The President's Daily Brief - January 19th, 2026: U.S. Deploys Bombers Toward Iran & American Forces Kill ISIS Leader In Syria
Episode Date: January 19, 2026In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: Bombers, aircraft carriers, and missile defense systems are shifting into position across the Middle East as Washington quietly prepares military o...ptions while pressure mounts inside Iran. American forces carry out a third retaliatory strike, killing a militant leader tied to an ISIS ambush that killed three Americans, as CENTCOM works to deter further attacks on U.S. personnel. Newly obtained documents reveal that Venezuela’s interim leader Delcy Rodríguez has been on the radar of U.S. drug agents for years, underscoring Washington’s view of her role in the regime’s alleged criminal networks. President Trump escalates pressure on Europe, announcing new tariffs on Denmark and other nations as he pushes for a deal to acquire Greenland. 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 American Financing: Call American Financing today to find out how customers are saving an avg of $800/mo. NMLS 182334, nmlsconsumeraccess.org. APR for rates in the 5s start at 6.196% for well qualified borrowers. Call 866-885-1881 for details about credit costs and terms. Visit http://www.AmericanFinancing.net/PDB. BRUNT Workwear: Get $10 Off at BRUNT with code PDB at https://www.bruntworkwear.com/PDB#Bruntpod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Monday, the 19th of January.
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, major U.S. military moves are now underway in the Middle East,
with bombers, carriers, and missile systems being deployed amid rising tensions with Iran.
I'll have the details.
Later in the show, the U.S. launches a third retaliatory strike in Syria,
taking out a militant leader tied to an ice.
Ambush that killed three Americans last month.
Plus, new documents reveal that Venezuela's interim leader, Delci Rodriguez, has been monitored
by U.S. drug agents for years, highlighting her central role in the regime's alleged criminal
networks.
And in today's back of the brief, President Trump announces escalating tariffs on Denmark and
other European nations as he pushes for a deal to acquire Greenland.
But first, today's PDB spotlight.
The U.S. is repositioning military assets across the Middle East.
Over the past 48 hours, reporting indicates that U.S. strategic bombers have landed at Diego Garcia,
that's the joint U.S.-UK. base in the Indian Ocean.
Now, Diego Garcia isn't just another airstrip.
It has the lengthy runways designed to support heavy strategic aircraft, including B-2-class bombers.
At the same time, open-source tracking of regional air traffic shows more than a dozen
the U.S. heavy military transport aircraft flying towards the Gulf region in just the past two days.
Now, these are logistics aircraft, moving munitions and medical and support equipment.
In other words, the less visible but essential pieces of any significant operation.
Reports also indicate that non-essential American and British personnel have been evacuated from Al-Udade Air Base in Qatar.
That's a precaution that you'd normally take when you're preparing for potential retaliation.
At the same time, the U.S. military has reinforced Patriot and Thad missile defense batteries across several Gulf states.
Again, not for messaging, but for protection against an expected response.
Put all of that together and you're looking at a familiar pattern.
This is exactly what you would expect to see if the U.S. were preparing for the possibility of an air campaign in the Middle East.
Now, this obviously didn't start just today.
On Friday, we told you the U.S. is moving a carrier strike group towards,
the region. The USS Abraham Lincoln is already underway and expected to reach operational position
in about a week. Carrier aviation adds another layer, sea-based strike power, and intelligence
collection capabilities and flexibility. And against that backdrop, the war of words between Washington
and Tehran has been heating up again, despite what appeared to be a brief detaunt last week.
This weekend, President Trump openly called for an end to Ayatollah Ali Khan's 37-year reign.
In an interview with Politico, the president said, quote,
it's time to look for new leadership in Iran.
Trump added that the best decision Khomeini ever made was not hanging more than 800 people two days ago.
That's a reference to the canceled, or at least delayed, mass executions of protesters that the regime was reportedly planning last week.
Chomani has responded to Trump in kind.
Chominee's ex-account posted a series of hostile messages aimed at Trump,
accusing the U.S. president of being responsible for deadly violence and unrest in Iran.
Chahmanee, or whomever is in charge of his ex, and I think also he has a TikTok account,
stated, quote, we find the U.S. president guilty due to the casualties, damages, and slander he inflicted
upon the Iranian nation. The Ayatollah also branded Trump a criminal.
And that brings us to a key development.
Iranian officials are now acknowledging a death toll of at least 5,000 people, as a
result of their crackdown on protesters.
That number is significant for a couple of reasons.
First, it's substantially higher than many Western estimates had been,
which had placed the toll closer to 2,500.
Second, if the regime in Tehran is willing to admit to 5,000 deaths,
well, the real number could likely be higher.
This is also the first time Ayatollah Khomeini himself has publicly acknowledged the scale of the killings.
Now, when regimes admit mass casualties,
They're often doing two things at once.
They're locking in their version of events, and they're preparing the ground for what may come next.
In this case, Iranian authorities are already signaling that the judiciary may pursue harsh punishments,
including executions against those they accuse of fueling the unrest.
The Iranian regime is, of course, under internal pressure, publicly acknowledging bloodshed on a massive scale,
and escalating its rhetoric against Washington.
The U.S., meanwhile, is moving the kinds of military.
military assets you reposition when you want credible, executable options.
None of this means a strike is inevitable, but the infrastructure, for one, is being quietly assembled,
well, not so quietly, and that may tell us where the decision-making process is heading.
All right, coming up next.
A third U.S. strike in Syria targets a terrorist leader tied to an ambush that killed three
Americans.
Plus, new reporting shows Venezuela's Delci Rodriguez has been on the DEA's radar for years.
I'll be right back.
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The U.S. military went back to work in Syria, carrying out a third round of retaliatory airstrikes
that killed a senior al-Qaeda-linked terrorist tied to the December ambush that left three Americans dead.
U.S. Central Command says the strike eliminated Bilal Hassin al-Jasim in northwest Syria.
And it's a terrorist that officials describe is directly connected to the Islamic State gunman
behind the 13th of December ambush in the ancient city of Pome.
Myra. You may remember if that attack killed two U.S. service members and an American civilian
interpreter. And the way the military is framing it, this strike is about continued accountability.
You can hear that message in how sentcom commander General Brad Cooper talks about it.
He told ABC News, quote, there's no safe place for those who conduct, plot, or inspire attacks
on American citizens and our warfighters. We will find you, end quote.
That December lone ISIS gunman ambush carried added,
weight inside the Pentagon. It marked the first U.S. combat deaths since President Trump returned
to office. The two service members killed were Iowa National Guard soldiers, Sergeant Edgar
Brian Torres Tovar and Sergeant William Howard. As we've been tracking here on the PDB,
the response that followed wasn't limited to one strike. The U.S. launched a broader campaign in Syria
under an operation known as Hawkeye Strike, named in honor of the fallen Iowa soldiers.
According to Centcom, the operation has included multiple large-scale strikes, carried out with U.S. partners, hitting more than 100 Islamic State weapons depots, logistics hubs, and infrastructure sites across the country, resulting in dozens of terrorist deaths and captures.
U.S. officials have said the campaign is still ongoing as part of a wider effort to dismantle terrorist infrastructure networks in Syria, particularly the Islamic State, before they can regroup or strike again.
And much like the previous strikes, the latest U.S. military action reinforces that message,
that those involved in killing Americans, whether they pull the trigger or help enable the attack,
remain targets wherever they operate.
Okay, shifting gears, the capture of Venezuela's Nicolas Maduro ushered in a new president in Venezuela,
and while most folks had never heard of Delcy Rodriguez,
U.S. law enforcement knew who she was, because they've been watching her for years.
Now, here on the PDB, we've profiled the interim Venezuelan leader before, but newly obtained records by the Associated Press and interviews with more than half a dozen current and former U.S. officials show that DEA agents began tracking Rodriguez in early 2018 before elevating her to a priority target status in 2022.
Now, that priority target status is an internal label that the agency uses for individuals that it believes have an outsized interest.
impact on the drug trade. While the label doesn't automatically translate into criminal charges,
it does signal sustained interest at a high level across multiple investigations. In other words,
this wasn't a one-off tip or a passing suspicion. It's a pattern that kept resurfacing as
Rodriguez climbed higher inside the Maduro regime. DEA intelligence files, cataloged Rodriguez's
known associates and allegations ranging from narcotics trafficking to gold smuggling. One confidential
informant told investigators back in 2021 that Rodriguez used hotels on Venezuela's
Ayla Marguerita as fronts for money laundering.
And as recently as last year, U.S. authorities were examining her ties to Alex Saab,
who is Maduro's alleged financial intermediary.
Saab was arrested in 2020 on federal money laundering charges.
U.S. officials have long viewed Ila Magrita as a trafficking hub linking Venezuela to the Caribbean
and Europe. Over the years, numerous traffickers have operated or taken refuge there,
including figures tied to Mexico's Sinaloa cartel. Despite the sustained investigation, the U.S.
government never publicly accused Rodriguez of criminal wrongdoing. She's also notably absent
from the list of more than a dozen Venezuelan officials charged alongside Maduro.
Still, DEA records, reviewed by the AP, showed Rodriguez's name surfacing in nearly a dozen
investigations across multiple field offices, from Paraguay to Ecuador to Phoenix and New York,
several of which remain active.
Current and former DEA agents say the records reflect consistent institutional interest throughout
her tenure as Maduro's vice president, which began in 2018.
What the records don't explain is why Rodriguez was elevated to priority target status.
That's a move that requires extensive documentation and internal approval.
And again, I want to underline this point. That designation doesn't guarantee prosecution.
But it does tell you how seriously investigators viewed her position inside the regime.
When taken together, the records obtained by the AP reflect how U.S. authorities have viewed Rodriguez
as someone embedded in the power structure, which investigators associate with Venezuela's criminal networks.
That detail is what makes Trump's praise of the newly named Venezuelan president striking.
Since Maduro's capture, Trump described her as a, quote, terrific person and highlighted her contacts with Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
When asked by reporters whether Trump trusts Rodriguez, the White House pointed to his remarks about having a, quote, very good talk with the interim leader before she met in Caracas with CIA director John Ratcliffe.
Concerns about Rodriguez were raised by opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, who met with Trump at the White House last week.
Machado, when referring to Rodriguez, said the U.S. justice system has sufficient information on her,
and that's an important detail.
Much of the DEA's interest in Rodriguez is driven by its elite special operations division,
notably the same unit that helped build a case against Maduro.
Shortly after Maduro's ouster, Trump warned that Rodriguez would, quote,
pay a very big price, probably bigger than Maduro, if she fails to play ball with Washington.
All right. Coming up in today's back of the brief, President Trump ramps up tariffs on Europe in a bid to force a deal on Greenland. We'll have the details.
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In today's back of the brief, Washington continues to push for a deal on Greenland,
with President Trump warning that 10% tariffs on Europe are coming unless Denmark makes a deal.
Trump is calling the acquisition of Greenland critical for U.S. national security.
He first raised this idea back in his first term, then resurfaced it after returning to office.
Trump has since steadily elevated it into a core national security priority in this current administration.
In a lengthy truth social post, Trump framed the issue less as a negotiation and more as a correction.
He argued Washington has spent decades subsidizing Denmark and much of Europe, not just financially, but strategically, by holding back on tariffs while providing what he described as maximum military protection.
So, from Trump's perspective, that balance is tilted too far.
for too long. Trump posted, quote, now after centuries, it is time for Denmark to give it back. World
Peace is at stake, end quote. Trump said China and Russia are seeking influence over Greenland,
and he made clear he does not believe Denmark can defend the territory on its own. In one of the
posts lines, he jokingly wrote that Denmark has limited defenses on the island, writing that Greenland
is protected by, quote, two dog sleds, adding that only the U.S. can
secure it effectively. From there, Trump played out to consequences. He warned that Denmark,
along with Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the U.K., the Netherlands, and Finland, will face a 10%
tariff on all goods exported to the U.S., effective by the beginning of February. And according to
the White House on the 1st of June, that rate will rise to 25% and remain in place, he said,
quote, until such time as a deal is reached for the complete and total purchase of Greenland.
Now, if you're wondering why Trump chose those countries in particular, well, he recently said those nations, quote, journeyed to Greenland for purposes unknown, casting that activity as a threat to global safety.
As we've framed before, the world's largest island is at a critical Arctic crossroads, hosts a major U.S. military base, and is becoming more strategically valuable, as melting ice opens new shipping lanes and access to natural resources.
Trump said the U.S. has sought to purchase Greenland for more than 150 years, but has been repeatedly
rejected by the Danes. He also tied his renewed push to advanced weapons systems and his
proposed Golden Dome Missile Defense Initiative, arguing that that system can't operate at full
capacity without Greenland's inclusion. So, you ask, where do things stand now? Well, Trump may
declare that he's not closing the door on talks. He wrote, quote, the U.S. is immediately open to
negotiation with Denmark and or any of these countries.
And that, my friends, is the President's Daily Brief from Monday, the 19th of January.
Now, if you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at PDB at thefirsttv.com.
And hopefully, you had a chance over the weekend to check out the latest episode of our
PDB Situation Report. As always, excellent guests, news, and insight.
But still no House Band were working on it.
You can catch the Situation Report on our YouTube channel.
That's at President's Daily Brief, as well as on podcast platforms all over podcast land.
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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