his work, as Israel reviews unverified.
intelligence that tied it to a possible foreign link.
Now, the timeline itself is straightforward, even if the answers are not.
Nuno Luero, 47 years old, died Tuesday morning at a Boston hospital after it was shot inside
his Brookline home the night before. Police were called to the three-story building Monday night
after reports of gunfire in the affluent neighborhood. Lurero was found lying inside the building's
entrance, neighbors told local media. From the start, investigators treated the scene as a homicide.
But while police moved quickly to secure the building, well, the clarity did not come with it.
Officers arriving on scene reported shell casings scattered across the lobby floor with bullets embedded in the wall.
A forensic team was immediately requested to process the area.
Beyond the physical evidence, however, the picture grew murkier.
Police say they did not have a description of a shooter and reports about a possible escape vehicle reflected confusion rather than certainty.
One officer reported seeing a gray sedan driving without headlights,
while other officer and witness descriptions pointed instead to a blue or black vehicle.
Those conflicting accounts, of course, remain a sign of how little is known at this point.
The Brookline Police Chief said the investigation remains, quote, active and ongoing.
Well, yeah, that makes sense, adding that authorities are limiting what they share publicly
in an effort to protect the integrity of the case.
So far, no arrests have been made.
For those inside the building, the violence unfolded suddenly.
A neighbor of Lureros, who lives upstairs,
told the Boston Globe she was lighting a menorah candle when she heard multiple gunshots.
When she opened the lobby door, she found Lurero on the ground and dialed 911 along with
another neighbor. As investigators pieced together what happened, attention began to shift to
who Lerro was and what kind of work he did. He had been appointed last year to lead MIT's plasma
science and fusion center, one of the Institute's large laboratories, overseeing more than 250
researchers and staff and students working on the forefront of plasma physics and nuclear fusion.
Prior to joining MIT in 2016, Lurero was born in Portugal, studied physics in Lisbon
and held a position at the Institute for Plasmas and Nuclear Fusion in that country.
Now, why it's important to understand his career is because the field he specialized in is considered
strategically sensitive, with implications for future energy systems and advanced technologies
closely watched by governments around the world.
It's that stature and nature of his research
that has drawn attention beyond the U.S.
Israeli officials are now examining intelligence
suggesting a possible Iranian connection to the killing,
though they have stressed that the assessment
remains preliminary and unverified.
So why is Jerusalem suggesting a connection to the Mullahs?
Well, sources cited by Israeli media,
say the interest stems not only from Lurero's work in fusion research,
but also from past statements in which he expressed support for Israel during its 12-day war with Iran.
At the same time, Israeli officials emphasize that no determinations have been made.
For now, as parallel investigations unfold, investigators do remain tight-lipped.
But the rare convergence of advanced scientific research, international intelligence interests,
and an unsolved killing, now has left a growing sense that this case may not be a straightforward local homicide.
And in today's back of the brief, new footage released in the Brown University shooting as the manhunt continues.
I'll have those details when we come back.
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In today's back of the brief, as the Brown University shooting investigation enters its fifth a day,
authorities in Providence say the shooter remains at large, and the probe is now expanded to include a secondary figure seen near the primary person of interest before the attack.
Police released additional surveillance images on Wednesday, showing an individual in a blue jacket with a beige hoodie, dark pants, and carrying a light-colored satchel.
This second individual was reportedly seen walking in proximity to the main suspect shortly before the December 13th attack, which left, of course, two students dead and nine others injured.
The Providence Police Department urged the public for help identifying this person on Wednesday,
asking anyone with information to contact a dedicated tip line as part of the expanded manhunt.
Now, the update from the Providence Police Department comes just one day after the FBI's Boston office
released new, quote, enhanced images and video of a separate primary person of interest.
That suspect can be seen walking down a suburban Providence Street,
less than two hours before the shooting wearing a black mask, a beanie, and what appears to be a two-tone jacket with a black cross-body bag.
It appears to be the same suspect first flagged by the FBI in Graniar CCTV footage on Saturday.
Now, the FBI, which issued a $50,000 reward Monday for information leading to the identification, arrest, and conviction of the shooter,
describes the main suspect as approximately 5'8 with a stocky build.
In a video timeline released Tuesday by the FBI, the suspect can be seen walking near the campus
and at one point after the shooting, walking by responding officers.
In another clip, the suspect is seen walking right next to the Barras and Holly building where the shooting occurred.
Officials say the second person of interest revealed on Wednesday appears to cross paths with the main suspect.
Video shows the individual walking toward the suspect on Benevolent Street at about 2.16 p.m., less than two hours before the shooting.
The suspect then turns around and runs down the street out of the camera's view.
We should note that the second person of interest is not seen running after the suspect,
according to a Fox News analysis.
So after five days with few answers, where does that leave the investigation?
Well, frankly, more or less in the same place it was when we provided our last update Tuesday morning,
though investigators do appear to be making some slight progress.
While authorities admit the new images and footage do little to clarify the suspect's
identity, they say it has helped investigators narrow the timeline as the manhunt continues.
At a press conference on Wednesday afternoon, officials provided few additional details,
noting the complex nature of the ongoing investigation.
Authorities acknowledged the challenges posed by the lack of footage inside the older portion of
the building where the shooting occurred, a fact that has drawn increasing criticism from members
of the community and even from the White House.
Brown University officials continue to urge community vigilance, but stress there's no known ongoing threat to the campus.
At the press conference, officials also urge the public to avoid distributing misinformation and AI-generated content,
which they say is proliferating online and complicating the public's understanding of the investigation.
As a reminder, the latest updates come after a previously detained person of interest was released from custody earlier in the week.
With that lead no longer viable, police say the grainy images and video clips remain the best available visual evidence of the suspect's movements on the afternoon of the attack.
The Providence Police Department continues to lead the investigation, but it's an all-hands-on-deck effort.
As officials continue to canvas neighborhoods near the Brown campus, review residential videos, sift through hundreds of tips, and review forensic evidence,
they're coordinating closely with law enforcement partners in the Rhode Island State Police,
Rhode Island Attorney General's office, the FBI, and a number of other federal agencies.
Police say they don't know yet how or where the gunman exited the campus,
and no firearm has as of yet been recovered.
And that, my friends, is the President's Daily Brief for Thursday, the 18th of December.
Now, if you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at PDB at thefirsttv.com.
And for an ad-free PDB experience, you know, that's possible, just 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.
