The President's Daily Brief - November 6th, 2025: Former Jihadist Turned Syrian President To Visit White House & Trump, Kim Summit Gains Traction
Episode Date: November 6, 2025In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: First—Syria’s new president, once part of a jihadist insurgency, is set to meet President Trump at the White House on Monday. We’ll bre...ak down what’s at stake for U.S. policy, and why the administration is pushing both Congress and the UN to repeal heavy sanctions ahead of the meeting. Later in the show—South Korean intelligence has assessed that a summit between President Trump and North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un will likely take place next year, saying the hermit kingdom is already preparing behind the scenes for a dialogue. Plus—Russian strongman Vladimir Putin orders top officials to prepare plans to resume nuclear testing, a response to President Trump’s recent announcement that the U.S. will soon begin nuclear testing for the first time in more than 30 years. In our 'Back of the Brief'—Ukraine’s drone pilots are reportedly engaged in video-game-style kill-tracking, earning rewards for each successful strike on Russian forces. We’ll break down this incentive-based system, and how it has fueled Ukraine’s intensifying drone campaign. 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 http://www.AmericanFinancing.net/PDB Birch Gold: Text PDB to 989898 and get your free info kit on gold Rugiet: Ready to give Rugiet a try? Get 15% off your first order by going tohttp://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 Rugiet.com. To listen to the show ad-free, become a premium member of The President’s Daily Brief by visiting PDBPremium.com.Please remember to subscribe if you enjoyed this episode of The President's Daily Brief. YouTube: youtube.com/@presidentsdailybrief Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Thursday, November 6th.
Welcome to the President's Daily Brief.
I'm Mike Baker.
your eyes and ears on the world stage. And yes, still on the road. All right, let's get briefed.
First up, in a historic first, Syria's new president, once part of a jihadist insurgency,
is set to meet President Trump at the White House on Monday. We'll break down what's at stake for U.S.
policy and why the administration is pushing both Congress and the U.N. to repeal heavy sanctions
ahead of that meeting. Later in the show, South Korean and Texas,
has assessed that a summit meeting between President Trump and North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un
will likely take place next year, saying that the hermit kingdom is already preparing behind
the scenes for a dialogue. Plus, Russian strongman Vladimir Putin responds to recent Trump comments
ordering his top officials to prepare plans to resume nuclear testing. And in today's back of
the brief, Ukraine's drone pilots are reportedly engaged in video game-style.
kill tracking, earning rewards for each successful strike on Russian forces. We'll break down
this incentive-based system and how it's fueled Ukraine's intensifying drone campaign. But first,
today's PDB spotlight. In just a few days, the White House will host one of the most
improbable figures ever to walk its halls, and that would be Syrian President Ahmed al-Shera,
the former al-Qaeda insurgent, and now head of state who will help talk.
former Syrian strongman Assad this last year. While there have been whispers of this encounter for
several days, White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt officially confirmed the meeting on Tuesday,
saying that serious new leaders have made, quote, good progress since taking power in December of
2024, in that President Trump wants to, quote, give them a real chance at peace, according to a
report from Reuters. Notably, it will mark the first time in history that a Syrian president will
set foot in the Oval Office. Well, not to mention a former member of Al-Qaeda.
Observers say that President Trump is taking a calculated risk that the former jihadist and
rebel commander can help Syria join a fragile new Middle East order, one anchored in mutually
beneficial economic deals and diplomatic normalization. According to our report from the Wall Street
Journal, the administration is already laying the groundwork behind the scenes to make the meeting a success.
Earlier this week, the Trump administration proposed a draft a United Nations Security Council resolution
that would lift key sanctions on Damascus. That's a move that would unlock the countries who return to the global economy
and clear the way for reconstruction contracts. It's not immediately clear, however, when that resolution could be put to a vote. It would need nine votes to pass and no vetoes from Russia, China, France, or Britain.
Now, Washington has been pushing the 15-member Security Council to ease these sanctions for months,
but the body has been reluctant to make a decisive move.
As a reminder, the sanctions in question apply to members of the Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham,
or HTS, which under the leadership of Shara, toppled the Assad regime.
HTS, formerly known as the Noosra front, was al-Qaeda's official wing in Syria, until breaking ties in 2016.
While Shirah has rebranded himself as a nationalist reformer committed to the values of pluralism since taking power,
global skepticism about his leadership does remain.
While the sanctions include a travel ban, asset freeze, and arms embargo,
the Security Council has granted Shirah numerous travel exemptions this year to facilitate diplomatic outreach,
and they're expected to greenlight this trip to the U.S., even if the resolution is not adopted by Monday.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration is also pushing the U.S. Congress to formally lift America's sanctions against Syria.
Specifically, Trump wants Congress to repeal the Caesar Act. That's the 2019 sanctions law that throttled Syria's economy during the Civil War.
And the goal would be to reopen the country to reconstruction, foreign investment, and most critically, American leverage.
As with the U.N. push, White House officials argue that unless Syria,
reconnects to the global financial system, it could collapse into a second civil war.
Entire cities do remain in rubble, the economy is paralyzed, and weapons still flow through
the country's northern corridors. One senior official told the journal the repeal is, quote,
key to allow U.S. business and regional states to operate in Syria.
The Senate has already approved the measure as part of this year's defense bill, but the House
remains divided, with some Republicans fearing that lifting sanctions too soon could whitewomen
hardliners inside Shiraz's government, many of whom fought under extremist banners during the war,
essentially legitimizing a government still populated by extremists.
But the administration is pressing forward.
Trump signed an executive order in June, temporarily suspending Syrian sanctions, but his team
wants permanence.
Ambassador Tom Barrick, Trump's special envoy for Syria, has been publicly lobbying lawmakers,
warning that there's, quote, no plan B if Shiraz's government
fails. Berrick, who helped broker the president's May meeting with Shirah and Riyadh,
says the White House views the new Syrian leadership as the last viable chance to stabilize the
country. If the holdouts in the House can be convinced to approve the repeal, it would mark a decisive
shift in American Middle East policy and would be the first step in normalizing diplomatic relations
with Damascus. And that shift would then allow major funds to start pouring into the war-torn country.
International lenders and Gulf investors have been waiting for a green light from Washington
before committing billions to Syria's reconstruction.
Analysts estimate the country will need at least $250 billion to rebuild basic infrastructure.
I should mention that Monday's meeting was largely brokered through the efforts of Saudi Arabia,
whose crown prince has been championing Shiraz rehabilitation.
For the Saudis, strengthening Syria provides both the hedge against Iranian influence
and an opportunity to showcase their ability to serve as an indispensable mediator in the Arab world on behalf of the U.S.
With all that in mind, the optics of Monday's meeting are rather extraordinary.
At one time, U.S. adversary now welcomed as a potential partner in rebuilding a nation once synonymous with terrorism.
But the administration insists the engagement is pragmatic, not naive.
I should also note that under the Senate's language on repealing the sanctions,
the president would still be required to issue reports for the next four years,
documenting that Syria is protecting human rights,
purging foreign fighters, cooperating on counterterrorism,
and developing ties with Israel.
If those benchmarks aren't met,
Congress could decide to pass new legislation to reimpose the sanctions.
All right.
Coming up next, South Korean intelligence says that a summit between President Trump
and North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un will likely take place next year.
Plus, Russian President Putin orders top officials to prepare plans to resume nuclear testing.
I'm surprised he's not rolling out yet another doomsday weapon.
I'll be right back.
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President Trump may finally get what's eluded him since returning to office.
That would be a sit-down with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.
South Korea's spy agency says the odds of new talks are rising, even as Pyongyang accelerates its nuclear ambitions.
Seoul's National Intelligence Service told lawmakers this week that Kim, quote, has the intent to pursue dialogue with the U.S.
And will seek contact if conditions become favorable.
In plain terms, South Korea's top spies think that Kim is softening his tone,
quietly positioning himself for talks once military drills in March wrap up.
Those joint exercises of U.S. and South Korean forces, which Pyongyang loves to denounce
as invasion rehearsals, have long been the North's go-to excuse to stall diplomacy.
Still, Kim has made his conditions clear. In a September speech, he said talks with the U.S. were
possible if Washington dropped its, quote, absurd obsession with denuclearizing and, quote, wants
genuine peaceful coexistence. The North Korean strongman made clear his regime would never
give up nuclear weapons, signaling that any dialogue with Trump would be about peace, not disarmament.
In the wake of that speech, officials in Seoul say North Korea, well, they've been recalibrating,
adjusting their propaganda and testing the waters for what could become their first direct contact
with Washington in years. For President Trump, who's made no secret of his desire to reopen a
diplomatic channel with the regime, the signs are encouraging. It's the kind of opening he believes
could turn confrontation into leverage for the U.S., a way to pressure Kim to ease nuclear ambitions
through dialogue rather than through isolation.
Still, the path forward comes with clear risks.
Since the last Trump-Kim meeting in 2019, Pyongyang has poured massive resources into its
weapons programs, strengthened military ties with Moscow and Beijing, and rolled out new missile
systems designed to evade Western defenses, particularly those of the U.S.
South Korean intelligence warns that the regime's seventh underground nuclear test could happen at any time,
and that new reconnaissance satellites and solid fuel ICBMs are already in development.
As I mentioned, despite these developments, White House officials insist the door to diplomacy remains open.
Trump administration officials say the president is willing to meet, quote, without any preconditions,
the same direct approach that defined his first-term summits.
Those meetings may not have produced denuclearization of the Hermit Kingdom, but they broke through decades of silence, creating a line of communication no previous administration had managed to build.
In Trump's view, that kind of personal outreach is still the best way to prevent escalation, especially when the other side is armed and unpredictable.
Kim, of course, has made little effort to disguise his nuclear aims. He's vowed to grow his stockpile exponentially, personally overseeing the attention.
of new long-range multi-warhead systems just last month.
His message was and is clear.
North Korea wants recognition as a nuclear power, not disarmament.
It's the posture that keeps the pressure on the peninsula high, even as his regime hints it talks.
For Trump, the challenge and the opportunity are one and the same.
Another summit could keep a dangerous standoff from sliding into a crisis, but it will also test
whether Kim's gestures are genuine or just another play for leverage in a bid to ease Western sanctions.
So with Kim clear that denuclearization is off the table, diplomacy only counts if it can deliver
proof of containment, such as nuclear inspections, monitoring and enforceable measures to
limit what Pyongyang already has.
Okay, turning now to another regime's nuclear stockpile. I mean, these days, who doesn't have a
nuclear stockpile. Well, now we're talking Russia. President Putin is once again brandishing his arsenal,
ordering his defense chiefs to draft plans for nuclear tests after President Trump signaled that
America may soon resume its own testing. Moscow's latest escalation played out live on state television,
a carefully choreographed show of power inside the Kremlin's Security Council Chamber.
It was Putin's answer, delivered less than a week after Trump's announcement that America would resume
nuclear testing for the first time in more than 30 years.
Flanked by his top breasts, Putin told the group he had warned Washington that any nuclear test
would, quote, require appropriate retaliatory measures.
Putin's message was clear if America breaks the moratorium.
Russia won't sit on the sidelines.
Putin then ordered his defense and policy teams to begin gathering intelligence on Washington's
potential plans for testing and to return with concrete proposals for how Moscow should respond.
Around the table, his generals fell in line.
Well, what would you expect them to do?
Russia's defense minister urged, quote, full-scale nuclear testing immediately,
while Chief of General Staff Valerie Garasimov warned that rebuilding test infrastructure could take years,
and such delay could leave Russia behind.
The Kremlin's intelligence chief added that his previous outreach to American officials had gone nowhere,
saying, quote, representatives from both the White House and the State Department declined to comment.
The mood in the room, though it would appear scripted, did carry an edge, a sense that Putin
wanted to be seen making the next move, not reacting to one. For Washington, the picture
hasn't been much clearer. The U.S. hasn't conducted an explosive nuclear detonation since 1992,
and administration officials, similar to the Kremlin's, note it would take years to bring the
nuclear Nevada test site back online. Trump himself has sent mixed signals in recent weeks,
first suggesting the U.S. would, quote, do some testing, then clarifying through his energy secretary
that the plan would involve non-nuclear system trials, not underground blasts.
As we've discussed, Russia hasn't conducted a live nuclear weapons detonation since the final Soviet test in the 1990s.
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could serve once again as a proving ground if tests are resumed.
Now, Putin's directive is not an order to detonate a bomb, but instead it's a signal.
By setting his foreign and defense ministries in motion, he's reviving the old machinery
of the Cold War while leaving room to claim restraint.
But his intention appears to be clear.
This kind of maneuver lets the Kremlin project strength without crossing the line of testing
and sends a message that Moscow won't be outpaced.
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nuclear competition contained. State TV theatrics aside, the move fits a familiar pattern. Putin's
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and control the narrative at home. All right. Coming up in the back of the brief, Ukraine's drone pilots
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In today's back of the brief, forget the old rewards of war like medals and ribbons.
Now Ukraine's drone pilots fight for digital rewards under a new government program that turns every confirmed Russian kill into store credits that they can use to purchase better drones.
The so-called, quote, Army of Drones bonus system has quickly become one of the most talked about programs in Ukraine's military.
What began as a small pilot initiative has evolved into a full-blown competition,
across the front, with hundreds of drone units now racing to climb the leaderboard and claim
bragging rights, one confirmed kill at a time. So you ask yourself, how does it work? Well, that's a good
question. The system runs through something called Brave One, that's a Ukrainian government-run
defense tech platform that doubles as both a digital weapon store and a public leaderboard.
When the program launched last year, soldiers earned six points for every confirmed Russian
casualty, enough to compile into purchasing larger drones. But recent changes have supercharged
the rewards. 12 points for each kill, 25 for taking out an enemy drone operator, and a staggering
120 points for capturing a Russian soldier alive using UAVs. If that sounds like something out of a video
game, well, that's the point. The system works a lot like Call of Duty's XP or Experience Points system.
It's a reward scheme where players progress by completing objectives such as defeating enemies.
And participation has exploded, up more than 400% just since August.
As for the leaderboard, the 414th Infantry Brigade sits among the top performers.
Their names now is familiar on the Brave One website as they are along the front lines.
For Keeve, it's part morale boost, part strategy shift, a way to keep troops engaged and incentivized as the war grinds on.
Ukraine's prime minister told the Guardian, quote, it's become truly popular among units.
He added that soldiers now talk about their point totals the way the gamers talk about scores.
The prime minister said, quote, the more infantry you kill, the more drones you get to kill more infantry.
It's become kind of a self-reinforcing cycle.
And the system has put up huge numbers.
Keev claims that drone pilots killed more than 18,000 Russian soldiers in September alone.
That's a figure that if accurate underscores just how much the nature of warfare has changed.
And so, for Ukraine's growing army of drone operators, the front line has instead become a game of points and rewards.
However, dystopian that may sound.
And that, my friends, is the president's daily brief for Thursday, this 6th of November.
Now, if you have any questions or comments, and I hope you do, please reach out to me at pdb at thefirsttv.com.
And if you'd like to listen to the show ad-free, well, you can do that, and it is simple.
Just become a premium member of the PDB by visiting PDB premium.com.
I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today with the PDB afternoon bulletin.
Until then, stay informed.
Stay safe.
Stay cool.
