The President's Daily Brief - March 5th, 2026: Desperate Tehran Seeks Ceasefire & U.S. Opens New Front Against Cartels
Episode Date: March 5, 2026In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: First up — Iran may be looking for a way out. Reports say Iranian intelligence quietly reached out to the CIA through a third country to explore ...possible talks about ending the war. But is the White House answering the call? President Trump says it may already be “too late” for negotiations. Later in the show — tensions remain high in the Strait of Hormuz as the White House considers deploying U.S. naval escorts to protect oil tankers moving through the critical shipping lane. Plus — the United States opens a new front in the fight against drug traffickers, launching joint military operations in Ecuador targeting criminal groups now labeled as terrorist organizations. And in today’s Back of the Brief — Washington turns up the pressure on Venezuela as the Trump administration reportedly prepares a criminal indictment against the country’s interim leader, Delcy Rodriguez. 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 Trust & Will: Estate planning doesn’t have to be complicated—create your will or trust online in minutes with Trust & Will and get 20% off at https://trustandwill.com/PDB DeleteMe: Get 20% off your DeleteMe plan when you go to https://joindeleteme.com/PDB and use promo code PDB at checkout. Acre Gold: Start building physical gold with simple monthly payments and enter to win two Ancient Collection gold bars at https://GetAcreGold.com/PDB Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Thursday, the 5th 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, Iran may be looking for a way out.
Reports say Iranian intelligence
quietly reached out to the CIA to discuss ending the war,
but is the White House answering the call?
I'll have the details.
Later in the show, an update on the chaotic situation
in the Strait of Hormuz,
as the White House considers deploying U.S.
naval escorts to protect oil tankers moving through that critical shipping lane.
Plus, the U.S. opens a new front in the fight against drug traffickers, launching joint
military operations in Ecuador, targeting groups now labeled as terrorist organizations.
And in today's back of the brief, Washington turns up the pressure on Venezuela, as the Trump
administration reportedly prepares a criminal indictment against the country's new interim leader,
Delci Rodriguez.
But first, today's PDB Spala.
We're starting off with a development that could speak volumes about the trajectory of the war.
According to reporting from the New York Times, Iranian intelligence operatives quietly reached out to the
Central Intelligence Agency to explore possible discussions about ending the conflict between Iran and Israel and the U.S.
The message was reportedly passed indirectly through the intelligence service of a third country.
Now, that's a common way adversaries communicate during wartime when formal diplomatic
channels are either frozen or politically impossible. At this stage, U.S. officials say the approach
does not appear to represent a serious negotiation effort. Instead, they describe it as more of a tentative
probe. An attempt to test whether Washington might be open to discussions about an off-ramp
from the conflict. And for right now, at least, the answer from the White House appears to be a
firm no. Iranian state media has denied the report, though, and dismissed it as psychological warfare.
They're saying it never happened, but public denials like that are fairly common in situations
involving intelligence back channels, particularly while a conflict is still actively underway.
What makes a reported outreach notable is the timing. It comes as Iran's leadership structure
is under extraordinary pressure. In recent days, Israeli and American strikes have targeted senior
commanders, security officials, and elements of the regime's governing apparatus. This has all left the regime,
of course, scrambling to stabilize its leadership. And in that chaotic environment, even identifying
who can speak on behalf of the Iranian regime has become increasingly complicated. And that raises a
broader strategic question. Military campaigns that focus on decapitating leadership can weaken
an adversary's ability to coordinate a response, but they can also create a different problem,
one where it becomes difficult to identify a counterpart capable of negotiating or enforcing a ceasefire.
In other words, the heart of the campaign hits Iran's leadership, the harder it may become to find someone who can actually deliver on any potential agreement.
Even if Tehran's security establishment decided that it wanted a pause in the fighting, it is far from clear that any surviving authority could enforce that decision across Iran's complex network of power centers, which includes its regular military, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, of course, intelligence services, and various political and clerical institutions.
There's also the question of what the U.S. would demand in return, should there be any sort of discussion?
According to officials familiar with the talks, Washington would likely insist that any halt to the bombing campaign includes sweeping concessions from Tehran,
including major limits on its ballistic missile program, significant curbs on its nuclear activities, and an end to its support for proxy groups such as Hezbollah.
For now, the reported outreach appears to have changed little in Washington's immediate calculus.
Western Israeli operations against Iranian military infrastructure continue, and the broader trajectory
of the war remains uncertain. Meanwhile, we're seeing a shift in the targets that Israel is striking
inside Iran. According to reporting from the Wall Street Journal, Israeli air strikes in recent days
have increasingly focused not just on military infrastructure, but on the institutions that make up
Iran's internal security apparatus, the machinery that the regime relies on to control its own
population. Those strikes have hit a number of organizations responsible for suppressing protests
and maintaining the Islamic Republic's grip on power. Among the targets, members of the Basij
paramilitary force, senior intelligence officials, and units tied to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps that oversee internal security. One of the most notable strikes targeted the IRC's Therala
headquarters. Now, that's a key command center responsible for coordinating protest suppression in Tehran,
during periods of unrest.
Israeli aircraft also struck the headquarters of Iran's police special units command,
known as Faraja, which handles riot control and civil unrest.
Iran later confirmed that the intelligence chief of that organization was killed in the attack.
The strikes have also extended into Iran's western Kurdish regions,
long-considered anti-regime strongholds,
where police stations and detention facilities linked to the intelligence services
have reportedly been hit.
Taken together, the apparent goal is to,
to weaken the regime's police state from the air, clearing space, at least in theory,
for unrest on the ground. But analysts cautioned that strategy may face serious limits.
Authoritarian systems like Iran have proven resilient in the past, and even after the recent
strikes, the regime still maintains a near monopoly on weapons across most of the country,
with besiege militias continuing to patrol the streets. For now, whether air strikes alone can
create conditions for a popular revolt,
Well, that remains an open question.
And speaking of the Kurdish regions, a quick follow-on to a story from yesterday's PDB afternoon
bulletin.
Yesterday, we discussed the CIA reportedly working to arm Kurdish fighters located along the
Iran-Iraq border in the western frontier.
Now, according to early reports, hundreds of Kurdish fighters have begun an incursion
into Iran from areas near the Iraqi border.
We'll have further details on this development as we go along, but it's worth
noting that this is a particularly complicated situation. There are several different Kurdish militias,
some that are designated by the U.S. as foreign terrorist organizations. Any involvement by Kurdish forces
could have also the unwelcome result of drawing Turkey into the mix. As noted yesterday,
Turkey has been engaged in a decades-long conflict with particular Kurdish factions, most notably
the PKK. As mentioned to this story, does bear close monitoring.
Right, before we go to break, I also want to update you on a story we brought you yesterday
when we reported that Moshaba Hamini, the son of the late Supreme Leader, had been selected
as Iran's next leader.
Now, that information came from Iran International.
That's a Persian language outlet based outside of Iran that often relies on sources inside
the country.
They have broken a number of major stories over the years, but in a system as opaque as Iran's,
and in an environment as fluid and chaotic as Iran is right now,
even well-sourced reports can sometimes get ahead of themselves.
The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday afternoon
that Iran's clerical leadership has not yet finalized their decision.
According to Iranian State News Agency IRNA,
a member of the Assembly of Experts said the body will meet as soon as possible
to select the next Supreme Leader,
but that further consultations are still required.
That said, most major outlets,
including the New York Times and Reuters and the Associated Press, still report that
Most Taba Khamani remains the most likely successor. We'll keep watching the story and bring you any
updates as they develop. Coming up next, chaos in the Strait of Hormuz as the White House
considers providing naval escorts for oil tankers. Plus, the U.S. opens a new front in the war
against drug traffickers with military operations in Ecuador. I'll be right back.
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Welcome back to the PDB.
I want to give you an update on what's unfolding in the straight-up Hormuz as Iranian threats and attacks rattle shipping in one of the world's most critical energy corridors.
President Trump has announced that the U.S. will step in with naval escorts and political risk insurance for tankers,
sailing the strategic passageway. The Strait of Hormuz sits between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula,
and as we've discussed, carries roughly 20% of global seaborne oil shipments. As you know,
any sustained disruption there quickly impacts global energy markets. And that is exactly why
this corridor has become another front in the conflict. The street has long been one of Tehran's
preferred pressure points, and in recent days, the regime has begun turning those threats into action.
As we've previously discussed, several commercial vessels have been attacked around the waterway.
One ship got fire after being struck by an unknown projectile, and another was attacked near
Oman, forcing its crew to evacuate. At the same time, Tehran has tried to project control over the
corridor itself. The regime claimed the strait is closed and warned that any vessel attempting to
transit would be, quote, set ablaze. Now, U.S. officials say that claim is simply not true.
The waterway remains open, but traffic has thinned as some operators avoid the passage,
worried about exactly the kind of attacks that we have seen unfold.
And that's the environment that Trump is now responding to.
The president announced in the post on Truth Social that he ordered the United States
International Development Finance Corporation to provide political risk insurance and financial
guarantees for maritime trade moving through the Gulf.
Trump wrote that, quote, effective immediately, the program will offer political risk
insurance for shipping companies in the region. He added that the Navy could even begin escorting
tankers through the strait, if necessary, to ensure what he described as the, quote, free flow of
energy to the world. The move is seen as a bid to cool energy prices after oil prices surged more than
$10 per barrel in the days following the joint U.S. Israeli strikes on Iran. And the market reaction
has been visible on the shipping side as well. Insurance companies have begun raising premiums for vessels
operating in the area, and in some cases, canceling coverage altogether, prompting tanker operators
to avoid the route. Inside the Trump administration, officials say the White House is closely watching
the economic fallout from the military campaign against Iran. One person familiar with the discussions
told Politico that access to the strait is especially critical for energy exports from
golf producers, such as allies, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia. Simultaneously, the widening conflict has begun
hitting energy infrastructure across the region.
Qatar has temporarily shut down a major natural gas export facility, and Saudi fuel refineries
have come under attack.
As we've been tracking, the U.S. military says it has already sunk 11 Iranian vessels since
the start of joint operations with Israel.
American officials believe future naval operations may focus less on ship-to-ship
confrontations and more on intercepting Iranian missiles or drones aimed at civilian
shipping. Secretary of State Marker Rubio said that the administration would roll out additional measures
to address rising energy prices triggered by the conflict, but kept details limited. He also said
the U.S. intends to eliminate Iran's naval threat in the region as part of the sustained effort
to keep the Strait of Hormuz open. Okay, well, while it may seem that all eyes are currently
focused on the Middle East, I do want to turn now to South America, where a new front
in the Trump administration's counter-narcotics campaign is opening.
The U.S. and Ecuador have begun joint operations with American Special Forces advising Ecuadorian soldiers
conducting raids on trafficking infrastructure. I want to highlight a key detail before getting into the
specifics of the operations, and it's one that the Pentagon has made very clear. American troops
will not be the ones carrying out these raids. U.S. forces are providing planning support,
intelligence and logistics, while Ecuadorian soldiers will carry out the operational missions.
And we're already getting a glimpse of what those missions look like. A 30-second video released by
the U.S. Southern Command shows a helicopter lifting off in low light and deploying fighters during what
U.S. military officials say is the opening phase of the operation. The command says that the raids
are part of a growing regional effort to confront what it calls the, quote, scourge of narco-terrorism.
To better understand why this partnership matters, you have to look at what's been happening inside Ecuador itself.
The South American country has seen a surge in violence tied to powerful drug trafficking organizations,
moving cocaine through its territory.
Criminal networks have increasingly turned Ecuador into a key logistics hub,
using its ports and coastal routes to move narcotics toward markets in the U.S. and Europe.
And while Ecuador isn't a major producer of cocaine, its location makes it very valuable
to traffickers. The country sits between Colombia and Peru, which are the world's two largest
cocaine producers, making it an ideal transit corridor for narco-terrorist groups that move the gear
north and across the Atlantic. That growing threat is exactly why Ecuadorian President
Daniel Noboa has leaned heavily into security cooperation with Washington. Noboa has prioritized
aggressive action against drug gangs, as violence tied to trafficking networks has pushed his country
to record homicide levels.
As our long time, PDB listeners know,
the U.S. has been ramping up its own pressure campaign across the region.
Since September of 2025,
American forces have carried out dozens of strikes
against suspected Venezuelan drug trafficking boats
in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific.
And the coordination between the two countries
has been building for months.
U.S. Southern Command Chief Francis Donovan
recently traveled to the Ecuadorian capital of Kito,
where he met with Noboa and seen
Ecuadorian officials to discuss expanding security cooperation. In a statement after the meeting,
Donovan praised Ecuador's armed forces for what he described as their, quote, courage and resolve
in confronting narco-terrorist networks. Shortly after the meeting, Naboa confirmed that Ecuador
was entering what he called a new phase of operations targeting both drug trafficking groups
and illegal mining networks. He said the March campaign would involve joint missions with regional
partners, including Washington. Now, a few weeks ago,
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Dan Cain,
hosted military leaders from across the Western Hemisphere in Washington
to coordinate strategies against transnational criminal organizations
that are operating throughout the region.
So as narcotics networks expand their reach across Latin America and the Caribbean,
the U.S. again appears willing to deploy military assets
alongside regional partners to disrupt traffickers
and dismantle the cartels and criminal networks.
Okay, coming up next in the back of the brief.
New U.S. pressure against Caracas, as the Trump administration reportedly prepares a criminal indictment against Venezuela's interim president, Delce Rodriguez.
More on that when we come back.
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In today's back of the brief, we're heading back to Venezuela, where Washington appears to be turning up the pressure on the country's new leadership.
even as the political transition there remains in flux. According to an exclusive report from
Reuters, the Trump administration is weighing criminal charges against Venezuela's acting president.
That, of course, would be Delci Rodriguez as part of a broader effort to force cooperation from
the remnants of the Maduro-era power structure. Four sources familiar with the matter told Reuters
that U.S. prosecutors in Miami have been investigating Rodriguez for years over alleged corruption
and money laundering tied to Venezuela's state oil company, Peda Vesa,
and are actively readying a draft criminal indictment.
The probe is reportedly intensified over the past two months
and focuses on financial transactions that took place between roughly 2021 and 2025
when Rodriguez was a senior figure in Nicholas Maduro's government.
Now, as our regular listeners know,
the looming possibility of an indictment comes to a delicate moment inside Venezuela.
Rodriguez, of course, stepped in as Venezuela's acting president following Maduro's capture.
But despite friendlier relations with the Trump administration, at least on the surface,
the system that Maduro built remains largely intact,
with loyalists still embedded across the military, the courts, and key government institutions.
According to the sources that spoke with Reuters,
the Trump administration's play here may be to use the threat of indictment
as leverage to start breaking up the entrenched system still loyal to Maduro.
and given that the U.S. capture Maduro and brought him to New York for trial over criminal charges of
narco-terrorism and cocaine trafficking, while the threat alone would carry serious weight.
Despite President Trump's public praise of Rodriguez, the report says U.S. officials have been pressing her
behind the scenes to detain or extradite several high-profile figures from the Maduro era,
including businessmen and political operators accused of helping move billions of dollars through Venezuela's
oil sector.
extradition of such figures would both strengthen the criminal case against Maduro and give Washington
even greater leverage over the direction that the post-Moduro government takes. Now, there is a twist here.
I need to stress that the Justice Department, the U.S. Justice Department, strongly denied Reuters reporting in a public statement,
saying that no such decision has been made. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche went so far as to call the Reuters report,
quote, completely false, and added, quote, not sure how such fake
news makes its way to publication. But Reuters quickly responded, saying their sources have been
vetted, and they stand by their reporting that a criminal indictment against Rodriguez is indeed being
prepared. Now, if Reuters reporting does prove accurate, it suggests Washington is trying to
manage Venezuela's transition with both a carrot and a very large stick, publicly working with
Rodriguez to stabilize the country, while privately holding the threat of criminal charges over her
head. And that, my friends, is the President's Daily Brief for Thursday, the 5th of March.
Now, if you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at PDB at thefirsttv.com.
And also, if you haven't already, I do hope you'll check out our YouTube channel.
That's obviously located on YouTube, and you just search up at President's Daily Brief.
Take a look at it. If you like what you see, I hope you'll 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.
