The President's Daily Brief - November 18th, 2025: New Emails Reveal Jeffrey Epstein’s Shadow Diplomacy & Sabotage in Poland

Episode Date: November 18, 2025

In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: Newly uncovered emails reveal Jeffrey Epstein’s sprawling network of foreign contacts — and his extraordinary claims that he was feeding Russia...n associates insight into Donald Trump’s policy decisions. Poland deploys security forces after a critical rail line to Ukraine is blown up in what officials are calling a suspected act of sabotage. Plus — thousands of demonstrators in Mexico City clash with police during protests over cartel violence and government inaction. And in today’s Back of the Brief — a notorious Ecuadorian drug kingpin who faked his own death has finally been captured in Spain, ending four years on the run. 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 Rugiet: Ready to give Rugiet a try? Get 15% off your first order by going to http://rugiet.com/PDB and using code PDB. Rugiet prescriptions are compounded medications, available only if prescribed following an online consultation with a licensed clinician. Compounded drugs can be prescribed by federal law, but are not FDA-approved and have not been reviewed by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or manufacturing. Individual results may vary. Full safety information available at https://Rugiet.com  Lean: Visit https://BrickhouseSale.comfor 30% off StopBox: Not only do you get 10% Off your entire order when you use code PDB10 at https://stopboxusa.com/PDB10, but they are also giving you Buy One Get One Free for their StopBox Pro. #stopboxpod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:09 your eyes and ears on the world stage. All right. Let's get briefed. First up, we'll take a look at the newly uncovered emails showing the deceased Jeffrey Epstein's sprawling network of foreign contacts and his claims in his emails that he was feeding Russian associates insight into Donald Trump's policy decisions. Later in the show, Poland is sending security forces and investigators
Starting point is 00:01:35 to investigate a suspected act of sabotage after a critical rotech rail line that leads to Ukraine was blown up. Plus, thousands of demonstrators in Mexico City clashed with police during protests over cartel violence and government inaction. And in today's back of the brief, a notorious Ecuadorian drug kingpin who faked his own death has finally been captured in Spain, ending four years on the run. But first, today's PDB spotlight. Now, admittedly, the Jeffrey Epstein saga is not something that we've come. covered to any degree here on the PDB. It's not that the story isn't important, but we tend to leave salacious stories to the tabloids while we focus on international stories and national security
Starting point is 00:02:20 concerns. Epstein's criminal behavior and the extensive abuses he committed have been covered exhaustively elsewhere, and nothing about that really requires further embellishment from us. However, every once in a while, something new emerges that steps outside the realm of scandal and into the world that we do cover, national security, foreign influence, and the machinery of international diplomacy. And that's where today's story lands, because newly released emails
Starting point is 00:02:48 are offering a surprisingly detailed look at Epstein's extensive network of foreign contacts, and they reveal that he wasn't just collecting names for cocktail party bragging rights. Epstein was actively trying to insert himself into high-level diplomatic conversations, including with Russian officials, by presenting himself as someone who could explain Donald Trump's worldview to foreign governments.
Starting point is 00:03:14 And that angle, McCorres, caught the attention of our PDB staff. According to Politico's reporting on the emails, one of the most eyebrow-raising exchanges comes from June of 2018. Epstein wrote to former Norwegian Prime Minister Thorbjorn Yaglund, say that three times fast, someone that he corresponded with regularly, claiming that he had previously spoken with Russia's late ambassador to the UN, Vitali Cherkin. Epstein said Cherkin, quote, understood Trump after our
Starting point is 00:03:44 conversations, and he claimed that Russia's foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, could likewise get insight into Trump's mind by talking to him, meaning Epstein. That email alone, well, tells us a lot. It shows that Epstein believed he had enough access or influence or at least perceived proximity to Trump that he could offer guidance to a foreign power on how to approach the U.S. He even framed Trump's mindset as simple to decode, suggesting foreign actors, quote, must be seen to get something when engaging with him. What's striking is the confidence with which Epstein wrote this. He wasn't tentative or speculative.
Starting point is 00:04:21 He positioned himself as someone already playing this role, an informal advisor of sorts, and a person whose insights supposedly mattered inside diplomatic circles. Now, there's no firm evidence that any such discussion with Lavrov's, ever happened, but the attempt itself is revealing. It shows that Epstein viewed himself, not just as a wealthy financier with powerful friends, but as a behind-the-scenes broker, capable of influencing how world leaders interacted with the United States. And the Russian angle is just part of the story. The Miami Herald's review of the documents shows that Epstein's foreign contact network stretched far beyond Moscow. He maintained communication with
Starting point is 00:05:04 Saudi and Emirati elites, prominent European political figures, American strategists like Steve Bannon, and business leaders on multiple continents. Some correspondents clearly saw him as a conduit for introductions or access, others as a man who was plugged into elite social circles. What the emails make clear is that Epstein treated influence as a kind of currency. Even after his 2008 conviction, long before his 2019 arrest, he was still working the phone. still sending invitations, still pitching ideas, still trying to broker meetings. He cultivated this shadow network of diplomats and financiers and politicians and academics and foreign officials as though he were running his own private foreign policy shop.
Starting point is 00:05:51 And until now, much of that world remained opaque. These new emails, well, they don't rewrite global history. There's no evidence that Epstein shaped major policy decisions or altered diplomatic outcomes, at least not in this latest batch of emails that have been released. But they do show a man who believed that he had the ability to insert himself into geopolitical conversations and who tried to act on that belief more often than we had previously known. Or at least he was trying to sell himself or portray himself as someone who was a mover and a shaker. They reveal how easily high-profile individuals can drift into quasi-diplomatic roles without oversight.
Starting point is 00:06:32 They also show how the blurred lines between wealth and access and influence, especially in international politics, can create openings for people who have really no business being anywhere near these conversations. And for the U.S., which spends heavily on clear channels of diplomacy and well-defined national security structures, this kind of freelance foreign policy behavior is always worth paying attention to. So as more of these communications continue to come out, the picture of Epstein is becoming more complex. He was a predator and also a self-styled power broker who imagined himself playing a role in international diplomacy. And he undoubtedly saw people influential contacts as currency, bartering and trading for influence, leverage, and favors.
Starting point is 00:07:20 All right, coming up next. Poland, Russia's security forces to the site of a suspected sabotage attack on a key rail line to Ukraine. And thousands of protesters in Mexico City, clash with police as outrage over cartel violence and government inaction boils over. I'll be right back. Hey, Mike Baker here with a question for all the dudes out there. Now, have you ever felt awkward picking up a prescription for something personal, right? Maybe wishing the pharmacist would, I don't know, lower their voice, maybe wishing there was a more discreet option? Well, there's a better, more discreet way to fill that prescription that you may be thinking about.
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Starting point is 00:09:55 Now, this isn't a small rural spur line. It's one of the main arteries that's used to ship humanitarian aid and other supplies toward Ukraine's border. The damage was discovered early Sunday morning, and investigators quickly determined it wasn't just wear and terror or weather or mechanical failure. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk was blunt in his assessment. He called it, quote, an act of sabotage. And that wasn't the only concerning detail. A little further down the same corridor near the town of Puvavi, investigators found metal objects
Starting point is 00:10:26 deliberately placed on the tracks. Those objects didn't cause a derailment, but officials say they were clearly positioned to do so. They also found damage to overhead power lines along the same route, which investigators believe connected to the main incident. All of this taken together has prompted Poland to deploy security forces and territorial defense units along roughly 120 kilometers of track to conduct a full sweep. looking for additional devices or signs of tampering. Officials say they don't want to miss anything,
Starting point is 00:10:55 and they aren't ruling out the possibility of more attempts. This rail line is one of the most important logistical pathways for Ukraine. Poland has been a central hub for everything from generators and medical supplies to ammunition moving east. Any disruption to those corridors creates delays, and in a war where timing matters, that can have real consequences. And for that reason, suspicion is already swirling around Russia, There's a surprise. Polish officials did not directly name Moscow, but they strongly hinted at foreign involvement. Prime Minister Tusk said there is, quote, a high probability that the sabotage was carried out by an intelligence service, not a blown actor, or a criminal group.
Starting point is 00:11:35 Other officials described it as, quote, unprecedented, coordinated, and clearly intended to disrupt assistance to Ukraine. Again, Poland stops short of naming Russia outright, but given the timing, the target, and the pattern of similar incidents across Europe in recent years, It's not difficult to connect the dots. Western intelligence agencies have previously warned that Russia might expand its hybrid warfare toolkit to include sabotage of infrastructure inside NATO countries supporting Ukraine. Of course, this isn't the first incident that Poland has dealt with. As we reported just earlier this year, authorities arrested multiple individuals tied to a Russian intelligence network, accused of plotting attacks on rail and military infrastructure.
Starting point is 00:12:19 So there's already a backdrop of activity that Polish officials have been monitoring closely. For now, the rail line has been repaired and reopened, but the investigation is ongoing. Poland's security services are reviewing surveillance footage, interviewing potential witnesses, and combing through communications intercepts to determine who was behind the attack and whether they had local accomplices. What happens next will be important, of course, if Poland attributes this to a foreign actor, especially an intelligence service, it raises a different set of questions for NATO. Sabotage inside a member state's borders, especially involving critical infrastructure tied to Ukraine's defense, moves the conversation from criminal investigation into the realm of alliance security.
Starting point is 00:13:04 We'll keep watching as more details emerge and as Poland completes its sweep of the rail corridor. But for now, the headline is pretty straightforward. A key supply line to Ukraine was deliberately targeted. The Polish government is treating it as sabotage. and investigators are looking closely at the possibility of foreign intelligence involvement, with Russia at the top of the list of suspects. All right, switching focus to the south of the U.S. border. Mexico City witnessed one of its largest anti-government demonstrations in years this weekend
Starting point is 00:13:34 as thousands of young people poured into the capital to protest cartel violence, official corruption, and what they describe as a government unable or unwilling to protect its citizens. The movement, driven largely by Gen Z activists, has been gaining momentum for weeks. But on Saturday, it crossed a new threshold when protesters breached police barricades surrounding Mexico's National Palace, forcing a confrontation that laid bare the country's deepening security crisis. As plumes of tear gas filled the streets, hooded protesters attacked riot police, dragging officers out of formation, beating some with hammers and chains,
Starting point is 00:14:12 and indiscriminately throwing explosive devices and fireworks. That's according to our report from Fox News. The pandemonium left more than 120 people with injuries, 100 of whom were police officers. 60 were treated for minor injuries, while another 40 were hospitalized with contusions, cuts, concussions, and other injuries. Meanwhile, 20 protesters were arrested,
Starting point is 00:14:33 while another 20 were referred for administrative offenses. So, what ignited this national anger? The demonstrations, were organized in the wake of the November 1st assassination of Michoakon Mayor Carlos Manzo, a killing that many Mexicans now see as emblematic of a state that can neither control cartel violence or shield public officials from it. He was gunned down after publicly condemning Mexican President Claudia Shownbaum for failing to reign in the country's powerful criminal syndicates. According to NBC News, the country's youth quickly took up Manzo's mantle,
Starting point is 00:15:09 accusing Scheinbaum of being too tolerant of organized crime. As our listeners may recall, Scheinbaum has repeatedly rejected offers of U.S. military assistance from the Trump administration, insisting that Mexico has the tools to confront the problem alone. But protesters say the country is losing the turf war with cartels and is now at a breaking point. One demonstrator lamented to reporters that, quote,
Starting point is 00:15:33 the state is dying. All told, Saturday's demonstration in Mexico City drew some 17, thousand protesters, and additional rallies were held in five other cities. Many of the participants told reporters they felt they had grown up in a Mexico where cartel control is routine and promises of reform rarely materialize. Their message was clear. They do not believe the state can protect them. And their concerns go beyond the recent assassination in Mitrokan. It's about growing resentment over a judiciary, widely seen as penetrated by cartel influence, local governments that govern in name only, and federal leaders who insist that progress is being made even as violence spreads across the country.
Starting point is 00:16:15 Now, government officials and Shyam himself, still enjoys high approval ratings, have attempted to downplay the significance of Saturday's demonstration. They friend the protest as politically manipulated, claiming right-wing opposition groups sought to infiltrate the Gen Z movement and exploit the killing of Mayor Carlos Manzo to weaken President Scheinbaum. They further allege the chaos in the capital was the work of a small band of organized, quote, provocateurs. But protesters rejected that explanation, arguing the confrontation, reflected the sheer scale of anger in the community. The protesters also deny any partisan motive,
Starting point is 00:16:51 and independent observers emphasize the decentralized nature of the movement. There are no identifiable leaders, no party ties, no formal organization, only shared frustration. Still, observers stress that this weekend's events do not signal and imminent collapse of the state. Mexico's federal institutions remain intact, and Shinebomb still has a considerable governing mandate. But the protest exposed a system under considerable strain, and a government that is quickly losing the trust and patience of the next generation. Okay, coming up in the back of the brief, Spanish authorities arrest an Ecuadorian drug kingpin,
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Starting point is 00:20:52 Subscribe now at Bloomberg.com. In today's back of the brief, a four-year-long manhunt for an elusive drug trafficking kingpin has finally come to an end. A Spanish and Ecuadorian authorities arrested Wilmer Chavaria over the weekend, one of Ecuador's most wanted drug traffickers, four years after he faked his own death and vanished into Europe. According to Spain's national police, Chavaria was detained in the Spanish city of Malaga on Sunday during a joint international operation after a years-long investigation
Starting point is 00:21:26 that stretched across continents. Chavaria, the alleged leader of the Los Lobos criminal organization, was photographed being escorted by officers in a black and, green track suit. How very sopranos of him. The moment marked a quiet end to a fugitive run that began in 2021 when his family publicly claimed he had died of a heart attack brought on by COVID-19. Ecuadorian officials say the fake death was part of a calculated effort to assume a new identity, slip into Spain, and continued directing the gang's operations from afar. Ecuador's president, Daniel Mabor, said Chavaria used his time in Europe to help coordinate
Starting point is 00:22:03 drug shipments, order assassinations inside Ecuador, and oversee criminal enterprises that extended well beyond narcotics, including illegal gold mining operations. U.S. officials have also linked him to some 400 deaths during his tenure leading Los Lobos.
Starting point is 00:22:21 Following the arrest, Noboa hailed a tireless work of Ecuadorian and Spanish law enforcement, calling international cooperation, quote, a necessity in combating transnational crime networks. Noboa said, quote, some wrote him off dead. We hunted him down in his very own hell. He added, quote, we have captured the highest
Starting point is 00:22:38 value target. Today the mafia's fall back. Today, Ecuador wins. For some background, Los Lobos, Spanish for the Wolves, has roughly 8,000 members and was designated a terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department back in September of this year. The group operates drug trafficking routes that run through Ecuador's port cities, and as I mentioned, has been tied to political assassinations and illegal mining operations, among other activities. Authorities also accuse the gang of maintaining close ties with Mexico's Halisco New Generation Cartel. While the capture of Chavaria is undeniably a win for the Ecuadorian government,
Starting point is 00:23:16 dismantling the networks that he ran will prove far more challenging. Los Lobos has long operated in a fragmented ecosystem of alliances and splinter groups, and the fact that Chavaria successfully commanded the organization from abroad highlights how resilient and globalized his network has become. Moreover, the arrest takes place against the backdrop of Ecuador's broader security crisis. Once a regional model of stability in South America, over the past several years, Ecuador has faced skyrocketing homicides,
Starting point is 00:23:47 attacks on politicians and journalists, and escalating battles between domestic gangs and foreign cartels, vying for control of coastal ports and trafficking corridors. And Noboa's plans to combat the violence were dealt a major setback over the weekend. On Sunday, Ecuadorians voted down a proposal that would have allowed foreign governments to operate military bases in the country. It's a measure that Noboa argued would strengthen cooperation with the U.S. and increase pressure on groups like Los Lobos. With the referendum defeated, Noboa's options for expanding international support have now
Starting point is 00:24:22 significantly narrowed. And that, my friends, is the President's Daily Brief for Tuesday, the 18th of November. Now, if you have any questions or comments, and I do hope you do, please reach out to me at pdb at thefirsttv.com. And if you haven't already, please check out our YouTube channel at President's Daily Brief. It's considered one of the finest of the YouTube channels. At least that's how I consider it. I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today with the PDB afternoon bulletin. Until then, stay informed. Stay safe. Stay cool. Lots of places can expose you to identity theft. Oh, no.
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