The President's Daily Brief - December 22nd, 2025: U.S. Unleashes Massive Ground and Air Assault in Syria & Another Tanker Boarded Off Venezuela
Episode Date: December 22, 2025In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: A major U.S. military response in Syria, as American and coalition forces unleash one of the largest strikes on ISIS in years. We break down how th...e operation unfolded, what was targeted, and what it signals about the fight ahead. Pressure ramps up on Venezuela, with U.S. forces boarding yet another oil tanker in the Caribbean as President Trump’s maritime blockade tightens. Some good news for Ukraine, as European Union leaders approve a massive ninety-billion-euro loan to support Kyiv’s military and economic needs over the next two years. And in today’s Back of the Brief—return to sender. Turkey considers sending Russia’s S-400 air defense system back in hopes of reopening the door to U.S. F-35 fighter jets. 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 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. 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 Monday, the 22nd of December.
Look at that.
We are just around the corner from Christmas Day.
Welcome to the President's Daily Brief.
I'm Mike Baker, your eyes and ears on the world stage.
And, of course, a big congratulations to Ole Miss,
taking down Tulane, 41 to 10 in the first round of the college football playoffs.
Next up, the rebels take on Georgia on New Year's Day,
as the kids say, that's going to be a barn burner.
I don't know if the kids actually say that anymore.
All right, let's get briefed.
First up, a major U.S. military response in Syria,
American and coalition forces targeted ISIS positions this weekend in one of the largest strikes in years.
We'll walk you through the operation and what it might tell us about the fight ahead.
Later in the show, U.S. forces move on a third oil tanker in the Caribbean in the continuing effort to disrupt Venezuela's illicit crude oil operations.
Plus, some good news for Ukraine.
As European Union leaders approve a massive 90 billion euro loan to support,
Keeves' ongoing war effort and economy.
And in today's back of the brief,
well, it's return to sender.
Turkey may send Russia's S-400 air defense systems
back to Russia in hopes of reopening the door
to U.S. F-35 fighter jets.
But first, today's PDB spotlight.
This weekend, the U.S. carried out a series
of large-scale air and ground strikes
against Islamic State targets inside Syria,
one of the most significant American attacks on ISIS in years.
We told you last week on the PDB about the deadly ambush that set this in motion,
the killing of two U.S. soldiers and a U.S. civilian interpreter while they were operating near Palmyra in Syria.
And now the Trump administration has delivered what it promised a decisive military response.
According to U.S. officials, American forces struck more than 70 ISIS targets across central Syria,
using fighter jets, attack helicopters, rocket artillery, and precision-guided munitions.
In total, more than 100 precision weapons were used, aimed squarely at ISIS weapons depots,
infrastructure sites, and operational hubs.
The operation has been named Operation Hawkeye Strike, honoring the Iowa National Guard soldiers
who were killed and wounded in the ambush.
USF-15 strike fighters and A-10 attack aircraft, better known as wardhawks,
were joined by Apache helicopters and Haimar's rocket systems.
Jordanian F-16s also took part in the operation,
meaning this wasn't just an American response.
U.S. Central Command described the operation as a, quote, massive strike
and made it clear it was retaliatory in nature.
The attack that triggered the response took place at a fortified Syrian internal facility near Palmyra.
Alone, ISIS gunmen at that time opened fire,
as American personnel were supporting a meeting with Syrian offensive.
officials. Two U.S. soldiers were killed, three others wounded, along with a U.S. civilian interpreter,
and a Syrian officer who was also killed. All of this, of course, is unfolding at a very sensitive
time for Syria. Since the fall of Bashar al-Assad late last year, the country's new president,
Ahmed al-Shara, has been trying to stabilize the country and rebuild relationships with Washington
and regional partners. That cooperation had already begun to pay dividends. U.S. and Syrian coordination
in recent weeks led to raids in Syria and Iraq that killed several ISIS militants and detained
others. Operations that produced new intelligence on ISIS weapons depots and infrastructure
that U.S. forces had not previously identified. According to reports, that intelligence directly
fed into this weekend's action. ISIS, for its part, appears to be deliberately testing this new
arrangement. U.S. military assessments indicate the group is attempting to destabilize serious new government.
well, yeah, it didn't take expert analysis to figure that one out, and disrupt its growing counterterrorism
operations with the United States. And this is a critical point. While ISIS lost its territorial
caliphate years ago, it never actually disappeared. It remains an active insurgent force, especially
in central and eastern Syria. Pentagon assessments warned that ISIS is still capable of launching
coordinated attacks and exploiting political instability. Since the ambush, U.S. Central Command,
says it has conducted at least 10 counterterrorism operations in Syria and Iraq,
resulting in the death or detention of more than 20 ISIS operatives.
President Trump, speaking publicly after the strikes began,
said he had ordered, quote, very serious retaliation
and described the operation as highly successful.
Defense Secretary or Secretary of War, whichever you prefer, Pete Hegeseth,
was even more blunt, saying U.S. forces hunted and killed ISIS fighters
and would continue to do so.
The U.S. still maintains roughly 1,000 troops in Syria, primarily in the northeast, and at the Altamfgerison in the country southeast, where they work with local partners to contain ISIS remnants.
U.S. military leadership has made clear that this mission is ongoing.
Coming up next, Washington's pressure on Venezuela's oil lifeline is escalating, boarding a second tanker and moving to pursue a third.
while in Europe, the EU delivers a major financial boost to Ukraine.
I'll be right back.
Hey, Mike Baker here.
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busy weekend off the coast of Venezuela as the Trump administration continues its operations against
sanctioned oil tankers tied to illicit crude. After intercepting a second tanker on Saturday, U.S. forces
found themselves in pursuit of a third vessel on Sunday in what was the third operation in less than
two weeks. So let's rewind for just a moment. Last week, you may remember that the Trump administration
announced a targeted naval blockade, not against all shipping, but against U.S. sanctioned oil
tankers moving Venezuelan oil. The goal is to hit Venezuelan dictator Nicholas Maduro's regime
where it hurts, and that, of course, would be the tanker-based export lifeline that keeps cash
flowing into Caracas. On Saturday, the U.S. Coast Guard interdicted and imported a tanker
in international waters of Venezuela that was not under U.S. sanctions. Now, that's an operation
that Homeland Security Secretary Christy Noam detailed in a post on X that included video of the seizure.
Nome said the Coast Guard, quote, apprehended the vessel in a pre-dawn operation with support from the Department of War,
identifying the tanker centuries as the Chinese-owned Panamanian flag tanker, which was carrying nearly two million barrels of Venezuelan crude.
She framed the action as part of a broader effort to choke off oil money tied to Maduro's regime,
writing, quote, the U.S. will continue to pursue the illicit movement of sanctioned oil that is used to fund narco-terrorism in the region.
end quote. Secretary of War or Defense Secretary, whichever you prefer, Pete Hegseth, echoed that
posture explicitly tying enforcement to Maduro, saying President Trump has been clear the crackdown
quote will remain in full force until Maduro's criminal enterprise returns every stolen American asset.
Hmm. U.S. military sources told Axios that American forces are prepared to stop tankers hauling
Venezuelan oil, even if the vessel itself is not formally designated.
under Trump's sanctions.
Now, that marks a real shift in how the U.S. is or will be enforcing sanctions.
It's the kind of move that does force shipowners and insurers and brokers to rethink whether
Venezuelan oil is worth the exposure, and the pressure on Maduro's lifeline didn't stop there.
According to U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity to Reuters, the Coast Guard
entered pursuit of another oil tanker international waters near Venezuela Sunday evening.
That would be the third tanker.
The vessel is described as a part of the country's so-called dark fleet,
accused of sanctions evasion, so this was a sanction tanker,
flying a false flag and operating under a judicial seizure order.
And it's important to note that not all interceptions look the same.
They can take different forms, of course,
including just sailing or flying close to vessels of concern,
allowing U.S. forces to disrupt or deter and document listed activity without a dramatic boarding.
And that was the case in Sunday's pursuit of that third.
tanker. According to a British Maritime Risk Management Group, along with a U.S. maritime
security source, the tanker has been identified as Bella One, a carrier already on the Treasury
Department sanctions list. The vessel was reportedly empty as it approached the Venezuelan coastline
unlike the centuries tanker on Saturday. That's according to tankertrackers.com.
But Bella One's history underscores why Washington is targeting these networks. The tanker previously
transported Venezuelan oil to China.
according to internal documents from Venezuela's state-owned oil company Peda Vesa and has also carried
Iranian crude. Maduro's regime has predictably condemned the actions over the weekend as, quote,
theft and hijacking. Now, despite holding the world's largest proven oil reserves, years of socialist
corruption and mismanagement and sanctions evasion have left the country dependent on increasingly
risky export schemes. Maduro and his predecessor, of course, Hugo Chavez,
managed to turn the region's bread basket or oil basket, more appropriately, into a basket case in a matter of two and a half decades.
Now, while it's certainly fair to debate the strategy and activities being undertaken against Maduro's regime by the Trump administration,
it's hard to argue that the people of Venezuela wouldn't be better off under a new government,
which of course is why the people of Venezuela actually did vote for a new government during the last election.
And that was an election that was then stolen by Maduro and his cronies.
Okay, I want to shift the focus to Europe, where EU leaders agreed to move ahead with a massive
90 billion euro, or if my math serves me correctly, I believe that's a 106 or so billion
U.S. dollars, interest-free loan for Ukraine.
After legal uncertainty, stalled a far more ambitious plan to tap into frozen Russian assets.
The Friday decision ensures Ukraine can come.
cover its military and economic needs over the next two years at a moment when the financial
picture in Kiev is growing increasingly tight. For background, after nearly four years of war,
the International Monetary Fund, the IMF, estimates Ukraine will need roughly $160 billion in
$26 and 27, and officials in Kiev say the government is on the verge of bankruptcy with funds
urgently needed by spring. That pressure is what initially pushed EU leaders toward a more bold
solution, using frozen Russian assets to help fund Ukraine directly.
As we've discussed here before on the PDB, roughly 210 billion euros, or about 246 billion
U.S. dollars in Russian funds are immobilized across Europe, with most of them being held in Belgium.
And the idea, at least in theory, was to use that money to finance what EU leaders described
as a, quote, reparations loan, forcing Moscow to shoulder some of the cost of its own
invasion. But turning that idea into reality has consistently proven to be complicated.
Negotiations dragged on last week as leaders tried to reassure Belgium that it would be protected
from any Russian legal retaliation. As the talks dragged on, the legal risk became harder for
Brussels to ignore. Belgium's resistance ultimately proved decisive. The country's prime minister
warned that directly using frozen Russian assets posed serious legal risks and could damage
Euroclear. That's the Brussels-based financial clearinghouse that holds roughly 226 billion of the
Russian funds. Those concerns sharpened further earlier this month when Russia's central bank
filed a lawsuit against Euroclear to block any loan to Ukraine backed by the frozen assets.
A reminder that Moscow is already probing for legal vulnerabilities even as the war grinds on.
Now, if you ponder too long, the irony of the Kremlin filing a lawsuit to block the use of their money to rebuild a country that the Kremlin invaded and has tried to conquer for the past almost four years, well, it's almost as ironic as the UN continuing to give Russia a permanent seat on the Security Council.
But I digress.
Anyway, rather than let the entire package bog down, the block pivoted.
EU leaders opted for a faster, cleaner workaround, which turned out to be borrowing on capital markets.
In other words, raising money by selling debt to investors to keep aid flowing, while the tougher legal questions around the frozen assets remain unresolved.
European Council President Antonio Costa announced the agreement shortly afterward, writing on social media, quote,
We have a deal. A decision to provide $106 billion of support to Ukraine for 2026 and 27 is approved.
Now, if you're wondering about the remainder of the funding,
well, Kiev is most likely expected to hopefully rely on Washington and other G7 partners,
which, as you're aware, have provided substantial military and economic assistance in the past.
That's a statement of the obvious.
But not everyone in the EU was on board with a plan.
Hungary, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic opposed providing aid to Ukraine,
but ultimately agreed not to block the package,
after receiving assurances from other members, they'd be shielded from any financial fallout.
It's a compromise that allows the rest of the EU to move forward.
Hungarian Prime Minister Victor Orban, who routinely describes himself with a straight face, might I add,
as a so-called peacemaker, despite being Vladimir Putin's lackey,
well, he condemned the decision.
He argued that the loan prolongs the conflict.
He must have gotten that in writing from Putin, a claim that sidesteps that Russia
launched the invasion in 2022. Yeah, they are responsible and shows no interest in taking a meaningful
role in the peace talks. Still, the majority of capitals across the EU welcome the move,
and German Chancellor Friedrich Mertz stressed that frozen Russian assets will be kept from the Kremlin
until Moscow pays war reparations, a bill that Ukrainian President Zelenskyy estimates
at more than $700 billion U.S. dollars. Okay, coming up in today's back of the brief,
Turkey is reportedly looking to hand Russia back its S-400 air defense systems.
Here, here you can have these back things in order to clear the way for F-35 sales from the U.S.
I'll have those details when we come back.
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In today's back of the brief, Turkey appears to be trying to undo a costly detour toward Moscow.
Ankara is looking at whether returning Russia's S-400 air defense systems that have purchased
could be the ticket to readmittance into the American F-30.
program. According to our report by Bloomberg News, citing Turkish and Russian officials familiar
with the matter, the idea was raised directly by Turkish President Erdogan during a meeting with
Russian President Putin on the sidelines of a summit in Turkmenistan earlier this month. But Ankara
isn't just looking to return Moscow's mobile long-range surface-to-air missile systems. It's also
exploring compensation if they are returned, potentially in the form of discounted Russian oil and
natural gas rather than the cash refund. Moscow, however, moved quickly to shut the entire idea down.
There's a surprise. The Kremlin denied the topic of returning the S-400s was ever discussed,
insisting the issue, quote, was not on the agenda. That's a familiar line that masks Moscow's
unease, as Turkey reassesses a Russian arms deal that has steadily lost its value.
Now, for background, Turkey has been locked out of the F-35 program since its 2017 purchase of the Russian air defense systems, triggering American sanctions and their removal from the fighter jet project.
That was back during President Trump's first term, when Washington formally cut Turkey, a fellow NATO member, of course, from the F-35 program, with a U.S. officials stressing the move was not punitive, but rather protective, warning that operating a Russian air defense system,
system alongside the F-35 risked exposing sensitive fighter jet data to Moscow.
Regardless of what Putin may want, U.S. Ambassador to Turkey, Tom Barrick, said talks between
Washington and Ankara or over a potential F-35 sale are, in fact, progressing.
Posting on X, Barrack was explicit about the terms, quote, as laid out in the U.S. law,
Turkey must no longer operate nor possess the F's 400 system in order to return to the F-35 program.
end quote. And Berwick pointed to improve political ties at the top. He said the relationship
between Trump and Erdogan has helped to reset the diplomatic atmosphere, leading to what he described
as the most productive conversations on the issue in nearly a decade, as Erdogan looks to return to
Washington's orbit. But Israel has raised concerns over a potential F-35 sale to Turkey and other
regional states also, citing the need to preserve its qualitative military edge. As you'll remember,
those concerns from Jerusalem resurfaced after Trump announced the sale of F-35s to Saudi Arabia last month,
though administration officials stress the jets destined for Riyadh will be configured at a lower capability level.
At this point, it does appear that Turkey is keeping its options open,
unsure if Washington will reopen the door to the fighter jet program.
So as Ankara weighs whether the S-400 chapter can be closed,
It has also moved to acquire 40 Eurofighter typhoons.
That's a possible stopgap measure.
And that, my friends, is the President's Daily Brief for Monday the 22nd of December.
If you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at PDB at thefirsttv.com.
And I hope you had the chance over the weekend to catch the latest episode of our extended weekend show, the PDB Situation Report.
If not, well, don't fret.
You can still catch it and past episodes on.
our YouTube channel.
Check that out.
That, of course, would be on YouTube
at President's Daily Brief.
And you can also find it on all
podcast platforms throughout the podcast universe.
I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today
with the PDB afternoon bulletin.
Until then, stay informed.
Stay safe.
Stay cool.
