The President's Daily Brief - January 6th, 2026: Maduro’s Successor Signals Cooperation & Russia Targets U.S. Assets
Episode Date: January 6, 2026In this episode of The President’s Daily Brief: Venezuela’s new leader Delcy Rodríguez abruptly softens her tone following the capture of Nicolás Maduro, signaling possible cooperation wi...th Washington—but her past record and the power structures still in place raise doubts about whether a real political transition is underway. Alarm bells ring across the Baltics after a sixth undersea cable outage in less than a week, as authorities investigate suspected sabotage and Western allies warn the pattern may point to coordinated Russian interference. Russia strikes an American-owned oil facility in Ukraine, triggering a massive oil spill in the city of Dnipro and underscoring the expanding scope of Moscow’s targeting. And in today’s Back of the Brief—President Trump pushes back on Kremlin claims, saying U.S. intelligence shows Ukraine did not target Vladimir Putin’s residence during a recent drone strike. 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 ZBiotics: Visit https://zbiotics.com/PDBfor 15% off American Financing: Call American Financing today to find out how customers are saving an avg of $800/mo. NMLS 182334, https://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. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Tuesday, the 6th 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, Delci Rodriguez, the newly named president of Venezuela and a key player in the Maduro regime,
strikes a sudden change in tone after her boss's capture, signaling a supposed willingness to possibly cooperate with the U.S.
But a closer look at her record and the power structure still in place in Venezuela raises serious questions
about whether the country is actually on the path to a real democratic transition,
or simply a reshuffling of Maduro cronies to lead the country.
Later in the show, growing alarm in the Baltics after a sixth undersea cable outage in less than a week.
I'm starting to see a pattern here.
As authorities investigate suspected sabotage and Western allies warn that the incidents may signal coordinated interference linked to Russia.
Plus, Russia targets an American-owned facility in Ukraine, triggering a massive oil spill in the city of the city of the state.
NEPRO. And in today's back of the brief, President Trump pushes back on Kremlin claims,
saying U.S. intelligence shows that Ukraine did not target Vladimir Putin's residence during a
recent drone strike. What? Do you mean that Putin might be guilty of disinformation? Well,
color me disappointed. But first, today's PDB spotlight. In the hours following the capture of
Nicholas Maduro, Venezuela's new acting leader, Delci Rodriguez, the former vice president,
head of the state's oil industry and now newly named president,
struck a defiant tone, accusing the U.S. of illegally kidnapping the country's president.
But within 24 hours, that posture appears to have softened.
In a statement released on social media, Rodriguez shifted to markedly more diplomatic language,
saying Venezuela, quote, aspires to live without external threats,
and extending what she described as an invitation to the U.S. to cooperate on a shared agenda
under international law.
The change came after President Trump publicly revealed that Rodriguez had spoken directly
with Secretary of State Marco Rubio and agreed to cooperate in a transition process.
So who is she?
The woman, Nicholas Maduro, handpicked to be a second in command,
and a name that we're likely to hear often in the coming days, Delci Rodriguez.
Well, she's a longtime fixture of Venezuela's Chevista Elite.
A trained lawyer, she rose to the ranks of Hugo's shableness.
Havas's group and later became one of Maduro's most trusted loyalists, serving as foreign minister,
head of the regime's constituent assembly, and vice president since 2018.
And let's just say, well, she's not a poster person for democracy or transparency or
justice or goodness and light.
Rodriguez is accused by the U.S., the European Union, and other Western governments of being
involved in many of the same abuses as Maduro himself, undermining democratic institutions,
enabling political repression, and helping enforce a system that crushed opposition and dissent,
not to mention financial enrichment via the regime's cooperation aiding and abetting of narcotics traffickers.
As foreign minister and later vice president, Rodriguez played a central role in defending sham elections,
attacking international human rights investigations, and shielding the regime from outside pressure.
She was a vocal supporter of the regime's use of security forces and loyalist militias to suppress
protests, even as demonstrators were jailed, beaten, or killed.
When the opposition tried to challenge Maduro's grip on power, Rodriguez was often the one
sent out to justify arrests or dismiss evidence of abuse or blame Venezuela's collapse on
foreign conspiracies. Western governments have sanctioned her, not for rhetoric, but for her
role in maintaining an authoritarian system built on intimidation, censorship, and the elimination
of political rivals. In practical terms, Rodriguez has functioned her.
less as a vice president and more as a political enforcer.
One of the key figures who helped keep Maduro in power
long after Venezuela's institutions stopped functioning as real democratic bodies.
Now, she hasn't been formally charged with drug trafficking like other members of the ruling elite,
but she's widely viewed as part of the same inner circle that oversaw Venezuela's collapse
into corruption and authoritarian rule and international isolation,
making her a continuation of the Maduro model.
And that's a larger issue here.
While Maduro may now be in U.S. custody, the regime itself is still very much intact.
The country is being run by many of the same figures who helped prop up Maduro,
and in some cases who face the very same criminal allegations.
That includes Dostado Cabello, the regime's longtime political enforcer who's been indicted by the U.S.
on narco-terrorism and drug trafficking charges tied to the Cartel de la Solz.
And it includes Vladimir Padreno Lopez, the powerful defense minister, head of the armed forces,
who is also wanted by U.S. authorities on drug trafficking charges,
and is the subject of a multi-million dollar reward for information leading to his arrest.
Add in figures like Jorge Rodriguez or Delci Rodriguez's brother and a central political operator,
basically head of propaganda, and the picture becomes clear.
Maduro may be gone, but the network that ran Venezuela into the ground is still firmly in place,
controlling the military, the security services, and the machinery of the state.
And that's why any talk of an easy transition should be treated with some skepticism.
For these figures, a real transfer of power isn't just about losing office.
It's about losing protection.
Many of them have just as much at stake as Maduro did, their political survival, their fortunes,
and in some cases their freedom.
A genuine change in government would undoubtedly expose years of corruption,
human rights abuses, and criminal activity that had been shielded by the regime.
So the incentive here for them isn't reform, it's resistance.
These are people with every reason to cling to power,
slow roll any transition, and protect the system that has kept them insulated for years.
One final point worth flagging here, and that's Cuba,
a country that has been heavily dependent on the Maduro regime.
In the days following the raid that captured Maduro, Havana quietly acknowledged that 32 members of Cuba's military and intelligence services were killed in the operation that captured Maduro and his wife.
That admission is, well, revealing.
It shows just how deeply Maduro relied on Cuba for personal security, intelligence support, and regime survival, and just as importantly, how invested Cuba remains in keeping the current power structure in place.
Ravana, Venezuela isn't just an ally. It's a strategic lifeline. And that means any transition
in Caracas won't face resistance just from inside Venezuela, but scrutiny and pressure and likely
interference from outside as well. Of course, not to mention Russian and Chinese interests that
exist in the country. The point being, unless there was some backroom deal done with the existing
Venezuelan leadership, a deal that would theoretically protect their interests and freedom, this will not
be a simple transition to the Democratic opposition that legitimately won the last election.
All right. Coming up next, growing alarm in the Baltics after a sixth undersea cable outage in less than a
week. And a Russian strike on an American-owned oil facility in Ukraine sparks a massive spill in the
city of the Nipro. I'll be right back. Hey, Mike Baker here. Now, I have been known in my time to enjoy an ice-cold
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by Calvin Klein. Welcome back to the PDB. Another undersea cable has been damaged in the Baltic,
this time in Latvian waters, and it's the frequency of these incidents that has the continent on edge.
With roughly half a dozen outages across the region in about a week,
governments are obviously on alert, even as they resist jumping to conclusions.
In the latest incident, authorities opened a criminal investigation into what they describe
as possible and intentional damage to an optic cable.
Latvian police inspected a vessel at a port in the country's west and questioned its crew
but said they had not found a clear link to the incident.
In other words, another damaged cable, another investigation, and still no
clear attribution. And that lack of clarity keeps repeating. Just days earlier, you'll remember our
coverage of Finnish authorities taking a far more assertive step, boarding and seizing the cargo
vessel Fitberg after it was seen near damaged communications cables between Finland and Estonia,
with its anchor lowered. That response was proactive. Helicopters, patrol vessels, crew detentions,
but the language surrounding the incident remained cautious. Finnish officials emphasized evidence
gathering over accusations, aware of how easily these cases slip into conclusions of Russian sabotage
before the facts are obtained. Looming behind these cases is the longer shadow of Eagle S. That's the
Russian-linked vessel, seized in 2024, and later tied to deliberate anchor-dragging that severed
undersea power and communications lines. Charges followed in that case, sharpening regional
sensitivities and changing how every new undersea cable failure is interpreted.
Still there is a counter-argument to suspected sabotage.
The Baltic Sea is shallow and crowded.
Many of those vessels are poorly maintained, and crew experience varies widely.
Conditions that make accidents, well, far more plausible.
And if you mix in winter weather, then an anchor scraping the seabed starts to look less like espionage, perhaps, and more like negligence.
The Financial Times reports that several serving and former intelligence officers argue that this cluster of incidents may be,
the product of bad seamanship, colliding with heightened scrutiny. Yet the pattern is worrisome.
Estonia reported multiple cable faults of its own in recent days, including two communications
cables linking the country to its NATO neighbor Sweden and another cable connecting to an Estonian
island. The frequency of disruptions across different national waters has put NATO partners
on sustained alert. Even if some breaks are accidental, the effect is the same, disruption
and pressure on governments to respond as if something hostile might be afoot.
That's why the response has focused less on public accusations and more on posture.
Patrols under NATO's Operation Baltic Sentry, the maritime effort to monitor critical infrastructure
have increased. So for now, the message is deterrence without declaration, showing that ships
operating in sensitive areas will be watched closely and seized if necessary. So, you ask, where does
that leave us for now? Well, there's no smoking gun tying the latest cable cuts directly to Russian
interference. There's also no escaping the reality that these incidents are happening too frequently
and too closely together to be dismissed outright. Okay, shifting to Ukraine. The war came back to
Keev early in this new year as Russian strikes roll on, killing two in and around the capital,
marking the first reported civilian deaths of 2026.
Ukraine's state emergency service said one of the strikes at a medical facility in Keeves' northern sector.
Firefighters managed to put out the blaze, but once they did, first responders found a body inside the building.
Another individual was reportedly injured and at least 25 people had to be evacuated.
Russian strikes also hit towns and villages across the wider Keeve region,
damaging homes and critical infrastructure and killing another civilian southwest of the capital.
according to the regional governor.
Moscow, as usual, denies targeting civilians and associated infrastructure,
insisting its attacks are aimed at military objectives.
But Ukrainian officials point to scenes like these burned medical facilities,
civilian deaths, and argue that the pattern tells a different story,
one that has repeated itself consistently through nearly four years of Putin's war.
Turning southeast of the capital region, in Denepro, a Russian drone strike
damaged an oil processing facility owned by a U.S.-based agribusiness that's headquartered in St. Louis, Missouri.
The Denepro city officials say the strike caused a spill of roughly 300 tons of oil onto major roadways,
bringing traffic in the area to a standstill for an estimated two days.
The Denepro mayor made clear what the strike had hit.
In the post on telegram, he wrote, quote,
Russians bombed American property.
That framing was echoed at the national level.
Ukraine's foreign minister said the latest strikes underscore Moscow's disregard for ongoing diplomatic efforts.
In a post on X, he said attacks on American-owned assets show, quote, a complete disregard for peace efforts led by President Trump,
and argued that the strikes only reinforced the urgency of strengthening Ukraine's air defenses and increasing sanctions pressure on Moscow.
According to the regional military administration, the attack also sparked a fire at the site, damaged vehicles, and destroyed a nearby
power line, officials say no casualties were reported at the facility itself. For some quick
background, the U.S. agribusiness, Bunge, is one of several international companies operating
in Ukraine, and its presence plays a significant role in the country's agricultural export economy.
The strike adds to a growing list of incidents in which Russian attacks have directly affected
U.S. business interests. It's a pattern that Ukrainian officials have been eager to highlight.
Back in August, a Russian missile attack damaged a Flex factory in Western Ukraine, one of the largest U.S. investments in the region. The American Chamber of Commerce in Ukraine described that strike as a direct hit on American business interests.
Flex later confirmed several employees were injured and stressed that the facility produces only civilian goods.
And in June, another Russian attack damaged an office building used by U.S.-based aerospace giant Boeing in Kiev, one of several commercial sites hit during.
aerial barrages on the capital at the time. The latest strikes come as Ukraine pushes for continued
international focus, not only on the civilian death toll in the war effort, but on the economic damage,
as diplomacy sputters along. All right, coming up in today's back of the brief, President
Trump calls out Moscow, rejecting Kremlin claims that Ukraine targeted Vladimir Putin's
residents during a recent drone attack. We'll have those details. Hey, Mike Baker here, let me
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In today's back of the brief, an important follow-up to a story we brought you just a few weeks ago.
You may remember this incident. In the middle of already fragile peace discussions,
the Kremlin suddenly claimed that Ukraine had carried out a drone strike, targeting a residence
belonging to Russian President Putin.
Moscow framed it as an attempted assassination,
an allegation that immediately hardened Russia's negotiating posture
and injected new volatility into an already tense diplomatic moment.
At the time, Ukraine flatly denied the claim,
but the accusation had its effect.
Talk stalled, rhetoric escalated,
and once again, a single dramatic assertion from the Kremlin
shifted the entire tone of the conversation.
Now comes a significant clarification from Washington,
President Trump says U.S. intelligence assessments show that Ukraine did not target Putin's
residence in that drone strike. In other words, according to American intelligence, the Kremlin's
claim simply wasn't true. I know, shocking. That's a direct contradiction, of course, of Moscow's
narrative and an important one. Because this wasn't just about a drone or a building. The allegations
surfaced at a moment when Russia was under pressure to engage seriously in talks. And the claim of a
personal threat to Putin, served to recast Ukraine, not as a negotiating partner, but as an
escalatory actor, justifying Moscow's decision to pull back, harden its stance, and reset the
narrative. Trump's statement suggests that intelligence professionals never bought the Kremlin's
version of events, and it reinforces a pattern that we've seen repeatedly throughout this war.
Dramatic claims from Moscow that are later walked back, quietly contradicted or undercut by
actual intelligence assessments.
often after they've already served their political purpose, at least from the Kremlin's perspective.
To be clear, Trump didn't accuse Russia outright of fabricating the story, but by stating plainly that
U.S. intelligence found no evidence that Ukraine targeted Putin's residence. He effectively stripped the
original claim of its credibility. And that, my friends, is the president's daily brief for
Tuesday, the 6th of January. Now, if you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at
PDB at thefirstTV.com. And finally, if you get a free minute or two during your busy day,
I hope you'll check out our YouTube channel. Oddly enough, you can find that on YouTube. Just search
at President's Daily Brief. Now, if you like what you see and how could you not,
please go ahead and hit that 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.
