The President's Daily Brief - November 13th, 2025: Inside Venezuela’s Plan To Resist A U.S. Invasion & Ukraine’s Air Defenses Falter

Episode Date: November 13, 2025

In this episode of The President’s Daily Brief: As American firepower surges into the Caribbean, a new report reveals how Venezuela plans to fight back if the U.S. makes a move—turning to gu...errilla warfare and chaos to grind U.S. forces to a halt. Troubling news for Ukraine as new data shows its air defenses are slipping amid intensifying Russian missile and drone attacks. Colombia becomes the latest nation to suspend intelligence cooperation with the United States over Washington’s recent strikes on drug traffickers. And in today’s Back of the Brief—Yemen’s Houthi rebels announce they’ve halted attacks on Israel and Red Sea shipping, signaling a pause in their campaign as the Gaza ceasefire holds. 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/BRIEF and use promo code BRIEF at checkout. TriTails Premium Beef: Feed your legacy. Visit https://trybeef.com/pdb  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 This is Euphoria Calvin Klein, the new elixir collection, featuring three perfume intense scents, inspired by a unique orchid accord, paired with vanilla, each with its own distinct attitude, each with its own universe, bold elixir, sensual, woody, addictive, magnetic elixir, sweet and romantic like a lingering touch, solar elixir, a radiant expression of joy, ultra-concentrated for amplified impact and lasting power. Find your euphoria. Discover the Euphoria Elixir Collection by Calvin Klein. Looking to diversify and protect your hard-earned assets, well, schedule a free consultation with the Birch Gold Group. They're the precious metal specialists.
Starting point is 00:00:38 Just text PDB to the number 989-89-89-8-8, and you'll receive a free, no-obligation information kit, and you'll learn how to convert an existing IRA or a 401k into a gold IRA. Again, text PDB to the number 989-89-89. It's Thursday, the 13th of November. Welcome to the President's Daily Brief. I'm Mike Baker. your eyes and ears on the world stage.
Starting point is 00:01:13 All right. Let's get briefed. First up, as the American military buildup in the Caribbean continues, a new report sheds light on just how Venezuela plans to fight back if the U.S. makes a move on the Maduro regime, turning to guerrilla tactics and chaos to grind U.S. forces to a halt. At least, that's the plan, apparently. I'll have those details. Later in the show, troubling news for Ukraine, new data shows that.
Starting point is 00:01:41 its air defenses are slipping as Russia's missile and drone barrages intensify. Plus, Colombia has become the latest nation to suspend cooperation with the U.S., cutting off intelligence sharing over Washington's recent strikes on drug traffickers. And in today's back of the brief, Yemen's Khuti rebels, remember them? Well, they say they've halted all attacks on Israel and the Red Sea shipping, signaling a pause in their campaign as the Gaza ceasefire holds. But first, today. Today's PDB spotlight.
Starting point is 00:02:13 America's most powerful aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald Ford, along with its strike group, arrived in the Caribbean this week. And just hours after the carrier group appeared on the radar, Venezuela's defense minister, Vladimir Padreno Lopez announced what he called a, quote, massive national mobilization. He declared that the country's entire military arsenal was now on, quote, full operational readiness. Ooh, how about that? According to Caracas, the order includes the deployment of ground, air, naval, riverine, and missile forces,
Starting point is 00:02:45 with every branch of the armed forces, militias, and security units participating. Maduro's government claims that some 200,000 personnel are involved. Now, it's worth noting that numbers like that are hard to verify, but one thing is certain the Maduro regime wants the world, and particularly Washington, to believe, anyway, that it's ready for a fight. Now, obviously, Venezuela's conventional military is no match for the U.S., and for that I give myself the PDB statement of the obvious award for the day. But that's where a new Reuters' exclusive report sheds some light on how Caracas actually plans to respond if things do get messy. If you're a regular listener, you'll know that we focus largely on the massive amount of U.S. hardware that's been pouring into the region, the ships, the aircraft, and precision munitions.
Starting point is 00:03:34 But one thing we haven't given much attention to is just how Venezuela would potentially mount its resistance in the event of a conflict with the U.S. Well, today's Reuters' report gives us some insight, and what they're planning says a lot about the shortcomings of the Venezuelan military. According to internal documents and interviews with senior officers, Venezuela has no illusions about winning a conventional war. one officer told Reuters, quote, we wouldn't last two hours. Instead, the Venezuelan government is quietly preparing for asymmetric warfare, a guerrilla-style campaign designed to turn any U.S. invasion into a drawn-out chaotic fight. The plan includes two key elements. First, what they call, quote, prolonged resistance. Venezuela forces would scatter into hundreds of smaller units. More than 280 different sites have already been identified, each capable of operating independently.
Starting point is 00:04:30 These groups would use hit-and-run tactics, sabotage, and ambushes against U.S. and allied forces. The second element is somewhat darker, something that Venezuela officials describe as anarchization. In other words, creating chaos, fueling unrest, riots, and internal disorder to make any occupation ungovernable. The idea is to flood the zone with instability so that the U.S. would face not only a hostile regime, but a collapsing state. One could argue that it's already collapsing. It's not exactly a strategy born of strength. It's an acknowledgement that Venezuela's army, despite its size on paper, is poorly trained and poorly equipped and deeply demoralized. Most of its arsenal consists of aging Soviet-era Russian hardware, T-72 tanks, Sukoy fighter jets, and service-to-air systems that are decades old.
Starting point is 00:05:20 Troops are underpaid, earning roughly $100 a month in local currency and have little combat experience beyond domestic policing, crowd control, and beating political dissidents who oppose Maduro. That leaves the regime with one realistic option, to make an invasion too costly, too messy, and too politically painful for the U.S. to sustain. To pull that off, the Maduro government is relying heavily on its civilian militias. It's a network of loyalists, trained to conduct urban warfare and sabotage. They've been preparing since at least 2019, when fears of a U.S.-backed uprising were at their peak. The documents reviewed by Reuters describe a, quote, all-of-nation approach, where militias, intelligence services, and pro-regime gangs known as collectivos would all be mobilized. These groups would attack infrastructure,
Starting point is 00:06:10 block roads, and stage hit-and-run strikes on supply convoys. And there's another layer to this strategy, and that would be propaganda. The mobilization isn't just about military readiness, it's about messaging. Maduro wants to frame any confrontation with the U.S. as imperial aggression, hoping to rally nationalist sentiment at home and sympathetic governments abroad. The move also plays well with his allies. Cuba, Iran, and Russia have all provided support, technical, financial, rhetorical, to the Maduro regime. And if fighting were to break out, each could provide asymmetric assistance, cyber operations, weapons transfers, or intelligence sharing. So, you ask yourself, what does all this mean for Washington? Well, it means that any
Starting point is 00:06:57 military confrontation, however limited, wouldn't be likely quick or clean. Even if U.S. forces could destroy Venezuela's command structure in days, the aftermath could devolve into a grinding insurgency, with militias and criminal networks and foreign intelligence services all in the mix. The question then isn't whether the U.S. could win, it's whether it could contain the chaos that follows. For Maduro, this playbook is as much about deterrence as defense. By making the cost of invasion appear to be unbearable, he's trying to prevent it altogether. It's a strategy that depends on convincing President Trump that Venezuela is better left alone. All right, coming up after the break, Ukraine's air defenses are slipping, showing cracks as Russia steps up its attacks, and Colombia
Starting point is 00:07:45 suspends intelligence ties with the U.S. over American strikes on drug traffickers in the Caribbean. I'll be right back. Hey, Mike Baker here. Let me take just a moment of time to talk about your security, specifically your online security, and to tell you about a great company called Delete Me that's out there working hard to keep you safe online. Delete Me makes it easy, quick, and safe to remove your personal data online at a time when surveillance and data breaches are common enough to make everyone vulnerable. Delete Me sent your regular personalized privacy reports, showing what information they found, where they found it, and what they've removed. Now, if you're like me, you care about protecting your personal data.
Starting point is 00:08:26 And I know that Delete Me helps us stay ahead of threats like identity theft and doxing by removing information from data broker's sites. Take control of your data and keep your private life private by signing up for Delete Me. Now it is special discount for our PDB listeners. Get 20% off your DeleteMe plan when you go to join DeleteMe.com slash brief and use the promo code brief at checkout. Again, the only way to get that 20% off is to go to join Deleteme.com slash brief and enter code brief at checkout. checkout. That's join deleteme.com slash brief, code brief. Some follow the noise. Bloomberg follows the money, whether it's the funds fueling AI or crypto's trillion dollar swings. There's a money side to every story. Get the money
Starting point is 00:09:14 side of the story. Subscribe now at Bloomberg.com. Welcome back to the PDB. Ukraine's skies aren't as safe as they once were. After months of steady success, intercepting Russian drones and missiles, The country's defenses are starting to buckle, and October brought their weakest showing of the year. The numbers tell the story. Of roughly 5,300 Russian drones launched last month, about 4,200 were destroyed or jammed. That's an interception rate just under 80%, which was the lowest of the year and a clear drop from the more than 90% at the start of 2025. Missile defenses are faltering far worse. Out of 270 rockets fired at Ukrainian cities, Barely half were taken down in what was the weakest results since April. It's a sharp turn for a country that once prided itself on near-perfect shoot-down rates,
Starting point is 00:10:11 and it's raising new worries about whether Keeves' defenses can keep up as winter sets in, and Moscow's attacks grow bolder. But I do want to point out that Ukraine's Air Force released only the raw data, with no details of what defenses were used or where. The figures were reviewed by ABC News, but couldn't be independently verified. and both sides have reasons, of course, to tweak the numbers, part of the endless cat-and-mouse game to outsmart the other strategy. Still, the trend is hard to ignore.
Starting point is 00:10:42 Russia's attacks are increasing, while Ukraine is intercepting fewer incoming missiles and drones. And that Kremlin campaign has left a visible mark on the ground. As we've previously discussed, across Ukraine, the power grid is struggling to stay online. The state operator says repeated strikes have at times left part of the country country with, quote, zero power generating capacity. Ukrainian President Zelensky acknowledged the strain, posting on telegram that, quote, repair crews, power engineers, and utility services are virtually working around the clock. In his words, quote, the Russians have increased their striking power.
Starting point is 00:11:18 The Kremlin's strategy emphasizes saturation, overwhelming Ukraine's air defenses with sheer volume and complexity. Military analysts say Moscow is now mixing waves of Iranian-made Shihed drones, cheap decoer. and cruise missiles in coordinated attacks meant to drain Ukraine's expensive interceptors. A former officer in Ukraine's security service told ABC News that the average monthly drone count from Russia this year has reached 4,400. He said, quote, day to day, it's become more difficult to intercept them, noting that many of Moscow's drones now come equipped with anti-jamming systems that make them not only harder to spot, but of course harder to eliminate. For Ukraine,
Starting point is 00:11:59 It's not only just a question of volume, it's economics, and the imbalance is somewhat staggering. Each interceptor missile for a U.S. supplied Patriot System or German-Iriss-T launcher can cost up to $4 million. For comparison, a Shahad drone, that's around $20,000. A decoy drone, yeah, closer to $10,000. And that gap is forcing Keeve to improvise. The government has poured money into homegrown interception drones and electronic warfare systems, while Zelensky continues to press Western allies to deliver cheaper, faster alternatives. But even those efforts can't fill the void. And then there's the weather.
Starting point is 00:12:40 Winter's early chill has made defense more difficult. The Finland-based open-source intelligence analyst organization Blackbird Group stated plainly, quote, if the weather is bad, visibility is bad, explaining that rain and snow make it tougher for teams to spot low-flying drones. So Ukraine's once formidable defensive umbrella is, under immense pressure, and resupply is lagging behind Russia's constant barrages. As both sides dig in for another brutal winter, Keeves' defenses, for the first time in months, are showing signs of fatigue.
Starting point is 00:13:12 Okay, shifting to Colombia, where socialist president Gustavo Petro has stirred up a new fight with Washington, making Colombia the latest to limit or cut-off intelligence sharing with the U.S. over President Trump's Caribbean strikes on suspected drug runners. In a post on X, Petro rolled out the order, urging Colombia's military to shut down every channel of, quote, communications and other agreements with American security agencies. The leftist president casted as a stand for human rights, oh, how self-righteous, saying the drug war must now answer to quote the human rights of the Caribbean people. Well, maybe, and here I'm just tossing out an idea, but maybe a leftist former guerrilla fighter known for his coddling of narco-traffickers shouldn't be spouting off. about human rights. It's unclear just what intelligence Colombia will realistically withhold, as Petro didn't specify,
Starting point is 00:14:04 raising questions about whether he's indeed taking a principled stand or merely performing political theater from Latin America's socialist bloc. It's also unclear as to whether his leftist government has actually been engaged in any meaningful intel-sharing up to this point. Regardless, it's a symbolic break from a partnership once considered the backbone of U.S. counter-drug operations across South America, although not with Petro's government. And it lands at the same time as the UK's own freeze on intelligence sharing announced this week, and it was put in place last month. In case you're wondering, yes, the UK withholding intel
Starting point is 00:14:40 is far more serious and potentially damaging than Colombia's decision to withhold intel. But obviously neither is a welcome development. As we discussed on Wednesday's PDB, London says the strikes in the Caribbean breach international law. Canada and UN human rights officials echoed those criticisms, that's a shock, stating that the American military campaign resembles so-called extrajudicial executions. But the Trump administration sees it differently. White House officials say the mission targets vessels posing a, quote, imminent threat to national security, armed speedboats tied to cartels, moving drugs, weapons, and cash across the region toward America's shores.
Starting point is 00:15:21 And while the operations began in the Southern Caribbean near Venezuela, the campaign, as we've been tracking, has adapted and expanded. U.S. forces recently targeted boats in the western and eastern Pacific off both Colombia and Mexico. At least 76 people so far have been killed in the military strikes, according to the Trump administration. Petro, who appears to be attempting to cast himself as some sort of regional conscience, yeah, that's good, has seized on those numbers. He's accused President Trump of committing war crimes and demanded an internal investigation. For Trump's White House, it's merely an act from a leader
Starting point is 00:15:57 whose own record on narcotics enforcement is far from clean. Washington points out that Petro, a former gorilla who spent years reeling against American drug policy, as allowed rebel commanders, tied to the cocaine trade, to avoid extradition to the U.S. Now, you may remember back in October when the Trump administration sanctioned Petro and several of his family members
Starting point is 00:16:19 over alleged links to Bogota. shadow narcotics economy. Treasury Secretary Scott Besant accused Petro of having, quote, allowed drug cartels to flourish and praised President Trump for, quote, taking strong action to protect our nation. So, what was once a dependable partnership
Starting point is 00:16:37 in counter-narcotics enforcement is now fractured. As Bogota steps away from intelligence sharing, its leftist leader seems more eager to criticize President Trump's strategy than to confront the cartels that have been bankrolling his economy. me. All right. Coming up next in the back of the brief, Yemen's Houthi rebels say they've halted
Starting point is 00:16:58 attacks on Israel and Red Sea shipping. How big of them, but warned that they'll strike again if the Gaza ceasefire collapses. More on that when we come back. Hey, Mike Baker here, well, you may have noticed it's now November, right? And that means, of course, getting ready for Thanksgiving. Now, Thanksgiving is one of those few times of the year when we can all slowed down just a bit, right? Gather as families and remind ourselves of what we're thankful for. And remember, please, no talk about politics or taxes or religion around the table. It's all about gratitude, not just for the past, but for the future. Now, the excellent team of Triedales Premium Beef understands that. You've got to check these guys out. There are fifth generation
Starting point is 00:17:40 ranching family in Texas, raising cattle the right way and shipping it straight to your door. And in time for the holidays, their thankful box was built just for this season. Delicious beef to feed your family and create the kinds of comforting meals that build a legacy. And let's be honest, nobody is going to be upset if there's a little less turkey on the Thanksgiving table and a little more beef. So find it now at trybeef.com slash PDB. Again, that's tribeef.com slash PDB. In today's back of the brief, after nearly two years of drone and missile attacks, Yemen's Khuti rebels say they've halted their campaign against Israel and commercial shipping in the
Starting point is 00:18:23 Red Sea. The statement came in the form of an undated letter from the group's military chief of staff, Major General Yusuf Hassan al-Madani, and addressed to Hamas's Al-Kasan brigades and posted online. In it, the Iran-backed militia declared that it's closely monitoring developments in Gaza and will resume military operations only if Israel restarts its campaign there. If that happens, the Khutis warn they'll again target Israeli cities and reinstate their blockade on Red Sea and Arabian Sea Navigation. For now, though, the group's guns appear to have gone quiet. Israel hasn't reported any Houthi drone or missile launches since early October, just before the current Gaza ceasefire began. The halt marks the first sustained pause in a campaign that since late 2023 has seen more than 130 ballistic missiles and dozens of drones launched toward east.
Starting point is 00:19:16 Israel, along with a wave of strikes on commercial vessels transiting one of the world's most vital shipping routes. That campaign, which the Houthis claim, put in solidarity with Hamas, killed at least nine sailors, sunk four ships, and rattled global trade through a corridor that previously handled over $1 trillion in goods annually. Despite their claims of targeting, quote, Israeli-linked ships, many of the vessels struck had little or no connection to Israel at all. Israel, in turn, launched at least 19 retaliatory strikes on Khutti targets inside Yemen, nearly 1,100 miles away, including attacks that killed senior rebel commanders. Both the Biden and Trump administrations also carried out U.S. air strikes this year,
Starting point is 00:20:00 hitting what officials described as underground Khutti bunkers and missile sites. The timing of this latest pause appears linked to U.S. pressure to preserve the Gaza's ceasefire. With fighting largely frozen in Gaza, the Khutis, long along. lined with Tehran may see little justification for continuing attacks that risk drawing new Western military responses. Still, the letter reads less like a peace offering than a warning. The group made clear that if Israel resumes operations in Gaza, it will resume its campaign. And that, my friends, is the President's Daily Brief for Thursday, the 13th of November. Now, if you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at pdb at thefirstt.com.
Starting point is 00:20:44 And if you get a moment, head on over to YouTube to check out and subscribe, hopefully, to our channel. You can find that again on YouTube at President's Daily Brief. I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today with the PDB afternoon bulletin. Until then, stay informed, stay safe, stay cool. Ryan Reynolds here from Mint Mobile, the message for everyone paying big wireless way too much. Please, for the love of everything good in this world, stop. With Mint, you can get premium wireless for just $15 a month. Of course, if you enjoy overpaying, no judgments, but that's weird.
Starting point is 00:21:32 Okay, one judgment. Anyway, give it a try at mintmobile.com slash switch. Up front payment of $45 for three-month plan, equivalent to $15 per month required. Intro rate first three months only, then full price plan options available. Taxes and fees extra. See full terms at mintmobile.com.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.