The President's Daily Brief - February 27th, 2026: U.S. Stealth Fighters Spotted Over Israel & Havana Oil Policy Shift
Episode Date: February 27, 2026In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: For the first time ever, American F-22 stealth fighters are deployed to Israel, marking a dramatic shift in U.S.–Israel military coordination as ...pressure builds on Iran during high-stakes nuclear negotiations. The Treasury Department authorizes licensed companies to resell Venezuelan oil to Cuba’s private sector, signaling a subtle but meaningful recalibration of U.S. policy toward Havana. President Trump announces he is directing the release of long-classified government UFO records, promising new transparency on decades of unexplained aerial sightings. New research reveals leading artificial intelligence models escalated to nuclear weapons use in the vast majority of simulated war scenarios, raising serious questions about AI’s role in future military decision-making. 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/PDB and use promocode PDB at checkout. Ava: See how millions are boosting their credit with Ava—download the Ava app and use code BAKER for 20% off your first year. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Friday the 27th of February.
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, in a historic first, the U.S. deploys F-12.
22 stealth fighters to Israel, signaling a dramatic escalation and military coordination between Washington and Jerusalem as pressure mounts on Iran amid high-stakes nuclear talks.
I'll have the details.
Later in the show, a quiet but significant shift in U.S. policy toward Havana as the Treasury Department moves to allow licensed companies to resell Venezuelan oil to Cuba's private sector.
Plus, President Trump announces he's ordering the release of...
long-classified government UFO files. Yes, it's a UFO story, promising new transparency on
decades of unexplained sightings. What do they know? And in today's back of the brief,
some unsettling findings from the world of artificial intelligence. Wait till you hear this one,
as new research reveals that leading AI models chose to escalate to nuclear weapons use
in the overwhelming majority of simulated war scenarios. Oh, good. But first,
today's PDB spotlight. In a move that would have been almost unthinkable just a decade ago,
the U.S. has deployed F-22 Raptor fighter jets to Israel, the first known instance of American
combat aircraft being based there for a potential wartime mission. Nearly a dozen of the stealth
fighters have reportedly arrived at Ovidda Air Base in southern Israel. While the administration
has not formally announced the deployment, flight tracking data, satellite imagery, and videos captured
by plane spotters, confirm what appears to be a significant new chapter in U.S. Israel military cooperation.
Now, the F-22 is the crown jewel of the U.S. Air Force's tactical fleet. It's a fifth-generation
stealth fighter designed to dominate the skies. They can conduct air-to-air combat, carry-out
precision strikes on ground targets, escort long-range bombers, and defend against cruise missiles
and drone swarms. Just last year, F-22's escorted B-2 bombers during U.S. strikes on Iranian
nuclear facilities. Now, positioning those aircraft inside Israel dramatically changes the operational
landscape. If President Trump follows through on threats to strike Tehran's nuclear or missile
infrastructure, American airpower would already be forward-deployed and integrated with Israeli defenses.
And that's where the strategic shift becomes even more important. For decades, the U.S. went out of
its way to avoid the appearance of close military integration with Israel. During the First Gulf War, as an example,
One, Washington took extraordinary steps to keep Israeli involvement quiet, fearing backlash from
Arab coalition partners. Equipment was repainted, cooperation was disguised, the goal was plausible
distance. That era is clearly over. After the Abraham Accords reshaped regional relationships,
Israel was moved under U.S. Central Command's area of responsibility. Military cooperation
increased, joint exercises expanded, missile defense coordination deepened.
But basing American combat aircraft in Israel for potential offensive operations against Iran,
well, that is a different level entirely.
This deployment also reflects hard geopolitical realities.
Saudi Arabia and the UAE have reportedly refused to allow the U.S.
to use their territory or airspace for a strike on Iran.
That significantly constrains traditional basing operations in the Gulf.
Many U.S. aircraft have now been concentrated at,
Mawfak Salty Air Base in Jordan. By dispersing aircraft to Israel, the U.S. gains flexibility and
survivability. Oveda Air Base, built in the early 1980s, includes hardened shelters, fuel storage,
and ammunition infrastructure capable of supporting large-scale air operations. It can reportedly
accommodate more than 100 aircraft, including refueling tankers. Israel's layered air and missile
defense systems, among the most robust in the world, also provide protection for these high-value
American assets. If you're going to station some of your most advanced fighters within reach of
Iranian missiles and drones, that's exactly the type of defensive umbrella that you want them under.
Of course, all of this is unfolding against the backdrop of the ongoing nuclear negotiations in
Geneva, such as they are, which continued yesterday.
Tehran continues to insist that uranium enrichment is its sovereign right and rejects
dismantling key nuclear facilities. They also refuse to expand the negotiations beyond a narrow
discussion on enrichment percentages. They've shown no willingness to negotiate on their ballistic
missile program or their regional proxy network. So the timing of the arrival of these F-22s,
well, it's no coincidence. The U.S. has already surged two aircraft carrier strike groups into the region
and positioned more than 60 additional fighter jets in Jordan. Now you have the arrival of the F-22,
in Israel. So whether this is designed primarily as deterrence or preparation for action,
well, that remains to be seen. But one thing is certain. The visible integration of U.S.
combat aircraft on Israeli soil marks a significant shift in posture, one that the Iranian regime
is undoubtedly watching very closely. All right, coming up next, the U.S. eases up on its oil
squeeze on Havana. And President Trump moves to declassified decades of government-eastern
UFO files. We'll have those stories after the break.
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Welcome back to the PDB.
In a quiet strategic change, the U.S. is carving a narrow path,
for oil to reach Cuba's private sector, offering limited relief for the island's fuel crisis,
while, in theory, anyway, keeping the communist government locked out.
The Treasury Department announced that companies can apply for licenses to resell Venezuelan
crude directly to private Cuban entities. What that means is, Washington is allowing a tightly
controlled exception within its sanctions framework. It's not the lifting of restrictions,
but instead selectively permitting specific transactions.
But in practice, it is something more strategic.
Washington still controls Venezuela's export spigot,
but it's creating a lifeline for private businesses in Cuba,
while attempting to bypass the regime in Havana.
To understand why this matters, you have to go back to January.
After the capture of Venezuelan leader Nicholas Maduro,
the U.S. effectively placed Venezuela's oil exports under its supervision.
Since then, no cost.
cargo is moved without American authorization. And when shipments to Cuba stopped, the island's already
fragile energy system began to buckle. As we've been tracking here on the PDB, we've seen blackouts
spread across the communist island, fuel lines growing longer, and power generation struggling to
meet minimum demands. For over 25 years, Venezuela has served as Cuba's primary energy lifeline under
a barter-based pact exchanging oil for services. When that pipeline shut down, following Maduro
Alster, it exposed just how dependent Cuba's communist system had become on subsidized crude.
Now, Mexico briefly tried to fill that gap. However, those shipments also halted after a cargo
vessel arrived in Havana back in January. That's according to shipping data. The result of
the oil squeeze was predictable, mounting hardship in a country already grappling with chronic
economic mismanagement under the one-party rule. So the Trump administration's message now appears
clear. Treasury officials say any authorized transactions must, quote, support the Cuban people,
including the private sector. Sales that would benefit the Cuban military or other state
institutions will not be permitted. The idea is to channel fuel toward private businesses rather
than government-controlled networks. Now, a skeptic, of course, would note that the Cuban government
and military will find workarounds, essentially confiscating oil supposedly destined for the commercial
sector. In addition, President Trump,
has made clear that countries previously receiving Venezuelan oil through swaps or debt arrangements,
mainly China and Cuba, must now pay full market prices.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio reinforced the broader point. He rejected claims that American
policy is responsible for Cuba's humanitarian crisis, arguing that the suffering stems from
decisions made by the Cuban regime, not from U.S. sanctions. Still, this is where the policy gets
more complicated. Even if,
Private Cuban importers are allowed to buy oil, can they actually afford it?
Cuba has struggled in recent years to finance spot market fuel purchases.
And then as mentioned, there's the more structural question.
Cuba's communist government controls motor fuel distribution and power generation through state-run companies.
The infrastructure of storage facilities and distribution channels and the energy grid remains firmly in state hands.
So, even if the private entities manage to secure a cargo,
under U.S. approved licenses, what happens once that oil reaches Cuban soil?
Does it remain in private circulation, or does the same state apparatus, including military-linked
enterprises, claim the oil as their own?
That's the tension at the heart of the strategy.
Washington is attempting something precise, relieve pressure on Cuban civilians, while maintaining
pressure on the ruling system.
But in a country where the state dominates the energy sector, separating private from government,
Well, that may be difficult to achieve.
Okay, I want to turn out as something that's been lighting up social media.
At least I think that's how the kids say it, right?
Lighting up social media?
Is that the HEP term?
Yeah, 6-7, whatever.
President Trump is reportedly opening the vault on one of Washington's most enduring mysteries,
ordering federal agencies to release files related to extraterrestrial life and UFOs.
So let me walk you through what set this off, because it is round.
interesting, if not a little bizarre.
Last week, former President Barack Obama sat down for a podcast interview with a liberal
commentator, Brian Tyler Cohen.
During a lightning round segment, ooh, a lightning round segment of their conversation,
Obama was asked the question, are aliens real?
The former president responded, quote, they're real, before quickly having a moment of
realization as to what he just said, clarifying that he meant the odds are strong,
that life exists somewhere in the universe.
So in a further attempt to clean up his comments, former President Obama added that he saw, quote, no evidence of extraterrestrials during his time in office. Nothing to see here, nope, and dismissed the idea of any secret facilities. Unless, as he put it, there was some enormous conspiracy that's kept from the president. But the exchange didn't stop there. Cohen followed up by asking President Obama, former President Obama, what the first question he wanted answered was when he took office. Obama's answer, quote, where,
are the aliens? Hmm. Now, as you can imagine, that line traveled fast, and it didn't take long for
the president to respond. When asked about former President Obama's remarks, President Trump suggested,
eh, the former president had disclosed classified information, saying bluntly, quote,
he's not supposed to be doing that, end quote. And that's where this move from podcast chat
to formal government action. In a post on truth social, Trump said the, quote,
based on the tremendous interest shown,
he's directing Secretary of Warpeed Hegset and other administration officials
to begin identifying and releasing government files
related to alien and extraterrestrial life and unidentified aerial phenomena.
That's what the Pentagon calls UAPs,
or previously referred to, of course, as UFOs.
Trump described the matters as, quote, highly complex,
but extremely interesting and important.
So, this isn't just some comment from the commander-in-chief.
It's a directive.
to begin opening federal records on a topic that's obviously fascinated the public for generations
and fueled countless conspiracy theories about what the government knows and is hiding from the public.
To be clear, though, that Pentagon has addressed unidentified aerial phenomena before.
Following a 2024 congressional hearing, the then Defense Department said it received hundreds of UAP reports
with 21 cases requiring, quote, further analysis because of what officials described as,
quote, anomalous characteristics and or behaviors, end quote.
And prior to that, of course, the Benegon revealed the existence of the now supposedly
shuttered atyp office.
That's the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program.
That was a unit tasked with investigating UFOs or UAPs.
At the same time, the department said it found no evidence of extraterrestrial activity,
and that, of course, just convinced folks that the government was hiding something.
Now, myself, having worked for the government for a couple decades, I do find it hard to believe that they could keep something this earth-shaking a secret.
Or do I?
Just kidding.
I am not privy to any information concerning the existence of aliens.
Or am I?
No, still kidding.
Public interest, of course, hasn't faded.
If anything, it's intensified.
And Trump is clearly tapping into that.
Now, whether the forthcoming releases reveal anything new, well, that means.
remains to be seen. And, don't forget, it's the government, so it's likely there won't be a
full release of all held materials. And undoubtedly, some of those materials will be redacted,
which, of course, will only fuel further speculation. Okay, coming up in today's back of the
brief, a real-world war game scenario, as new research finds that top AI systems repeatedly
chose nuclear escalation in simulated conflicts.
More on that when we come back.
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In research that sounds like a science fiction plot,
some of the world's leading artificial intelligence models
proved surprisingly eager to hit the nuclear button during simulated war games,
far more so than humans in the same scenarios.
According to a new study reported by DeCrypt,
researchers at King's College London tested advanced models from Open AI, Google, and Anthropic
in a series of geopolitical crisis simulations designed to mirror real-world conflict scenarios
between nuclear-armed states. The goal was to see how these systems reasoned through
high-stakes military decision-making. Breaking down the study, the researchers said,
quote, each model played six war games against each rival across different crisis scenarios,
with a seventh match against a copy of itself,
yielding 21 games in total in over 300 turns, end quote.
They added that the models, quote, assumed the roles of national leaders
commanding rival nuclear-armed superpowers with state profiles loosely inspired by Cold War dynamics.
And the results, well, the results were, well, disconcerning.
Across the simulations, the models repeatedly opted for nuclear escalation.
In some cases, even when diplomatic or conventional military alternatives were still on the table.
In roughly 95% of the scenarios, at least one model supported the use of nuclear weapons as part of its strategy.
That's 95% of the scenarios.
Researchers noted that the systems often framed nuclear strikes in cold-cost benefit terms,
describing them as decisive moves that could end a war quickly or preserve long-term advantage.
disturbingly, one of the lead researchers said the models seem to treat nuclear weapons as just
another strategic lever, rather than as a last resort option weighted by moral or humanitarian
considerations, even when reminded about the devastating implications. During one conflict simulation,
for example, Google's Gemini said, quote, if they do not immediately cease all operations,
we will execute a full strategic nuclear launch against their population centers. The AI
coldly added, quote, we will not accept a future of obsolescence, we either win together or perish together, end quote.
Ugh, okay, thanks, Hal.
Across the 21 games, the models never pursued meaningful de-escalatory options.
Instead, they deployed tactical nuclear weapons in virtually every scenario.
Now, even Putin's attack dog and chief nuke saber-rattler, Dmitri Medvedev, would balk at that.
But not everyone is sounding the alarm.
just yet. Oh, look, there's an optimist in the crowd.
Edward Geist, a senior policy researcher at the Rand Corporation, cautioned that the structure
of the simulations themselves may have biased the results. If a scenario is framed in a way that
rewards decisive escalation or presents limited off-ramps, an AI model, much like a human
strategist, might converge on nuclear use as a rational endpoint. In other words, the behavior
could reflect the rules of the game more than an intrinsic desire to escalate. Or,
it could be that the AI models are psycho-warmongers.
To that point, others were less optimistic,
and warned the problem may be more foundational
to the way that AI functions.
A researcher from Princeton University told the new scientist that, quote,
it is possible the issue goes beyond the absence of emotion.
More fundamentally, AI models may not understand stakes
as humans perceive them, end quote.
Notably, the study lands at a consequential moment.
The Pentagon of military is worldwide.
are increasingly integrating AI into logistics and intelligence analysis and targeting support
and operational planning tools. While current policy maintains human control over nuclear decision-making,
AI is steadily being woven into the broader ecosystem that shapes how conflicts are modeled and managed,
and if researchers warn that under real-life scenarios involving compressed timelines,
military leaders may face a stronger incentive to rely on AI. Now, this doesn't
mean the machines are about to go full sky net and launch World War III. But it is a sobering
reminder that as AI systems become more capable and more deeply embedded in military planning,
understanding how they reason about risk and escalation is essential. And yes, you're welcome
for that cheery story. That, my friends, is the President's Daily Brief for Friday the 27th of
February. Now, if you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at PDB at the first
TV.com. And now, while stories of AI models launching nukes may not be a happy way to end the
episode, may I just finish on a positive note by reminding you that today is Friday. And of course,
every Friday, we launch a brand new episode of our extended weekend show, the PDB Situation Report.
It's much better than launching a nuke. You won't want to miss this weekend show. Guests include
former director of Britain's MI6 intelligence service, Sir Richard Dearlove, as well as the brilliant
weapons analyst and all-around smart guy, Ryan McBeth. The episode hits the airwaves tonight at
10 p.m. on the first TV, and as always, can be found on our YouTube channel at President's Daily Brief,
as well as podcast platforms everywhere. I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today with the PDB
afternoon bulletin. Until then, stay informed. Stay safe. Stay cool.
