The President's Daily Brief - January 14th, 2026: What Could A Strike In Iran Look Like? & A Terror Labeling Shakeup
Episode Date: January 14, 2026In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: First up—with Iran’s regime now acknowledging mass deaths among protesters and President Trump reviewing his options, we examine what a U.S. st...rike on Iran could actually look like, from cyber pressure to economic punishment to limited military action. Later in the show—President Trump follows through on a long-standing promise, formally designating three branches of the Muslim Brotherhood as terrorist organizations. Plus—Trump prepares to meet with Venezuela’s María Corina Machado, as the White House weighs the country’s post-Maduro political future. And in today’s Back of the Brief—signs of paranoia in Pyongyang, as Kim Jong Un replaces top members of his personal security team, a rare shakeup that may point to fears of assassination plots. 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 CBDistillery: Visit https://CBDistillery.com and use promo code PDB for 25% off your entire order! Glorify: Feel closer to God this year with Glorify—get full access for just $29.99 when you download the app now at https://glorify-app.com/PDB. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Wednesday, the 14th of January.
Welcome to the President's Daily Brief.
I'm Mike Baker, your eyes and ears on the world stage.
And yes, it is true.
I am back on the road.
All right, let's get briefed.
First up, with Iran's regime acknowledging thousands of protesters killed,
and President Trump reviewing his options,
we examine what a U.S. strike on Iran could look like,
from cyber pressure to economic punishment to limited.
military action. Later in the show, President Trump follows through on a longstanding promise,
formally designating three branches of the Muslim Brotherhood as terrorist organizations.
Plus, Trump gets ready to meet with Venezuela's Maria Carina Machado, as the White House continues
to consider the country's post-Moduro political future. And in today's back of the brief,
paranoia in Pyongyang, well, hey, that's not new, as Kim Jong-un replaces top members of his
personal security team. It's a rare shakeup that may point to fears of assassination plots.
Honestly, Nicholas Maduro replaced some of his close-in protection detail with Cuban officers
due to his paranoia. And, well, look how that turned out. But first, today's PDB spotlight.
It's becoming increasingly clear that President Trump's red line with Iran has been crossed.
Over the past several days, reports out of Iran have grown more grim by the hour. Human rights groups
say the body count among protesters continues to rise, with estimates now reaching into the thousands.
And notably, the regime itself has begun to acknowledge the scale of their violence,
no longer denying mass casualties, but instead justifying them,
pointing the finger at supposed foreign agents like, well, the usual suspects, Mossad, and the CIA.
Of course, it's the great Satan.
It has nothing to do with the repressive regime, and their standard practice of shooting protests.
From the very start of these protests, President Trump has been explicit about where his line is,
the killing of civilians by their own government. And based on everything we're saying now,
that line appears to have been crossed in a significant way. Which brings us to the key development
driving today's PDB spotlight. On Tuesday, President Trump convened a formal meeting with senior
national security officials to review his options for responding to the crackdown in Iran.
That meeting has already happened. It included top leadership from the state.
State Department, the Defense Department, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. And while no formal decision
was reportedly announced or made, the significance of that meeting shouldn't be ignored. It was a structured
senior-level review of real options. Now, before we go any further, it's important to set guardrails here.
As you know, we're not in the business of speculating on the PDB. We can't tell you exactly what the
president's next move will be, and chances are, we won't know until it's already in motion.
But we can walk through the menu of options in front of the White House.
Those options generally fall into three buckets, cyber, economic, and kinetic.
Now, I'm not including diplomatic negotiations as a bucket, because, well, after you've already
killed a few thousand protesters, negotiating a diplomatic settlement that simply keeps the regime in
place might seem off-putting to the Iranian population.
population that has died or are still on the streets risking their lives. Anyway, taken together
these three buckets of options could help explain what, quote, striking Iran might realistically
mean. Let's start with cyber. One option on the table is the use of offensive cyber operations
against the Iranian regime. That could include disrupting military communications, interfering with
internal security networks, or degrading the systems used to censor the internet and track protesters.
Cyber pressure has several advantages. It can be fast, it can be targeted, and in many cases, it avoids the immediate visual escalation that comes with airstrikes.
But cyber operations also have limits. Their effects can be temporary, difficult to measure in real time, and easy for the regime to downplay or conceal.
Still, they can weaken Tehran's ability to control events on the ground, without handing it the kind of dramatic imagery that it would use for propaganda.
Next is economic pressure, and this is an area that we've already seen in action.
President Trump has announced a 25% secondary tariff on any country doing business with the Iranian regime.
That's a significant move. It doesn't just target Iran. It targets anyone doing business with the regime.
And it raises the cost of continued engagement with Tecran at a moment when the Iranian economy is already under severe strain.
Now, this fits squarely into Trump's broader maximum pressure strategy.
It's designed to force choices, both inside Iran and among its remaining partners.
And then, of course, there's the kinetic option.
This is the category that gets the most attention, and understandably so.
If the U.S. were to take kinetic action, it would almost certainly focus on high-value targets
tied directly to the regime's ability to carry out violence against protesters.
That could be command and control nodes, internal security.
infrastructure and select military facilities connected to the crackdown.
But here's where things get a little, or a lot, complicated.
As of now, the Pentagon has not repositioned forces in preparation for an imminent strike.
Now, there's no aircraft carrier sitting off Iran's coast, and that tells us something important.
If kinetic action were taken in the near term, it would likely be limited, targeted, and
standoff in nature, long-range airstrikes rather than a sustained campaign.
Of course, none of these options come without risk. That's my statement of the obvious for the day.
Some administration officials have expressed concern that overt U.S. action could feed regime propaganda,
allowing Tehran to claim that the protests are foreign-driven, although at this stage,
I suspect the protesters would like their protests to include some foreign involvement.
Others worry the opposite, that a weak or symbolic or feckless diplomatic response could demoralize protesters
who believe Washington's warnings were real, and have taken courage and strength from those warnings.
That tension is central to the decision facing the White House. So, you ask, and it's a good question to ask,
where does that leave us? Well, President Trump has spent the past two weeks, escalating his language,
tightening economic pressure, and now formally reviewing his options. Tehran, meanwhile,
continues to crack down, while issuing threats and floating negotiations all in the same breath. What comes next,
course, will depend on if the regime believes they can end the protests simply by killing more protesters.
All right, coming up next, the U.S. designates three branches of the Muslim Brotherhood as terrorist
organizations, and Trump prepares to meet with Venezuela's Maria Corina Machado as the White House
weighs the country's post-Moduro political future. I'll be right back.
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Welcome back to the PDP. The Trump administration has formally designated the Lebanese, Jordanian, and Egyptian branches of the Muslim Brotherhood as terrorist organizations. It's a sweeping move.
that escalates U.S. pressure on Islamist networks linked to Hamas and reshapes how Washington treats the group
across the Middle East. The action reflects a long debated shift in U.S. policy toward the Muslim
Brotherhood, which has operated for decades as a fragmented transnational movement, with branches
taking sharply different paths and actions in different countries. Under the new framework,
Washington will now formally treat several of those branches as part of the global terrorist ecosystem.
rather than just political offshoot. That's according to a report from the Associated Press.
On to the designations announced on Tuesday, the Lebanese Muslim Brotherhood received the most severe classification.
The State Department designated that Lebanese branch as both a foreign terrorist organization, or FTO,
and a specially designated global terrorist, or a SDGT.
I mean, because it is Washington, so you need to use acronyms.
It's a dual listing that triggers sweeping criminal penalties, freezes assets,
and immigration restrictions.
The group's leader was also individually designated as a global terrorist.
That designation reflects the Lebanese branch's activities since Hamas's 7 October attacks on Israel.
As the AP notes, Lebanese Muslim Brotherhood linked elements launched rockets toward Israel in the aftermath
of the attacks, tying the group directly to regional hostilities rather than political
activism alone.
The Egyptian and Jordanian branches, by contrast, were designated,
by the Treasury Department as specially designated global terrorists or SDGTs, a slightly narrower
legal step, but one with significant consequences. U.S. officials say both branches provided material
support to Hamas, placing them squarely within Washington's post-7 October enforcement framework
against actors enabling the group. While all three designations aim at cutting off funding
and international support, the differences between the designations matter. And FTO designation
carries criminal liability for anyone providing material support, along with more formal travel
and immigration restrictions, while SDGT listings focus on financial and sanctions-based pressure.
Together, they mark what the administration describes as the opening phase of a broader campaign
to dismantle Muslim Brotherhood-linked networks that, quote, engage in or support terrorism.
So, what kind of reactions can we expect from the Middle East? Well, the geopolitical fallout is
likely to be immediate and uneven. The move is expected to be welcomed by countries such as Egypt
and the United Arab Emirates, both of which view the Muslim Brotherhood as a destabilizing force
or direct threat. The Brotherhood was founded in Egypt in 1928, but Egypt banned the group back in 2013,
while Jordan outlined to the Brotherhood's activities in April of last year. Other regional governments
that have long treated the Brotherhood as a threat, including Saudi Arabia, which designated it as a
terrorist group in 2014, will also likely support the action. By contrast, countries such as
Turkey and Gutter, which have historically hosted or tolerated Brotherhood-affiliated figures, are expected
to view the designations with skepticism or quiet concern. One regional analyst told the AP it would
quote, be a thorn in bilateral relations. Beyond the Middle East, the designations carry important
implications for Western security. AP notes that branding major Muslim Brotherhood branches as
terrorist organizations could significantly impact visa applications, asylum claims, and refugee
screenings in the U.S. and Europe. Affiliations that were once treated as political could now
trigger automatic terrorism-related flags, tightening scrutiny across immigration and intelligence
channels. The administration is framing the action as just the beginning. In its announcement,
the State Department said the designations represent a first step in an ongoing effort to deny resources and operational space to Muslim Brotherhood chapters worldwide.
The message is clear. In the Trump administration's view, the Muslim Brotherhood is no longer a political gray zone.
Certain branches are now being treated as active contributors to regional violence, and the legal machinery of U.S. counterterrorism policy can be brought to bear.
All right, up next.
President Trump is preparing to sit down at the White House with Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Carina Machado
as Washington weighs how and by whom Venezuela will be governed. As we've been tracking here on the PDB,
inside the Trump administration has been an active debate over how Venezuela should be governed now that Nicholas Maduro is out.
Machado has long been the most recognizable face of the Democratic opposition, especially abroad.
But at least for now, Trump has made a more pragmatic call, keeping Delci Rodriguez, Maduro's
former vice president, and a regime insider, in place as the U.S. takes direct responsibility
for overseeing the fragile transition.
Now, Rodriguez has already been sworn in as president, though even that title comes with an asterisk.
White House officials, Evan said whether she's meant to govern long-term or simply hold a seat
while Washington determines the next phase.
That uncertainty reflects Trump's preference,
for keeping options open. Machado, meanwhile, will arrive in Washington on Thursday with real
international stature, but also with unanswered questions about her political footing inside Venezuela.
You may remember she won the Nobel Peace Prize last year for her work promoting democracy
and human rights, emerging from months of hiding as a fugitive under the Maduro regime to eventually
accept the award in Oslo, Norway last month. In October, she dedicated that prize to the suffering people
of Venezuela and to President Trump
for his decisive support of our cause.
That moment elevated her
global profile, even as the
realities inside Venezuela,
remained far more complicated.
But that praise soon turned
into a bit of a public side show.
In a Fox News interview, Machado said
she intended to share the Nobel Prize
with Trump, a gesture that the
Nobel Institute rejected,
pointing out that the award cannot be revoked
or transferred or shared.
Trump didn't hide his irritation
well, that's a surprise, responding to the Institute, quote, Norway was very embarrassed for not awarding him the prize outright.
When asked by reporters whether Machado's gesture would change as thinking about her potentially leading Venezuela,
Trump replied, quote, I have to speak to her.
Speaking after Maduro's removal, he said it would be, quote, very tough for Machado to lead the country,
adding, quote, she doesn't have the support within or the respect within the country.
And that line, well, that line matters more than it may apply.
here at first glance. It signals that Trump is weighing domestic legitimacy just as heavily as
international approval. All of this, of course, is happening as the situation inside Venezuela
changes rapidly. As BDB listeners know, in the aftermath of Maduro's ouster, Trump announced that
the U.S. would govern Venezuela until a, quote, proper transition could be arranged. That approach
has drawn strong pressure from some foreign policy hawks on Capitol Hill, who want a faster push
toward elections. But the White House is emphasizing caution. Trump told NBC news that elections are unlikely
within the next 30 days and suggests that the U.S. could oversee Venezuela for years if necessary.
For now, the question in Washington isn't whether the U.S. will shape Venezuela's transition. That's
already happening. The question is who Trump ultimately trusts to carry it out. Whether that ends up
being a familiar opposition figure with international clout or the former regime insider and Maduro crony,
That remains to be seen.
Okay, coming up in today's back of the brief, signs of growing paranoia in Pyongyang,
as North Korean leader Kim Jong-un revamps his personal security detail amid fears of internal threats.
We'll have those details.
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In today's back of the brief, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un is changing the people closest
to him, replacing three senior officials tasked with keeping him alive, as paranoia over
assassination threats at the top of the regime intensify, and considering recent events,
namely the capture of Maduro, he may not be wrong in his thinking. The ship first came into focus
through South Korea's unification ministry. Officials in Seoul say Kim quietly installed new chiefs
across three state agencies responsible for his protection, including the elite bodyguard
command that handles counter-dron and electronic threats. And I want to underline one detail early. This
wasn't announced by the regime. It was noticed. Ministry officials, say the reshuffle,
became clear only after Kim appeared at a military parade back in October, surrounded by a visibly
different security detail. But taking a step back, that timing is not coincidental. It
lines up closely with Kim's decision to align more closely with Russia, in support of Moscow's
war, of course, in Ukraine. That move didn't just deepen Pyongyang's alignment with the Kremlin.
it fundamentally changed the threat environment around Kim.
An analyst of the Korea Institute for National Unification told AFP that changes in Kim's security detail
came amid conclusions that the heightened attention to Moscow and Pyongyang's relationship
increased the risk of an assassination attempt, potentially even involving Ukrainian actors.
In other words, once Kim tied himself more directly to Putin's conflict, the risks for the regime
stopped being rhetorical.
and South Korea's intelligence service has been warning about this trajectory for some time.
According to Seoul, Kim has moved to upgrade his personal security posture, even seeking
advanced communications jamming systems and drone detection equipment.
These upgrades are designed to counter modern, more remote assassination methods, the kind
that bypass traditional layers of protection.
I also think it's worth paying attention to who Kim is choosing to appear alongside, publicly,
as this security posture tightens.
He's been seen increasingly with his daughter, including during his inspection of Pyongyang's
nuclear-powered submarine that's under construction. As we've previously discussed here on the PDB,
analysts widely see her as the eventual successor in the nuclear-armed regime, which only, of course,
raises the stakes for inner circle security. And of course, there's another backdrop here that's
nearly impossible to ignore. Recent headlines appear to be weighing heavily on Pyongyang's leadership,
particularly the U.S. capture of Venezuelan strongman Maduro.
That type of operation represents a nightmare scenario for Pyongyang.
The regime is long warned of U.S.-led decapitation strikes,
accusing Washington of seeking to remove leaders from power.
So for Kim, the sudden fall of a U.S. adversary reinforces a familiar authoritarian lesson.
Personal security and regime security are inseparable.
And that, my friends, is the President's Daily
Brief for Wednesday, the 14th of January. Now, if you have any questions or comments, please
reach out to me at PDB at thefirsttv.com. And if you get the chance, please stop by our YouTube
channel. That's at President's Daily Brief. If you like what you see, and hopefully that's the
case, please hit the subscribe button. 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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