The President's Daily Brief - March 17th, 2026: Iran’s Missile Campaign Breaking Down & Hezbollah Link In Michigan
Episode Date: March 17, 2026In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: First up — an update on the war with Iran. I’ll walk you through where things stand on day seventeen of Operation Epic Fury, including why Tehr...an’s missile and drone attacks across the Gulf appear to be slowing—and how much longer the campaign could last. Later in the show — new details emerge about the man behind the attack on a Jewish preschool in Michigan. Israeli officials now say the suspect’s brother was a Hezbollah commander, raising new questions about possible terrorist connections. Plus — Cuba’s power grid collapses, plunging the island into darkness as the country’s economic crisis deepens and Havana begins signaling a potential opening to economic talks. And in today’s Back of the Brief — Russia temporarily shuts down mobile internet in parts of Moscow as the Kremlin tests new systems designed to control online information during protests or political unrest. 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 Pocket Hose-Ballistic: Text PDB to 64000 to get a FREE pocket pivot and their 10-pattern sprayer with the purchase of ANY size Copper Head hose. Message and data rates may apply. 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. Mars Men: For a limited time, our listeners get 50% off FOR LIFE, Free Shipping, AND 3 Free Gifts at Mars Men at https://Mengotomars.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Tuesday, the 17th of March.
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, an update on the war with Iran.
I'll walk you through where things stand on day 17 of Operation Epic Fury,
including why Tehran's missile and drone attacks appear to be slowing,
and how much longer this campaign could last.
Later in the show, new details emerge about the man behind the attack on a Jewish preschool in Michigan.
Israeli officials now say the suspect's brother was a Hezbollah commander,
raising new questions about possible terrorist connections.
Really? I mean, we're still questioning whether there were terrorist connections,
connections? Plus, Cuba's power grid collapses, plunging the island into darkness as the country's
economic crisis worsens. And in today's back of the brief, Russia temporarily shuts down mobile
internet in parts of Moscow as the Kremlin tests new systems designed to control online information
during protests or political unrest. Wait, the Kremlin? Suppressing information? Telling people
what to think? Nah, it doesn't sound right. But first, today's speedy-be-suffer.
spotlight. It's now day 17 of Operation Epic Fury. Perhaps you've heard about this, and I thought I'd
start things off with an overview of where things stand right now, and some of the major outstanding
questions that remain, and there are a few. According to U.S. Central Command, since the start of the war,
the United States military has flown roughly 6,000 combat sorties over Iran, carried out by the Navy,
Air Force, and Marine Corps. Those missions have focused on degrading Iran's missile launchers,
drone infrastructure, air defenses, and other key military assets.
And that pace of operations gives you a sense of just how large this campaign has already become
and how determined Washington and Jerusalem appear to be to systematically dismantle Iran's ability
to wage this war.
Now, one major ongoing question has been Iran's ability to launch missiles and drones at U.S.
facilities in the region and at its neighbors.
And on that front, it does appear that its capabilities have been diminished dramatically.
In the early days of the war, Iran unleashed massive barrages across the Gulf.
Countries like the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia reported waves of ballistic missiles and hundreds of drones,
targeting U.S. bases, energy infrastructure, and major cities.
To many people surprised, the UAE bore the brunt of these attacks.
Now, the UAE alone was on the receiving end of hundreds of Iranian drones and ballistic missiles
in the first several days of the conflict, with most reported.
intercepted by air defenses. But since those opening salvos, the volume of Iranian attacks has fallen sharply.
Data compiled from Gulf Defense Ministries and outside analysts shows that the number of missiles
and drones being launched has dropped significantly compared to the first days of the war.
Some estimates suggest missile launches have fallen by roughly 90 to 95 percent since those opening
strikes, as Iran's ability to sustain large barrages appears to be eroding. To be clear, that doesn't
mean that the threat has disappeared. Iran continues to launch attacks across the Gulf, including
drone strikes on infrastructure and airports. Israel also continues to come under daily cluster bomb
attacks, largely targeting major population centers. But compared to the widespread barrages
that opened the conflict, the data suggests that Iran's ability to maintain that tempo of attacks
has been significantly degraded. Now, in addition to the air campaign, of course, is also the
maritime front. U.S. Central Command announced yesterday that coalition strikes have damaged or
destroyed more than 100 Iranian naval vessels since the start of the conflict. That number includes
not only larger patrol ships, but also smaller craft, mine-laying boats and the fast-attack
speedboats frequently used by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy. Now, that number sounds
impressive, but it's worth noting that Iran doesn't need much to continue disrupting traffic
through the Strait of Hormuz, which they have done, frankly, successfully.
That's because the strategy that Iran relies on in the Gulf isn't built around large warships.
Instead, it's designed around asymmetric tactics, small fast vessels, sea mines, and mobile missile
launchers positioned along Iran's coastline. Even a relatively small number of surviving speedboats
or mine-land craft can threaten commercial shipping in the narrow channel where tankers must pass.
And the geography works in Iran's favor. At its narrowest point, the Strait of Hormuz is only about
21 miles wide, with the actual shipping lanes running through even tighter corridors. That makes it
easier, of course, for Iran to deploy mines and launch drones or stage harassment attacks with
fastboats, forcing insurers and shipping companies to think twice about sending vessels through the
waterway. The reality is, the regime has managed to almost stop the commercial tanker traffic
through the strait, with the exception of Iranian oil, heading mostly to China.
So while U.S. and Israeli strikes have clearly taken a heavy toll on Iran's naval assets,
Tehran doesn't need a large fleet to continue creating problems in the strait.
In a choke point like Hormuz, even a limited number of mines or missiles or speedboats can be
enough to keep global energy markets on edge.
Now, the main question on everyone's mind is just how long this campaign will continue,
and perhaps the clearest indication of an answer is coming from Israel's side.
According to Israeli military officials, the war effort is proceeding according to plan,
and in some areas even faster than expected.
But even so, Israeli commanders say they're preparing for at least three more weeks of operations inside Iran.
The reason is simple. The target list remains enormous.
Military planners say thousands of additional sites tied to Iran's missile program,
drone production and military infrastructure still remain to be hit, both in Tehran and across the country.
So while the campaign may be moving quickly, the scope of the remaining targets suggests the U.S. and
Israel still have a long way to go before achieving their objectives.
And until the Strait of Hormuz becomes reliably passable again, until tankers can move through
the waterway without the constant threat of mines, missiles, or harassment from Iranian speedboats,
the broader strategic objective of this campaign remains unfinished.
In many ways, reopening that narrow stretch of water may ultimately prove more important than air assaults over Iran.
Now, there's one more interesting, rather unusual Iran-related story that I wanted to mention before we move on.
According to reporting out of Washington, President Trump was briefed this past week on suggesting that Iran's new Supreme Leader, Mostaba Khomeini, may be gay.
something that U.S. intelligence officials reportedly believe is credible based on sensitive sources.
The reporting says Trump reacted with surprise and laughter during the briefing,
and that the information has circulated quietly within the intelligence community for some time.
It should go without saying that if that's true, it would carry enormous political implications inside Iran.
The Islamic Republic criminalizes homosexual conduct,
and the regime has a long record of brutally punishing people,
accused of it. That means the mere existence of this kind of allegation, whether it proves accurate
or not, could become a significant vulnerability for Khahmani, as he tries to consolidate power
during the most dangerous moment the Iranian regime has faced in decades.
All right, coming up next, new details emerge about the man behind the attack on a Jewish preschool
in synagogue in Michigan. As Israeli officials say the suspect's brother is a Khazbullah commander.
while Cuba's power grid collapses, plunging the island deeper into crisis.
I'll be right back.
Hey, Mike Baker here.
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Welcome back to the PDB. I want to follow up on a story that we covered last week involving
what federal authorities describe as a targeted act of violence against the Jewish community
at a synagogue in Michigan. At the time, investigators were working to understand the suspect's
motive and background. Now, new reporting is beginning to fill those gaps, including his family
ties to Chazbollah. As we discussed, the attack unfolded Thursday in West Bloomfield, a suburb of
Detroit and home to Temple Israel, one of the largest reform synagogues in the U.S. Federal authorities
say the suspect drove a truck packed with fireworks and gasoline jugs into the complex,
crashing through the entrance and barreling down a hallway inside the building.
The vehicle came to a halt near classrooms at the synagogue's early childhood center,
where children as young as four years old were present.
Officials say no one was injured, thanks in large part,
to the fast actions of Temple Israel's private security team,
which confronted the attacker after the crash.
Authorities say he exchanged gunfire with an armed guard before becoming,
trapped inside the vehicle after it caught fire. Investigators say the attacker
ultimately shot himself inside the burning truck. Now, the suspect was later identified as 41-year-old
Iman Muhammad Ghazali. That's a naturalized U.S. citizen originally from Lebanon. At the time
of the attack, federal officials said the investigation was ongoing and that a motive had not
yet been confirmed. Early reporting from the Associated Press noted that Gazali had reportedly
lost several family members in an Israeli airstrike just days before his attack.
But as investigators continue digging, another piece of the story has begun to emerge,
and it's a significant one. According to a statement released by the Israeli Defense Forces,
the IDF, Gazali's brother, identified as Ibrahim Mohammed Ghazali, serves as a Hezbollah commander
responsible for managing weapons operations within a specialized branch of the terror group's
the Bader Unit. Now, the IDF says that unit is responsible for launching hundreds of rockets
toward Israeli civilians during the ongoing conflict with Iran. In other words, the man who carried out
an attack on a Jewish synagogue in Michigan appears to come from a family network tied directly
to one of Iran's most dangerous terrorist proxies. That, I don't know, could be a clue regarding
his motivation. And that revelation naturally raises another question. How did someone with those
kinds of family ties end up living in the U.S. in the first place. Well, according to the Department
of Homeland Security, Gazali was admitted to the U.S. in 2011 as the spouse of an American citizen and later
obtained citizenship in 2016 under President Obama's term, a development that now raises
serious questions about how someone with direct ties to Hezbollah was even able to enter the
country and eventually obtained citizenship. Well, I've got a potential answer. One answer,
answer could be that vetting and due diligence on folks entering the country is pathetically
ineffective. Yeah, that could be possibly an answer. I want to be clear that federal authorities
have not formally labeled the incident an act of terrorism. The FBI has instead described it
as what it calls a targeted act of violence. But, you know, what the old saying is, if it walks like a
duck and talks like a duck, it could be a terrorist sympathizing duck. I think that's the old saying.
Okay, I want to turn to Cuba now, where the situation on the island continues to deteriorate.
According to reports, Cuba's national power grid has suffered a total collapse,
plunging much of the country into darkness and marking the latest in a series of nationwide blackouts that have hit the country.
Officials say efforts are underway to restore electricity, but the outage shows just how fragile Cuba's energy system is becoming.
The island's aging power infrastructure has struggled for years with the chronic underinvestment,
outdated equipment, and fuel shortages, but the current crisis appears to have reached a new level.
Cuba relies heavily on imported oil to generate electricity, and shipments of fuel to the island
have completely dried up in recent months.
Cuban President Miguel Dias Canel acknowledged recently that no oil shipments have arrived in the
country for the past three months, and without those deliveries, the country's power plants
simply can't produce enough electricity to keep the grid functioning.
Even before the collapse, rolling blackouts had become routine.
Hospitals and clinics have struggled with intermittent power.
Food refrigeration has been disrupted. Tourism,
one of the few reliable sources of hard currency for the Cuban government has taken a major hit.
Fuel shortages have also driven prices to extraordinary levels on the island's black market.
In some cases, Cubans are reportedly paying as much as $300 to fill up a car's gas
tank. It's a staggering figure in a country where the average monthly salary is only a small
fraction of that amount. Not surprisingly, the worsening conditions have fueled growing public
frustration. The blackouts and shortages have sparked protests across the island, and officials
in Havana are clearly aware that the country's economic crisis is becoming increasingly
difficult to manage. And now, the growing crisis inside the country appears to be softening the regime
somewhat and forcing them to make some major concessions, or at least talk about making major
concessions. Cuba's top economic official says the government is preparing a significant policy
shift that would allow Cuban Americans living abroad to invest directly in the island's private sector
and even own businesses in their home country. If implemented, the move would represent one of the
most significant economic openings in Cuba since the early years of the revolution.
when the communist government nationalized most private industry after Fidel Castro came to power.
Well, thanks Fidel, that worked out really well.
Cuban officials say the goal is to create what they describe as a, quote,
more dynamic business environment that could help revive several struggling sectors of the economy,
from tourism and mining to modernizing the country's outdated electrical grid.
As we've reported, Cuban leaders have publicly confirmed that talks are underway with officials in Washington,
aimed at addressing long-standing disputes between the two countries.
Details of those discussions remain scarce,
but the fact that they're acknowledging them publicly
suggests that Havana may be looking for ways to ease the economic pressure
that's now bearing down on the island.
For his part, President Trump has signaled that the administration
may be open to some form of economic agreement.
Speaking recently to reporters,
he described Cuba as a failed nation,
but also suggested that a deal between Washington and Havana
could come together relatively quoth.
quickly. Now, whether that happens remains to be seen, of course. But what is clear is that Cuba's
deepening economic and energy crisis is forcing the government to consider changes that
would have been almost unthinkable just a few short years ago. All right, coming up next in the
back of the brief, Russia cuts mobile internet in parts of Moscow while testing new nationwide censorship
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In today's back of the brief, we turn to Russia, where the Kremlin appears to be testing a new
tool for controlling information, cutting off mobile internet access, even in Moscow, in what may be
a rehearsal for nationwide censorship during periods of political unrest. Now, here's what that actually looks
like on the ground. Over the past several days, people in Moscow have suddenly discovered that their
mobile internet simply isn't working. In a city of more than 13 million people that relies on
digital services, well, the impact, of course, has been immediate. According to the Wall Street
Journal, commuters stepping out of Moscow subway stations have been unable to order taxis,
open navigation apps, or even send basic messages. Some residents have been forced into shops just to find
working Wi-Fi. Others say they've been asking strangers for directions for the first time.
in years. So, you ask, what is going on here? Well, the Kremlin insists these outages are
necessary for security. Russian officials claim the outages are to defend against Ukrainian drone
attacks, which they say can use local cell towers for navigation. But many civilians and even local
officials aren't buying that explanation. Instead, Russians say they may be seeing something far more
significant, a real-world test of a system that the Kremlin has been quietly building for years,
one designed to give Russian President Putin's regime the ability to shut down or control the internet
whenever unrest sparks. And if you're a regular PDB listener, you know that this isn't a new idea
among authoritarian regimes. Russia's approach closely mirrors tactics we tracked in Iran during its
recent protests, when the mullahs shut down large portions of the internet, while allowing regime
insiders to remain connected through a parallel network.
In Iran's case, so-called white SIM cards allowed loyalists to retain internet access while
ordinary citizens were cut off. The system that Moscow has been testing would allow authorities
to keep certain government-approved websites online while cutting off access to the broader internet.
Those approved platforms include official government portals, state media outlets, and domestic apps
such as Max, which is a Kremlin-controlled messaging service promoted as a replacement for
telegram. At the same time, the Kremlin steadily moved to restrict foreign platforms that
allow Russians to communicate outside the government's control, throttling or intermittently blocking
messaging services like WhatsApp as regulators push schools and government offices to migrate
towards state-approved systems that can be easily monitored. And this tightening grip on Russia's
internet has been building for years. In 2016, Russia blocked LinkedIn entirely. The Kremlin later
slowed access to Twitter, now of course known as X. And more recently, regulators restricted access
to YouTube, widely used by Russians seeking information that contradicts government narratives.
But what's happening now appears to be on a much larger scale. Across dozens of Russian regions
spanning the country's 11 time zones, mobile data has gone offline, including in areas thousands of
miles from the fighting in Ukraine. Take the Kamchaka Peninsula, please. Okay, sorry, that's a nod to an old
Henny Youngman joke. And this may be the only podcast where you'll get a reference to Henny Youngman.
Okay, anyway, the Kamchaka Peninsula. Look, it sits some 4,500 miles from the war's front lines.
Regional officials there appeal directly to Moscow to restore internet access, citing no threat
of a drone or missile attack in the war's four years. In other words, the outages are happening in places
nowhere near the threats the Kremlin claims to be defending against, raising questions about
the regime's explanation. The consequences of censorship being felt across Russian society. A Kremlin-line
newspaper even reported that the internet outages in Moscow alone caused roughly $63 million
in business losses over a five-day period. Now, to be fair, the consequences of censorship
have been felt in Russia for over 100 years, but technology developments over the years have
made the task ever easier for the Kremlin's censors.
And that, my friends, is the President's Daily Brief for Tuesday, the 17th of March.
Now, if you end up with a free minute or two in your busy day, I hope you'll check out our
YouTube channel.
All you have to do is head on over to YouTube, of course, and search up at President's Daily
Brief.
If you like what you see, and I don't see how you could not, please hit that subscribe button.
I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today with the PDB afternoon bulletin.
Until then, stay informed.
safe. Stay cool.
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