The President's Daily Brief - November 12th, 2025: Where’s Putin? How Paranoid Vlad Is Hiding His Location & Bombings Rock India and Pakistan
Episode Date: November 12, 2025In this episode of The President’s Daily Brief: A rare look inside the paranoid world of Vladimir Putin. Investigators have uncovered that the Russian president operates from three nearly iden...tical offices—built to conceal his true whereabouts, even from his own government. Twin bombings in India and Pakistan have both sides trading blame, threatening to reignite one of the world’s most dangerous rivalries. Plus—a quiet diplomatic rift between Washington and London. The U.K. has suspended parts of its intelligence-sharing with the U.S. over concerns about America’s recent boat strikes in the Caribbean. And in today’s Back of the Brief—China says its stranded astronauts are in good condition after space debris forced them to delay their return to Earth. 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 Debt Relief Advocates: Learn what debt reduction you may qualify for. Go online and visit https://DRA.com 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 https://www.AmericanFinancing.net/PDB BUBS Naturals: Live Better Longer with BUBS Naturals. For A limited time get 20% Off your entire order with code PDB at https://Bubsnaturals.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Wednesday, the 12th of November.
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, a rare look inside the paranoid world of everybody's favorite evil villain and purveyor
of doomsday weapons, Vladimir Putin.
Investigators have uncovered that the Russian president operates from three nearly identical
offices built to conceal his true whereabouts, even from his own government.
Later in the show, twin bombings in India and Pakistan have both sides traded.
blame, of course, and risk re-igniting one of the world's most dangerous rivalries.
Plus, a rift between Washington and London. The U.K. has halted parts of its intelligence
cooperation with the U.S., citing concerns that recent boat strikes in the Caribbean may have
crossed the line. And in today's back of the brief, more stranded astronauts. China says its
crew is stuck in orbit after space debris forced them to delay their return to Earth. But
first, today's PDB spotlight.
A new investigation by Radio Free Europe's Russian investigative unit, known as Systema,
is giving us some insight into Russian President Putin and the air of paranoia that surrounds his regime.
According to investigators, the Kremlin has built at least three, nearly identical offices in different parts of the country,
all designed to make it nearly impossible to tell where Putin actually is.
And it's like a grand game of where's Wally.
Now, these aren't just look-alike spaces with similar furniture.
We're talking near-perfect replicas, down to the grain of wood on his desk and the exact pattern of seams on the walls behind him.
And according to analysts, they're used to disguise his true location during official meetings or TV appearances or pre-recorded events.
Radio Free Europe spent months reviewing hundreds of Kremlin released videos and photographs of Putin's appearances.
That sounds like fun going back several years.
They compared minute visual details, lighting, and even reflections in the furniture.
Putin's three primary workspaces are located at his official residence just outside Moscow,
his seaside compound in Sochi, and a heavily guarded lakeside retreat
roughly halfway between Moscow and St. Petersburg.
All three offices are built to look identical, same desks, same walls, same curtains,
same furniture, same lava lamps, same layout.
The goal is to make every video,
of Putin looked like it was shot in the same room, no matter where he really is. And according to this
investigation, that's exactly what's been happening. Meetings the Kremlin claimed were held in Moscow
were actually filmed in Sochi, and footage supposedly from Sochi was actually recorded hundreds of
miles away at the lakeside retreat. And it also reflects a man and a system obsessed with secrecy and
control. The project's findings line up with testimony from a former officer in Putin's
personal security service, Gleb Karekulov, who defected in 2022.
Karakulov told Western media that Putin is, quote, pathologically afraid for his life,
so much so that he travels with a portable communications bunker,
avoids planes when he can, and surrounds himself with layers of deception, including
the fake offices.
Now, you might ask, why go to all that trouble?
Well, analysts point to two main reasons.
First, of course, personal security.
Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the Kremlin has faced repeated drone strikes deep inside
Russian territory, including near Moscow. As those threats increase, Putin's team appears determined
to mask his movements and limit any chance of him becoming a target. Second, strategic deception.
By manipulating where and when Putin appears to be, the Kremlin controls the narrative. It keeps
adversaries guessing, conceals decision-making timelines, and projects an image of constant stability.
even if the reality behind the scenes is a bit more chaotic.
In recent years, observers say Putin has spent increasing amounts of time at his lakeside residence,
which has become a kind of a fortress.
It's isolated, heavily defended, and surrounded by restricted airspace.
Satellite imagery shows expanded air defense systems in the region,
suggesting the Russian government has quietly hardened the site against possible attacks.
The Kremlin, of course, denies that Putin is hiding,
but it doesn't directly address the existence of these duplicate offices.
Officials typically describe his location only after an event has already aired.
Now, that's not unusual for a wartime leader, but in Putin's case, it fits a long-standing pattern.
This is a man who famously kept his distance even from his own ministers during the pandemic,
seating them at tables the length of a bowling alley.
He's known for moving around by armored train instead of aircraft, and now we know that he governs from a stage set
that can be replicated from anywhere in the country.
All right.
Coming up next, twin bombings in India and Pakistan threaten to reignite tensions between the nuclear neighbors.
And Britain quietly pulls back intelligence sharing with Washington over U.S. strikes in the Caribbean.
I'll be right back.
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Welcome back to the PDB.
The explosions happen less than 24 hours apart, one in Delhi, another in Islamabad.
And just like that, South Asia's most combustible rivalry reawakened.
Indian Prime Minister Modi vowed to, quote, hunt down those behind the Delhi blast,
a fiery explosion that tore through rush hour traffic near the Red Fort Metro Station on Monday evening.
The destruction left 13 people dead, more than 20 wounded,
and the city reeling from its deadliest attack in over a decade.
Police say a Hyundai sedan detonated while idling at a red light,
triggering a chain of explosions that engulfed nearby vehicles and rickshaws in flames.
The site just steps from the 17th century Red Fort,
where India's first Prime Minister declared independence in 1947,
quickly became a scene of death and disbelief.
Delhi police have now turned to enact India's main anti-terror law,
the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act.
That's a clear sign that authorities are treating the blast as an act of terrorism
and not a tragic accident.
Investigators in Delhi say the evidence trail started with the car's original owner who was detained in a nearby suburb for questioning, along with another man who had later bought the vehicle, as authorities raced to untangle its claim of ownership.
That search led them 20 miles south to Faridabad, where officers uncovered what they described as a, quote, transnational and interstate terror module.
There, inside a rented home, investigators found nearly 3,400.
pounds of explosives, timers, remote detonators, and a rifle. You could consider all that a clue.
That cache turned out to be just the start. Investigators soon traced the operation to two
Kashmiri doctors now under arrest, both suspected of links to the Pakistan-based terror group,
Jaishi Muhammad. CCTV footage, investigators say, shows one of the doctors driving the same Hyundai
that went up in flames in Delhi. According to an Indian news outlet, that discovery
fueled suspicions in New Delhi that the explosion may have foreign fingerprints.
Still, officials stopped short of confirming any direct link between the arrested doctors
and the terror attack.
From Bhutan, where he was on an official visit, Modi said he had come, quote, with a heavy heart,
adding that the terror attack, quote, deeply disturbed everyone.
Yeah, that's a fair statement.
He vowed that his government would, quote, get to the very bottom of this conspiracy.
As investigators in Delhi began to comb through the wreckage, Pakistan was reeling for
from an explosion of its own, and, of course, the cross-border blame game began instantly.
According to the BBC, within hours of the blast in Delhi, a suicide bomber struck outside a
courthouse in Islamabad, killing 12 and injuring at least 30. The attacker reportedly waited
near a police car before detonating his device. Prime Minister Sharif wasted no time, accusing India
of orchestrating the blast through, quote, terrorist proxies, calling it an act of state
terrorism. New Delhi, of course, fired back, calling the accusations, quote, baseless and unfounded.
Indian officials countered that Pakistan's security crisis is largely self-inflicted, the result of
escalating insurgent attacks in a broken relationship with the Taliban and neighboring Afghanistan.
As for the responsibility for the Islamabad bombing, well, that remains murky. A splinter group of the
Pakistani Taliban, known as the TTP, initially claimed responsibility for the attack. However, the BBC
reports that the TTP's leadership is denying involvement. The contradiction has only deepened
confusion and suspicion across South Asia. For now, New Delhi and Islamabad are under pressure
to rein in the rhetoric before this latest crisis spirals beyond control. Okay, shifting gears.
The United Kingdom has stopped feeding intelligence to the U.S. on suspected drug trafficking
boats in the Caribbean. It's a quiet but telling act of dissent over
military strikes that London insists breach international law.
The suspension, first reported by CNN, marks a rare fracture in one of the world's closest
intelligence partnerships. For years, the U.K. and U.S. have worked side by side through what's
known as a Joint Interagency Task Force South. That's a Florida-based unit that tracks drug
routes across Latin America and the Caribbean. British surveillance aircraft and naval crews,
often operating out of its overseas territories across the Caribbean, have long been Washington's
eyes and ears in the region, spotting drug smuggling boats, relaying coordinates, and helping the
U.S. Coast Guard move in for the arrest. But several sources told CNN that the intelligence sharing
ended last month. London apparently grew uneasy after learning that some of the same intelligence
once used for interdictions was now being folded into the ongoing American military campaign
that's targeting drug vessels in the Caribbean. By Washington's own count, at least 76 suspected
drug traffickers have been killed since the strikes began in September.
The United Nations top human rights official has called the U.S. operations a violation of international
law, and that's a stance that London shares.
British officials concluded the campaign amounts to extrajudicial killings.
As we've been tracking here on the PDB, these Caribbean operations were once U.S. Coast Guard-led
law enforcement efforts.
Suspects were detained, not targeted.
That, of course, changed, as our regular listeners know.
when the Trump administration reclassified several cartels as foreign terrorist organizations,
invoking wartime authorities under the law of armed conflict.
According to a memo sent to Congress, the White House has argued that drug traffickers
pose an imminent threat to Americans and can therefore be treated as, quote, enemy combatants
in what it calls a non-international armed conflict. A classified Justice Department opinion
reportedly backs that view. But legal experts counter that simply labeling a cartel
a terrorist group doesn't automatically authorize lethal force under international law,
even as the administration maintains that those targeted in the strikes aren't ordinary citizens
at all, but rather cartel operatives waging a covert war against the U.S.
Inside Washington, the campaign has sparked its own internal rift.
Admiral Alvin Holsey, the commander of U.S. Southern Command, reportedly offered to resign
after questioning the legality of the strikes.
That's a concern echoed by lawyers in the Department of War's Office of General Counsel.
They've warned that the attacks may breach domestic and international law.
And that dispute became more than academic.
Holesi is now expected to step down in December, barely a year into his tenure.
Canada, meanwhile, has quietly followed Britain's lead.
While Ottawa says it will continue cooperating with the U.S. Coast Guard,
it's told Washington that Canada won't share any intelligence that could be used to select targets for strikes.
Taken together, the moves by London and Ottawa highlight how Washington's narco-terrorism doctrine
is forcing allies to confront the question of just how far they're willing to go to assist U.S. efforts.
All right, coming up in the back of the brief, China's astronauts are stuck in space.
I'll have those details when we come back.
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tell them the PDB sent you. In today's back of the brief, China's latest space mission was supposed
to be routine. A textbook returned to Earth after six months aboard the country's
Jianggong Space Station. But instead of a smooth,
landing. The three-member crew is stuck in orbit, waiting for the all-clear. Their return was delayed
after mission control detected a growing cloud of space debris in the projected re-entry path.
That debris, created by decades of satellite launches and collisions and missile tests,
now poses one of the greatest hazards to modern spaceflight. A single fragment moving at orbital
speed, roughly 17,000 miles per hour, can puncture a spacecraft or destroy it outright. So for now,
the astronauts, part of the Shenzhou 18 mission, are staying put.
Officials at China's Man Space Engineering Office said on Tuesday that the crew remains,
quote, in good condition, working and living normally.
They emphasize there's no danger to the astronauts and that they're continuing routine
operations aboard the station while the ground team reassesses the safest time for re-entry.
The three crew members launched back in April of this year to conduct a series of experiments
and to carry out maintenance work on the station.
They were expected to return this week, then handing over control to the incoming Shenzhou 19 team.
That crew, however, has been ordered to delay its own launch until the orbital path is cleared.
China's space agency has not disclosed the source of the debris, but analysts note that recent anti-satellite tests and the breakup of aging satellites have worsened conditions in low Earth orbit.
The U.S. Space Command currently tracks more than 40,000 pieces of debris, though experts estimate the real number of dangerous.
fragments is in the hundreds of thousands. If all goes as planned, China's astronauts could
attempt re-entry in the coming days, once mission control confirms a clear orbital window. Their spacecraft,
equipped with redundant shielding and emergency life support reserves, is designed to remain docked
to the space station for extended periods if necessary. And that, my friends, is the president's
daily brief for Wednesday, the 12th of November. If you have any questions or comments, and I hope you do,
please reach out to me at PDB at thefirstTV.com.
And don't forget to tell your friends and family and colleagues about the PDB.
They'll thank you for it.
They can find us, of course, on YouTube at President's Daily Brief
and on podcast platforms all around 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.
