The President's Daily Brief - January 26th, 2026: Iran Chemical Weapons Claims & Minneapolis Shooting Fallout
Episode Date: January 26, 2026In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: First up—disturbing new reports out of Iran suggest the regime may have deployed chemical agents against protesters, raising serious questions ab...out how far Tehran is willing to go to crush dissent. Later in the show—we break down the latest developments from Minneapolis, where a Border Patrol agent shot and killed a man during an immigration crackdown, fueling renewed calls for federal law enforcement to leave the state. Plus—trilateral talks between Russia, Ukraine, and the United States wrap up with leaders projecting optimism, but little tangible progress toward ending the war. And in today’s Back of the Brief—President Trump claims a secret weapon he dubbed the “Discombobulator” was decisive in the raid that captured Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro. 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. CBDistillery: Visit https://CBDistillery.com and use promo code PDB for 25% off your entire order! American Financing: Call American Financing today to find out how customers are saving an avg of $800/mo. NMLS 182334, https://nmlsconsumeraccess.orgAPR 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. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Monday, the 26th of January. Welcome to the President's Daily Brief. I'm Mike Baker,
your eyes and ears on the world stage. And yes, if you said to yourself, if it looks like Mike's back on the road, you'd be right.
Coming to you this morning from some nondescript airport somewhere. All right, let's get briefed.
First up, new reports out of Iran suggest that the regime may have deployed chemical agents against protesters,
raising serious questions about how far Tehran is willing to go to crush dissent.
I'll have the details.
Later in the show, we'll break down the latest developments from Minneapolis
where a border patrol agent shot and killed a man during the immigration crackdown,
leading to more calls for federal law enforcement to leave the state.
Plus, the trilateral talks between Russia, Ukraine, and the U.S. have wrapped up
with leaders projecting optimism, but little tangible progress.
Well, of course, hope is the thing with feathers.
And in today's back of the brief, President Trump claims a secret weapon, apparently not really secret anymore,
which he called the, quote, Discombobulator.
I'm not making that up.
And he claims it was decisive in the raid that captured Venezuela's Nicholas Maduro.
Now, if I'm not mistaken, I believe the original Discombobulator at first appeared in one of the Austin Power movies.
I may be wrong on that.
But first, today's BDB spotlight.
We're tracking new reports out of Iran that suggests the regime may have outdone itself in its brutal crackdown on protesters.
According to multiple accounts and officials in the United Kingdom, Tehran's security forces may have used lethal chemical agents against demonstrators.
It's an allegation that, if confirmed, would mark a major escalation in the regime's use of force against its own people.
Witnesses and medical sources describe symptoms.
They go far beyond what you'd expect from standard riot control agents.
like tear gas. Protesters reportedly experienced severe respiratory distress, sudden collapse,
and prolonged breathing complications, effects that raised immediate alarms among outside observers.
In some cases, victims required urgent medical care, while others described lingering symptoms
hours after exposure. Sources even alleged delayed health reactions that led to deaths of those
exposed days later. Footage captured during one protest.
appeared to show security personnel wearing full hazmat suits and protective masks,
positioned to top military vehicles moving through city streets.
That's an image that has only added to concerns about what may have been deployed by the regime.
Now, it's important to be clear here.
These are reports from the ground, but access inside Iran remains tightly restricted.
Independent verification is difficult, and the regime has offered no transparency.
I know, I too am shocked, that the Mullahs and the Revolutionary Guard,
have not been transparent about their brutal efforts to remain in power.
But multiple outlets and analysts say the accounts are consistent enough and serious enough
that they warrant close international scrutiny.
If Tehran did, in fact, deploy chemical agents against civilians,
that would represent not just another brutal episode in its long history of repression,
but a step into territory that carries enormous legal and moral and strategic consequences,
none of which would likely bother the Iranian regime.
Chemical weapons are banned under international law,
and their use, especially against a civilian population,
would further isolate an already isolated regime.
If the reports are determined to be accurate,
we can count on the United Nations and the international community
to issue a very terse memo.
Of course, this new reporting comes against the backdrop of growing internal pressure.
Iran's leadership continues to face unrest,
economic strain, and deep public resentment.
The use of extreme measures would suggest a regime increasingly willing to accept international condemnation
in exchange for short-term control at home.
Meanwhile, it appears the regime is preparing for the possibility of a U.S. strike at the highest level.
New reporting indicates that Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamini,
has moved to a fortified underground bunker amid rising concerns
that tensions with Washington could boil over into direct military action.
While Iranian officials have not confirmed that move, such a step would be consistent with
contingency planning at the very top of the regime.
This comes as U.S. military assets continue to flow into the region.
As we've reported here, a carrier strike group, or as Trump called it in Armada, air defenses
and support forces have been repositioned, giving Washington a wide range of options if it chooses
to escalate.
Publicly, U.S. officials have stressed deterrence and readiness rather than imminent action.
but the posture itself sends a clear signal.
At the same time, the regime remains defiant in the face of the U.S. build-up in the region.
Iranian military commanders and senior officials have issued sharp warnings,
vowing that any American strike would be met with a full-scale response.
State media continues to project confidence,
emphasizing Iran's missile capabilities,
regional proxing network, and readiness for confrontation.
This dual posture, private precaution paired with public defiance,
is familiar. Tehran wants to deter action by projecting strength, even as it quietly prepares for
worst-case scenarios. The messaging is aimed as much at domestic audiences as it is at Washington.
The regime wants to appear unshaken, unbowed, and firmly in control. And finally, new reporting
suggests that if a strike does occur, the U.S. may not be acting alone. According to regional reporting,
Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, and the U.K. could provide support in the U.
event of U.S. military action against Iran. The nature of that support remains unclear, and none of the
governments involved have publicly confirmed such plans. Taken together, though, these developments
paint a picture of a regime under extraordinary strain, accused of extreme brutality at home,
preparing for conflict with the U.S., and facing a shifting regional environment that may be less
forgiving than in the past. All right, coming up next, a fatal shooting in Minneapolis escalates
tensions at home. And Russia, Ukraine, and the U.S. conclude talks in Abu Dhabi, with little to show for them.
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A federal immigration operation in Minneapolis again turned deadly when a border patrol agent was forced to fire on a man during an armed encounter, sending tensions across the city soaring, fueling renewed protests for federal law enforcement to leave Minnesota.
Here's what we know so far.
As we've been tracking here on the PDB, federal agents have been in Minneapolis for over a month now, carrying out what the Department of Homeland Security describes as an immigration enforcement operation.
Federal agents on Saturday were operating in an area that has increasingly become a protest flashpoint,
as demonstrations against ICE officers have flared in recent weeks.
Agents were in the middle of a targeted enforcement action when a crowd began to gather,
adding pressure to an already tense scene.
According to video and official accounts, that's when an individual, Alex Preti, entered the picture.
He was near the agents as the operation unfolded, moving through a crowded environment
where protesters and officers were already pushing against one another.
What had been a confrontational standoff quickly collapsed into seconds of chaos.
Multiple videos from the scene show a close-quarter struggle unfolding amid the crowd.
In multiple clips, officers can be heard shouting, quote,
he's got a gun as Preti is forced to the ground.
An officer is then seen in one video,
reaching into Preti's waistband and pulling out a 9-millimeter semi-automatic handgun.
the moment federal officials say the encounter became deadly.
If you slow the footage down, it does appear that as the weapon is retrieved by an ice officer during the struggle, the gun's slide appears to move, suggesting that it may have discharged.
Seconds later, an agent fires multiple rounds at close range.
The shots came with officers and bystanders just feet away.
When the gunfire stops, Preti is motionless on the ground.
DHS said Border Patrol agents were engaged in a federal arrest action already underway and not a random patrol
when Freddie approached them armed with a handgun, two magazines, and no ID. However, there is video footage
that appears to show Preti holding a phone, not a handgun. One does not look like the other.
According to government's versions of events, officers attempted to disarm him, but he violently resisted.
In what officials described was a dangerous confrontation, an agent fired with the department
Hartman characterizes as, quote, defensive shots.
The officer who fired the fatal rounds was identified only as an eight-year veteran of the Border Patrol.
Within hours, authorities explained their response on the ground.
Minnesota National Guard troops were deployed to assist local police,
with units sent both to the shooting site and a nearby federal building
that's become a regular focal point for demonstrations.
Again, a bystander video obtained by the Associated Press shows Preti reaching for and holding a cell phone.
not brandishing a weapon.
Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara said police believe Preti was a lawful gun owner with a permit to carry,
something that's still under investigation.
Minnesota is a carry state, meaning that if Preti purchased the gun legally and held a permit to carry,
he had every right to have that weapon on his hip.
That's the Second Amendment in action.
What investigators are now working to determine is exactly when the weapon became visible to officers
and whether Pretti was in the process of drawing it during the confrontation.
The problem, as always, in this world of social media and smartphones, is that there's always a rush to judgment or a rush to exonerate before an actual investigation identifies all the facts.
DHS was quick to claim that Preti approached the ICE officers with a weapon in his hand and an intent to cause bodily harm.
Protesters, however, were quick to claim Prettie was innocent and was holding a phone and was not posing a threat to the officers.
Only one of those versions can be true, and that truth is determined through a thorough examination of all available video footage, witness statements, and forensics.
DHS Secretary Kristy Noem addressed those questions in a press conference.
She said Preti attempted to, quote, impede a law enforcement operation and questioned why he approached a federal agents in the first place.
Noam emphasized the threat, quote, fearing for his life and for the lives of his fellow officers, an agent fired defensive shots.
Preti was pronounced dead at the scene.
President Trump weighed in on truth social, criticizing Governor Tim Walz and the mayor of Minneapolis.
Trump shared images of the handgun recovered at the scene and accused local leaders of
failing to protect federal officers, arguing that their liberal rhetoric is, quote, inciting
insurrection.
Border Patrol Chief Gregory Bovino defended his personnel's actions, noting that the officer
involved had extensive training.
Bovino warned that federal agents in Minneapolis
are facing increasingly aggressive actions while carrying out enforcement operations.
This latest shooting, of course, happened just over a mile from where an ice officer shot
Renee Good on the 7th of January, after DHS said she used her vehicle as a weapon against an agent.
That earlier incident sparked days of protests and left Minneapolis already on the edge
before Saturday's confrontation even began.
Despite the deployment of National Guard troops, demonstrations persist now with protesters
defacing public property and shoving federal agents,
underscoring just how volatile the environment around immigration enforcement has become in Minneapolis.
All right, shifting gears.
After last week's discussions in Davos, the diplomatic effort shifted to Abu Dhabi,
where U.S. negotiators brought Russia and Ukraine to the same table,
opening a phase of trilateral talks framed as progress,
even as the toughest questions and most contentious details remain unsolved.
That has been, to be fair, the history of any discussions around Putin's four-year war in Ukraine,
optimism and hope in the face of little actual progress.
Over two days, delegations from Washington, Moscow, and Kiev met for talks hosted by the UAE.
Political and military officials were all involved, and the focus, according to Ukrainian officials,
was on possible parameters for ending the war.
Ukrainian President Zelensky said the delegations agreed to head back to their capitals and coordinate
next steps, adding that follow-up meetings could take place as early as the beginning of February.
From Keith's perspective, this wasn't about producing a deal on the spot. It was about keeping the format
intact, keeping the U.S. actively involved, and keeping talks from stalling out entirely.
From Washington's side, officials close to the talks described the meetings as a new phase of
constructive U.S. mediation. Advisors to President Trump came away sounding cautiously optimistic,
saying the talks help narrow gaps on the biggest sticking point, which of course is territorial control of eastern Ukraine.
It's worth pausing there because progress in this context doesn't mean a possible solution.
It means positions that have been frozen for months, particularly on the Kremlin's side, are at least being tested again.
U.S. officials say it took months of quiet diplomacy to get Moscow-in-Keev to agree to a trilateral format under American mediation.
The talks began on Friday and continued.
through Saturday. At times, U.S. mediators sat in joint sessions with both sides,
and at other moments, Russian and Ukrainian negotiators met directly without the Americans in the room.
As for the negotiation teams, the U.S. delegation included, well, Trump advisor Steve Whitkoff and
Jared Kushner, with Army Secretary Dan Driscoll and the commander of U.S. European Command,
General Grinkiewicz. Ukraine's delegation was led by Zelensky's chief of staff and included his
National Security Advisor Rustem Umorov, along with the country's military chief of staff and other
senior presidential advisors. Russia's delegation was led by Admiral Igor Kostakov, the chief of Russian
military intelligence. According to U.S. officials, the groundwork for these negotiations was laid
early last week. As we discussed on the PDB, it began with Trump meeting with Zelensky and Davos,
followed just hours later by a four-hour meeting in Moscow between Russian President Putin, Whitkoff, and
Kushner.
But that Moscow meeting also underscored the ceiling on this process.
Kremlin aide Yuri Ushikov described the discussions as extremely frank,
saying a lasting settlement would be unlikely without resolving territorial issues
according to what he called the formula agreed in Anchorage,
a reference to the August Putin-Trump meeting in Alaska.
Ushikov and Putin made clear that without addressing territory,
there's no point in hoping for a settlement.
You may remember that ahead of the Alaska summit,
the Kremlin demanded Ukrainian forces withdraw from parts of Dhenetsk and Nogansk, which are not occupied
by Russia. That's a demand that Keev consistently rejects. After being briefed by his negotiating team,
Zelenskyy said the talks again focused on possible parameters for ending the war and emphasized
U.S. oversight as a critical component of any agreement. Still, there was no rush to declare success.
A Ukrainian official caution that while some progress had been made, it remains unclear whether Putin
is prepared to give his negotiators any authority to strike a deal in the next meeting.
So, in short, it's still too early to judge what tangible progress came out of the talks.
That same Ukrainian official said that if the next trilateral round moves things further along,
discussions could eventually shift to Moscow or Kiev, venues that have not hosted negotiations
in years. And this is where the practical limits of the talks became clear.
Zelensky has said any territorial decision would ultimately have to be.
be made by Ukrainians themselves, either through an election or a referendum. A December poll
showed roughly 75% of Ukrainians oppose any peace deal that includes withdrawal from the Donbass
without firm security guarantees. All right. Coming up in today's back of the brief, Trump says a
secret weapon was crucial to the raid that captured Venezuela's Nicholas Maduro. We'll have those
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In today's back of the brief, we're learning a bit more about the confirmed use of the secret weapon.
President Trump says helped U.S. forces capture Venezuelan strongman Nicholas Maduro.
In an exclusive interview with the New York Post, Trump confirmed that a classified system
known as the, quote, discombobulator was unleashed as U.S. helicopters moved into Caracas on the
3rd of January to arrest Maduro and his wife on federal drug and weapons charges.
Trump said, quote, the discombobulator. I'm not allowed to talk about it. Confirming its use while
making clear there are limits to what he can publicly explain. Still, he offered enough to possibly
understand the effect. As we've discussed here on the PDB, Venezuela and forces had Russian and Chinese
supplied rocket air defenses and radar in place for decades in anticipation of an eventual U.S.
attack. But nothing happened the night of the operation. Trump said, quote, they never got their
rockets off. We came in, they pressed buttons, and nothing worked, end quote. It's a shame they never
got their rockets off. That's got to be frustrating. The way Trump tells it, this wasn't a scramble or a
near miss. Regime defenses simply failed to respond, allowing U.S. forces to move in and secure their
target without losing a single American life. Trump's comments came after he was asked about reports
that the Biden administration previously purchased a pulse energy weapon tied by some researchers to the
so-called Havana syndrome. Now, for those unfamiliar, that term refers to unexplained neurological
symptoms reported by American diplomats and intelligence personnel overseas, including dizziness
and cognitive problems, which some officials suspect may stem from directed energy exposure.
And while little is publicly known about the system that Trump described, what stands out as how
closely his account aligns with what was reported on the ground in Venezuela in the aftermath of
the raid. One member of Maduro security detail told the New York Post that radar systems
shut down without warning just before the assault began. According to the guard, the next thing he
saw were drones, a lot of them, suddenly appearing overhead, and then came the U.S. helicopters.
The guard said defenders would then hit by what he struggled to describe, something that
that felt less like a conventional weapon and more like an overwhelming physical force.
He said, quote, it was like a very intense sound wave. It felt like my head was exploding from the
inside. He claimed several regime guards suffered nosebleeds, nausea, and severe disorientation,
leaving them unable to stand or respond as U.S. forces secured the complex,
possibly with the help of the dreaded discombobulator.
And that, my friends, is the president's daily brief for Monday, the 26th of January.
Now, if you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at PDB at thefirsttv.com.
And hopefully, you had the chance to catch the latest episode of our extended weekend show.
That's the PDB Situation Report.
Daniel DiMartino, Venezuelan analyst from the Manhattan Institute,
along with author and China analyst Gordon Chang,
joined the show to talk all things Venezuela and China.
You can catch it and past episodes on our YouTube channel.
Just head on over to YouTube and search up at President's Daily Brief.
It's also available, of course, on all podcast platforms.
I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today, still from the road, with the PDB afternoon bulletin.
Until then, stay informed, stay safe, stay cool.
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