The President's Daily Brief - October 13th, 2025: Israeli Hostages Released & Hamas Launches ‘Mafia-Like’ Crackdown In Gaza
Episode Date: October 13, 2025In this episode of The President’s Daily Brief: After 2 years, the remaining living hostages have been released from Gaza. The exchange comes as Trump arrives in the Middle East to meet regiona...l leaders. Hamas is turning its guns inward. The group has launched a sweeping crackdown inside Gaza, targeting rival clans and suspected collaborators to reassert control. Renewed economic warfare between Washington and Beijing—China defends its new rare earth export curbs as “legitimate,” firing back at new U.S. tariffs and export bans. And in today’s Back of the Brief—the War Department announces a new counter-narcotics task force under a directive from President Trump, with a mission to take the fight to the cartels in the Caribbean. 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/@presidentsdailybriefTriTails Premium Beef: Discover the Autumn Butcher Block — built for family meals and legacy-making — available now at https://trybeef.com/pdb while supplies last.Birch Gold: Text PDB to 989898 and get your free info kit on gold Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Ryan Reynolds here for MintMobil
with a 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.
Okay, one judgment.
Anyway, give it a try at mintmobile.com slash switch.
Upfront 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.
Looking to diversify and protect your hard-earned assets, well, schedule a free consultation with
the Birch Gold Group. They're the precious metals specialists. Just text PDB to the number 989-89-89, 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 989-89-89. It's Monday, the 13th of October. Welcome to the President's Daily Brief.
I'm Mike Baker, your eyes and ears on the world stage. And yes, look at that, back on the road.
All right, first up, it has been a long time coming. But as of 8 a.m. local time in Gaza today,
or 1 a.m. on the east coast of the U.S., the process of releasing the remaining Israeli hostages
held by Hamas for the past two years had begun. In a complicated and opaque process, the first seven of the reported 20 living
hostages were delivered by Hamas to the Red Cross, with word that the remaining 13 would be handed
over in Khan Yunus in a second release. President Trump will be on the ground in the Middle East today,
meeting with regional leaders and guarantors in Egypt as the ceasefire's fragile future hangs
in the balance. We'll have the details. Later in the show, with the hostage release process underway,
Hamas is turning its guns inward. The group has launched a sweeping
crackdown inside Gaza, targeting rival clans and suspected collaborators to shore up its
authority. Plus, renewed economic warfare between Washington and Beijing after the U.S. slapped on
fresh tariffs and export bans over China's tightening of rare earth mineral exports.
And in today's back of the brief, the war department announces a new counter-narcotics task
force under a directive from President Trump. The mission, take the fight to the cartels,
in the Caribbean. But first, today's PDB spotlight. After two years in captivity, 737 days, to be
exact, the hostage release process began around 8 a.m. local time in Gaza, with the first seven of the
remaining 20 living hostages handed over to the Red Cross. The remaining 13 were released in a
second handover in Con Unis around 10 a.m. local time. The hostages were handed over to the
International Committee of the Red Cross before being escorted over the border into Israel.
Once safely inside Israeli territory, the hostages were reunited with their families
before being transferred to three different hospitals for medical care.
Doctors say all of them are receiving treatment, physical and psychological, after what officials
describe as unimaginable conditions in captivity.
Their release is part of the first phase of the new ceasefire plan.
A massive prisoner exchange will also see roughly 2,000 Palestinians freed from Israeli custody.
That includes about 250 inmates currently serving life sentences, as well as more than 1,700 detainees arrested after the October 7th attacks.
Meanwhile, President Trump landed in Israel earlier this morning.
He's scheduled to address members of the Knesset and meet with families of the hostages before traveling to Egypt for a high-level peace summit in short.
Charmel Sheikh. The president's delegation includes several of his top national security officials,
Secretary of State Marker Wubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and CIA Director John Ratcliffe.
Together, they'll join regional leaders to sign a document guaranteeing the ceasefire, alongside Egypt,
Qatar, and Turkey, all of whom will serve as guarantors. The summit itself is expected to draw
a wide range of international figures, leaders from the UK, France, Germany, Italy, and Indonesia,
along with the United Nations Secretary General Antonio Gutierrez.
Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One,
President Trump expressed optimism about the agreement.
He said he's confident the ceasefire will hold,
telling reporters that people on both sides are simply, quote, tired of the war.
He added that he's received what he called verbal guarantees
from both Israel and Hamas, along with key regional players,
regarding this first phase of the truce,
the hostage release, and the steps that will fall.
follow. But not everyone is ready to declare peace. Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu praised the
return of the hostages as, quote, the beginning of a new path, but he also cautioned that very big
security challenges remain and that Israel's military campaign is, quote, not yet over.
One of the major components of this initial phase is the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza.
The UN says it's already distributed hundreds of thousands of hot meals and bread bundles to civilians
in both the north and south of the strip.
What it hopes is just a beginning
of sustained humanitarian efforts.
Meanwhile, Egypt's state-affiliated media
reports that dozens of aid trucks
are lined up on the Egyptian side
of the Rafa crossing,
waiting for the signal to move in.
It's a fragile moment of hope
after two years of war,
and one that could still unravel quickly
depending on the next actions of Hamas.
But for hostage families in Israel today,
the long nightmare of captivity
has finally come to an end.
So, what comes next?
Well, apparently for Hamas, what comes next, or actually now,
is an attempt to consolidate their power in Gaza
and a mafia-style crackdown on its own people.
That's already underway.
We'll have the details.
I'll be right back.
Hey, Mike Baker here.
Good values, right?
A strong foundation.
Legacy.
Well, you know, those things don't just happen by accident.
They're built and reinforced day by day, and oftentimes around the family dinner table.
And that's why I'm proud to work with and buy from Tritails Premium Beef.
This is a great company.
There are fifth generation of ranching family out of Texas.
There's no corporate middlemen.
There's no suits.
It's just a family of ranchers raising cattle and doing business the right way.
And right now, they've got their autumn butcher block on offer.
It's two chuck roasts for those slow-cooked family meals, four New York strips for the grill,
ground beef for the weeknight staples, and they're throwing in stew meat for free. It's beef built for
the season, and it's about more than food, frankly. It's about knowing where your food comes from,
supporting family ranching, and feeding your family right. Check it out while it's still available
at tribeef.com slash PDB. That's tribeef.com slash PDB.
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 side of the story.
Subscribe now at Bloomberg.com. Welcome back to the PDB. Well, it didn't take long. Just days after
Hamas agreed to a ceasefire deal, the group has launched a deadly campaign to reestablish control
over Gaza and to settle scores. The message is clear. Hamas doesn't intend to give up power.
According to new reports, roughly 7,000 Hamas fighters have been recalled to active duty inside the strip.
They've been ordered to move into neighborhoods vacated by Israeli troops and reassert the group's authority.
It's part of a coordinated effort to remind every Gazan about who's in charge, and to eliminate anyone who dares to challenge the Iranian-backed terror group.
The BBC reports that Hamas has also installed five new governors across Gaza, all with military-backed.
backgrounds. Some previously commanded brigades within the group's armed wing, the Al-Kasan
brigades. It's a sign that the group's civilian leadership is now taking a back seat to its
military commanders, the men who run Hamas like a military, not a government. But this isn't just about
reestablishing order in the strip. It's about revenge for the terror group. Multiple reports say
Hamas has begun abducting members of powerful Gaza clans, families that wield local influence and in some
cases have challenged Hamas's rule over the past two years. Those abductions appear to have
triggered violent protests. In at least one incident, Hamas gunmen opened fire on Palestinian demonstrators.
Eyewitnesses describe scenes of armed fighters firing into crowds, masked men dragging rival
clan members into vehicles, and families pleading for information on missing relatives.
Analysts say Hamas is now targeting anyone in suspects of cooperating with Israel or simply not towing the
line. Others describe it as a preemptive purge, meant to crush dissent before it spreads. One Gaza-based
source told the BBC that, quote, anyone with a weapon or following is now a potential target.
What's happening here is the reemergence of a familiar pattern. Every time Hamas feels its grip is
slipping, it turns inward, eliminating rivals, intimidating critics, and consolidating power
through fear. It's a page pulled straight from the playbook of organized crime syndicates,
and authoritarian regimes alike.
When in doubt, purge.
But this time, the stakes are even higher for Hamas.
As we've covered here on the PDB for months now,
Hamas has faced growing unrest among Gaza's powerful clans,
the extended families that control much of local life
and wield influence over trade, aid distribution, and territory.
These clans are more than social groups.
They're parallel power structures, and Hamas knows it.
by abducting clan leaders and attacking protesters, the group is sending a message.
There will be no power sharing, no negotiation, and no tolerance for internal opposition.
It's the same message that Hamas delivered back in 2007 when it seized control of Gaza by force,
throwing rival Fatah members off of rooftops and executing opponents in public squares.
Only this time, Gaza isn't the same place.
After two years of war, vast parts of the territory are in ruins.
Israeli troops have withdrawn from several sectors, creating a power vacuum that's now being filled
not just by Hamas, but by armed local groups, black market gangs, and clan militias.
Hamas's response to that fragmentation has been swift and brutal.
Fighters have reoccupied former Israeli positions, set up new checkpoints, and deployed informants
to identify suspected collaborators.
Reports suggest that internal security officers are now operating in plain clothes,
blending into civilian areas to monitor for dissent.
At the same time, the crackdown risks igniting a broader internal conflict.
Some clans have begun arming themselves, preparing to defend their neighborhoods.
In Kan Yunus, witnesses say gunfire erupted between Hamas forces and local fighters loyal to a local
clan after a series of arrests.
It's a reminder that even within Gaza, Hamas's authority isn't necessarily absolute.
For ordinary Gazans, this cleansing campaign means more fear and fewer options.
Families are caught between rival factions.
A knock at the door could mean a visit from a clan militia or from Hamas' internal security wing.
It also complicates any hope for outside stabilization efforts.
For the ceasefire to hold, Gaza needs some form of civil order.
Instead, it could be carved into territories controlled by competing power centers, each with its own guns,
grievances and goals. And that brings us to the broader question. What does Hamas actually want?
Well, publicly, the group says this mobilization is about restoring law and order. Oh, protecting Gaza from
traitors and criminals. But privately, well, privately it's about survival. Hamas understands that
once the guns fall silent, its greatest threat won't come from Israel. It'll come from within.
Every militia, every clan, every armed rival represents an alternative to their authority,
and in a territory where legitimacy is measured by who can enforce it,
Hamas is determined to make sure no one else gets that chance.
So while the outside world is currently focused on the ceasefire deal,
humanitarian aid, and the return of the hostages,
Hamas is waging a new war, one not aimed at Israel, but at its own people.
Okay, shifting gears. Beijing's clampdown on rare earth minerals has opened a new front in the U.S. China trade war,
with President Trump launching a trade counteroffensive aimed at breaking the CCP's grip on global supply chains.
At the center of this new front, control over rare earth minerals, the strategic elements that power everything from electric vehicles to semiconductors and advanced weapons systems.
It's an arena where Beijing holds near total dominance.
In a statement Sunday, China's Ministry of Commerce defended its new export curbs as part of an effort to, quote,
strengthen its export control system and, quote, safeguard world peace and regional stability,
what amid what it called, quote, a turbulent global security environment.
A ministry spokesman insisted the measures, quote, do not constitute export bans,
adding that applications that meet the requirements will be approved.
He emphasized that Beijing had four.
fully assessed the potential impact on the supply chains and was, quote, confident that the impact
will be very limited. But the scope of these restrictions tells another story. The new controls extend
beyond raw rare earths to cover intellectual property and production technologies, including extraction,
refining, or any process, underpinning China's industrial edge. Foreign firms under these measures
must now obtain licenses to export goods containing more than 0.1 percent,
China sourced rare earths or any item produced using Chinese refining or recycling technology.
And as for products with possible military applications, well, they'll be denied outright,
signaling Beijing's intent to choke off materials that could strengthen foreign weapons programs.
The European Chamber of Commerce in China warned that the curbs were already clogging export pipelines,
creating a backlog of license requests and, quote, adding further complexity to the global supply chains of rare earth
elements. Washington's counterpunch came fast. Within 24 hours, the White House announced a 100%
tariff on all Chinese imports, stating, quote, over and above any tariff they are currently paying,
effective the 1st of November. The White House also unveiled new export controls targeting, quote,
any and all critical software used in industrial and defense sectors. The commander in chief posted on
truth social, quote, there is no way that China should be allowed to hold the world captive,
its rare earth's policy, accusing Beijing of weaponizing the minerals to extort global markets.
The White House said the measures were designed to protect, quote, America's technological edge
and fortify supply chains for advanced manufacturing. Beijing was quick in a response of its own.
The Commerce Ministry accused Washington of, quote, double standards, noting that the U.S.
Control List covers more than 3,000 items, triple the number targeted by China.
Ministry officials described their own measures as, quote, necessary passive defensive actions, whatever that means, but warned that Trump's escalations had, quote, seriously undermined the atmosphere of trade talks.
And Beijing didn't stop there. Just hours later, the country revealed plans to impose port fees on American vessels docking in Chinese ports beginning the 14th of October.
That's mirroring a U.S. policy taking effect the same day.
The ministry described the move as, quote, a justified response to,
unlawful and discriminatory tariffs. The renewed economic standoff threatens to unravel, of course,
months of fragile diplomacy. As we've been tracking here on the PDB, the senior U.S. and Chinese
negotiators met in Geneva in May, followed by rounds in London, Stockholm, and Madrid that yielded
what both sides cautiously described as, quote, framework consensus on trade. But with China's
latest restrictions now in place, Trump warns he may cancel his upcoming meeting,
with Chinese President Xi Jinping scheduled for the final week of October that was meant to ease
trade tensions and negotiate a path towards renewed stability. Okay, coming up in the back of the brief,
the war department in the U.S. rolls out a new task force in the Caribbean, part of President
Trump's plan to hunt down the region's biggest cartels. More on that when we come back.
Hey, Mike Baker here, with an exciting offer from our friends over at Birch Gold Group. Now,
How does this sound? Buy gold and get free silver. Sounds pretty good, doesn't it? That's right,
for every $5,000 purchased from Birch Gold Group this month in Advance of Veterans Day, they'll send you a free
patriotic silver round that commemorates the Gadsden and American flags, just like this one right here.
Look, gold is up over, what, 40% since the beginning of this year, hitting record highs,
and Birch Gold can help you diversify into gold by converting an existing IRA or 401.
into a tax-sheltered IRA and physical gold.
Plus, they'll send you free silver
honoring our veterans on qualifying purchases.
And if your current or former military,
Birch Gold has a special offer just for you.
They're waiving custodial fees
for the first year on investments of any amount, right?
With an A-plus rating with the Better Business Bureau
and tens of thousands of happy customers,
including many PDB listeners,
I encourage you to talk with Birch Gold
about diversifying your savings
into gold. Just text PDB to the number 989898 for a free information kit and to claim your
eligibility for free silver with a qualifying purchase before the end of the month. Again, it's simple. Just text
PDB to 989-89-89-89. In today's back of the brief, Secretary of War or Secretary of Defense,
whatever the title might be, Pete Hgg-Seth announced a new escalation in America's war on the cartels,
unveiling a counter-narcotics joint task force in the Caribbean aimed at trafficking networks
poisoning the Western Hemisphere. Under direct orders from President Trump, the task force,
which launched Friday, will operate within the U.S. Southern Command's area of responsibility
and will be led by the Second Marine Expeditionary Force. Its mission to hunt down and dismantle cartel
operations at sea before the drugs ever reach American shores. Officials from the Department of War
and Southcom, described the initiative as a renewed commitment to restoring order in a region
long exploited by transnational narco-terrorists.
Hegzat said the mission's objective is clear and uncompromising, quote,
crush the cartels, stop the poison, and keep America safe.
The message is clear, if you traffic drugs toward our shores, we will stop you cold, end quote.
Admiral Alvin Halsey, commander of Southcom, called the new task force, quote, a decisive step
toward regional stability. He said that by forming the Joint Task Force around Second
M.EF headquarters, quote, we enhance our ability to detect, disrupt, and dismantle illicit
trafficking networks faster in a greater depth. The task force will reportedly integrate intelligence,
surveillance, and reconnaissance assets to map maritime trafficking routes and intercept narcotics
before they reach the U.S. or allied territory. Its aim will expand real-time intelligence
sharing, conduct joint training with regional partners, and deploy advisory teams to strengthen
local counter-narcotics forces with a fusion of American military and law enforcement.
The move comes amid escalating U.S. maritime operations in the Caribbean, targeting cartel-linked
vessels, including several suspected to originate from Venezuela.
As we've discussed, four small boats reported to be carrying narcotics were destroyed in
the series of military strikes, resulting in 21 deaths in operations the Trump administration.
administration says, served as precursors to this latest campaign now underway.
And that, my friends, is the President's Daily Brief from Monday, the 13th of October.
If you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at PDB at thefirsttv.com.
And I hope you had an opportunity over the weekend to catch the latest episode of our extended
weekend show, the PDB Situation Report. If not, well, it's simple.
just head on over to our YouTube channel at President's Daily Brief, where you can find it and past episodes.
I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today with the PDB afternoon bulletin.
Until then, stay informed. Stay safe. Stay cool.
