The President's Daily Brief - October 16th, 2025: Putin SNUBBED By Arab Leaders & John Bolton Indictment Looms
Episode Date: October 16, 2025In this episode of The President’s Daily Brief: Another humiliation for Vladimir Putin. His much-hyped “Russia–Arab World Summit” was supposed to highlight Moscow’s influence—but a...lmost no Arab leaders showed up. We’ll look at what this says about Russia’s weakening hand in the Middle East. Pakistan and the Taliban government in Afghanistan agree to a brief ceasefire after deadly border clashes and airstrikes. But the truce may not hold for long. Former National Security Adviser John Bolton faces possible indictment this week for allegedly mishandling classified documents. And in today’s Back of the Brief—Meta takes down a Facebook group accused of using the platform to “dox and target” ICE agents in Chicago, after a Justice Department request. 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/@presidentsdailybriefGoldbelly: Impress your friends and family. go to https://GOLDBELLY.com and get 20% off your first order with promo code PDB.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 6.327% for well qualified borrowers. Call 866-885-1881 for details about credit costs and terms. Visit http://www.AmericanFinancing.net/PDB. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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gold IRA. Again, text PDB to the number 989-89-89. It's Thursday, the 16th of October. Look at that.
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Welcome to the President's Daily Brief.
I'm Mike Baker, your eyes and ears on the world stage, and still somewhere on the road.
All right, let's get briefed.
First up, can I get a sad trombone for Vladimir Putin?
His big Russia-Arab World Summit was meant to showcase Moscow's power
and prove that they're not isolated on the world stage.
But almost no one showed up to that.
the party. We'll break down what that says about Russia's fading influence in the Middle East.
Later in the show, Pakistan and the Taliban government in Afghanistan have agreed to a short
ceasefire after deadly cross-border clashes and airstrikes. Plus, the latest on John Bolton,
remember him and his amazing mustache? A grand jury is expected to charge the former national
security advisor this week for allegedly mishandling classified documents. And in today's back of the
brief. Meta removes a Facebook group used to, quote, docks and target ICE agents in Chicago
following a Justice Department request. It would be nice to live in a world where we still don't
know what the verb doxing means. But first, today's PDB spotlight. Guess who's coming to dinner?
Well, not that many folks, if you're Vladimir Putin. It was a humbling week for Russia's
leader on the world stage. And another clear indication,
that Russia's influence in the Middle East is slipping.
Back in April, the Kremlin announced plans for what it called the Russia Arab World Summit.
That sounds rather grand, doesn't it?
It was supposed to be Putin's big diplomatic comeback, a high-profile gathering,
meant to showcase that Moscow still matters in a region increasingly focused on U.S. leadership.
For months, the Kremlin worked the phones, sending out invitations, lining up photo ops,
blowing up balloons. The idea was to fill a conference hall in Moscow with presidents and prime
ministers and kings from across the Arab world, proof that Russia hadn't been isolated by Western
sanctions or distracted by the war in Ukraine. But there was one problem. Nobody, well, almost nobody,
wanted to go. As the summit date approached, the Kremlin realized that nearly every major Arab leader
declined the invitation. Sorry, we're busy that.
night. No Saudi Arabia, no Egypt, no Jordan, no UAE. The only confirmations came from
Syria's new president, Ahmed al-Sirah, and come on, that guy will go to any party, and the head
of the Arab League. That's it. So rather than face the optics of an empty conference hall,
Putin canceled the event, or as he put it, postponed it. Officially, the Kremlin claimed
that he did it to avoid, quote, interfering with President Trump's Gaza peace summit,
taking place in Egypt. But few are buying that explanation, because it's nonsense. The reality is
pretty simple. Putin threw a party, and nobody wanted to go. And it's more than a scheduling embarrassment.
It's emblematic of just how far Russia's standing in the Middle East has fallen since the start of the war in Ukraine.
For nearly a decade, Putin managed to project power across the region. His military intervention in Syria,
back in 2015, saved Bashar al-Assad's regime from collapse and established Russia again as a serious player in Middle Eastern affairs.
Moscow built military bases on the Mediterranean, struck energy deals across the Gulf, and maintained ties with Israel, Iran, and the Palestinians.
All at the same time.
For a while, Putin was seen as the rare leader who could talk to everyone, but that illusion has crumbled.
Let's start with Syria. Assad is gone, replaced by President Ahmed al-Shera, who visited Moscow this week for the first time, which is entertaining in its own way, given that Assad has taken refuge in Moscow under Putin's top cover. I wonder if they went to a dinner together, or at least hung out for a little while over bourbon and cigars. But Shiraz's reason for attending, and his message were clear. Syria needs to reconstruction aid and guarantees that Russia's troops won't interfere in.
in the process. Now, that's a big shift. Syria was once largely dependent on Moscow for its survival.
The new Syrian government is now dictating terms to Russia. Then there's Iran, once considered
Russia's closest to ally in the region. The so-called Russia-Turran Axis has taken a beating,
literally. When Israeli warplanes pounded Iranian military sites, Moscow's response was telling.
Beyond a few carefully worded statements, there was nothing. No aid, no troops, not even strong condemnation.
The Mullahs took note, and so did the Gulf states. The much-hyped Russia-Iran axis, once touted as a counterweight to U.S. power, now looks exposed and marginalized and hollow.
And while Russia used to play host to both Hamas and Fatah delegations in an effort to mediate the Palestinian issue,
It had no role whatsoever in the recent Gaza's ceasefire, not a seat at the table, not even an observer's chair.
Instead, all eyes were on Charmel Sheikh, where President Trump, Egypt's Abdul Fata al-Sisi, and a lineup of regional and European leaders signed the peace accord.
Russia wasn't invited.
And that absence says everything.
For years, Putin tried to position himself as the anti-Washington, an alternative power center for the Arab world.
But the Ukraine war has wrecked that strategy. Sanctions have gutted Russia's economy. Its weapons
exports are plummeted, and its diplomatic bandwidth is stretched thin. Meanwhile, the U.S.
has reclaimed its role as the key player in the Middle East, something even Moscow's former partners
now quietly admit. It seems that Putin's balancing act between Israel, Iran, and the Arab states
has finally collapsed. By backing Iran and embracing Hamas rhetorically,
He alienated Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu, who, according to Ukrainian officials,
recently agreed to transfer a Patriot missile system to Kiev.
That's another self-inflicted wound for the Kremlin, losing a working relationship it spent decades cultivating.
Russia's frustration has started to show.
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov recently said Moscow would, quote,
not impose its services on Middle East peace efforts.
That's a diplomatic way of admitting that no one's asking for you.
services, Sergei. Dmitri Medvedev, the hawkish former president and chief nuclear saber-rattler,
and also dutiful minion to Putin, went further, calling Trump's peace deal meaningless and predicting
more war. Well, the louder Russia complains, the more irrelevant it sounds. And this isn't
just about the Middle East. Across the broader region, from Central Asia to the Caucasus,
countries that once saw Moscow as their anchor are drifting away. Armenia and Azerbaijan, for example,
have both turned toward Washington. The Trump recently hosted their leaders at the White House to finalize
a peace deal that gives the U.S. exclusive rights to develop a new trade corridor linking the two nations.
That would have been unthinkable a few years ago when Russia was the dominant power in that neighborhood.
The pattern is clear. Moscow's global reach is shrinking. Its influence fading.
and its prestige is collapsing.
So, yes, Putin threw a party, and nobody came.
But the deeper story is that he's lost his audience altogether.
All right, coming up next,
Pakistan and the Taliban agreed to a short ceasefire after deadly clashes.
And John Bolton and his mustache are now expected to be indicted over classified documents.
I'll be right back.
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elixir collection by Calvin Klein. Welcome back to the PDB. After days of deadly gunfire across
their disputed border, Afghanistan's Taliban government and Pakistan agreed yesterday.
to a 48-hour ceasefire. Everybody's getting in on the ceasefire action. It's a brief pause in one of the
world's most volatile frontier rivalries. Both sides claim that the other capital requested the truce
in an effort to not appear weak, which took effect just hours after Islamabad reportedly carried out
airstrikes in Kabul and across the southern border province of Kandahar. Taliban officials accused
Pakistan of killing a dozen civilians and wounding more than 100.
Pakistan's military, meanwhile, boasted it, eliminated, quote, 15 to 20 Afghan Taliban and injured many more.
Now, much like our coverage from earlier this week, I want to point out that neither claim from Islamabad or Kabul could be independently verified.
As we've been tracking, the current spiral began last week after a string of explosions in Afghanistan that Kabul blamed squarely on Pakistan.
Islamabad denied the involvement and countered that the Afghan Taliban.
Taliban allowed its Pakistani offshoot, the TTP, to launch cross-border attacks with impunity.
The weekend saw the fighting reach its deadliest point in years.
Kabul claimed to have killed 58 Pakistani troops.
Islamabad said the Taliban had lost 200 men.
Again, both figures are impossible to confirm.
The clashes briefly subsided, then reignited Tuesday, when each capital accused the other of breaking the lull.
Along Pakistan's northwestern frontier, military officials said their forces had killed up to 30 Taliban
and Pakistani Taliban fighters. By Wednesday, explosions rattled Kabul and Kandahar.
As a ceasefire took effect in fighting subsided, a Taliban spokesman said its forces were ordered
to observe the ceasefire, quote, as long as no one commits aggression. But the battle quickly shifted
to online, where government officials traded on verified drone footage,
air raid clips and videos in a digital tug-of-war over the truth.
Residents along the volatile border describe scenes of panic and destruction prior to the ceasefire.
One Afghan resident of Spindbolak, just a kilometer from the border, told the BBC, quote,
Very heavy clashes continued for almost five hours with drones and jets flying overhead.
A doctor on the Afghanistan side of the disputed border reported, quote,
seven bodies and 36 injured brought into the hospital, including women.
women and children. Taliban officials added that hundreds of families fled their homes,
warning that the Afghan government remains on, quote, high alert. The violence has drawn concern
from global powers. China and Russia both called for restraint this week. Well, that should do it.
Meanwhile, President Trump weighed in, offering to mediate, saying that, quote,
both sides need to stop the fighting and start talking. Now, whether this truce holds or
simply marks another lull before the next barrage remains to be seen.
For now, it has paused the bloodiest confrontation between the two neighbors
since the Taliban returned to power back in 2021.
Okay, shifting to the U.S., a federal grand jury met Wednesday to consider charges
against former national security adviser John Bolton.
He's accused of mishandling classified materials through a private email server.
The proceedings came two months.
months after FBI agents raided Bolton's Maryland home and Washington office,
seizing documents and devices in a long-running probe into the outspoken Trump critic's
handling of national security information. Justice Department officials told the New York Post
they expect an indictment as soon as today, calling the case, quote, airtight. So what allegedly
happened? According to court records, investigators discovered classified materials linked to U.S.
weapons programs, the American mission to the UN, and confidential travel memos, some of which
prosecutors alleged were transmitted or stored through Bolton's personal AOL account. What?
The dude still runs an AOL account. Investigators also found diary-style notes. Diary-style notes.
What could that be? From his time in President Trump's first administration. The same period,
he chronicled in his 2020 memoir that the National Security Council said appeared to
lie on classified government records.
Bolton has denied any wrongdoing.
His attorneys,
insisted he, quote, did not have anything inappropriate after leaving the White House.
But federal warrants, unsealed last month, revealed that an unidentified foreign actor had
breached Bolton's account, an intrusion that intelligence officials now believe may trace
back to Iran.
Federal investigators were ordered to search for malware or any tools.
They could have compromised Bolton's devices, though it's unclear what they found.
Sources close to the probe say Bolton's meticulous note-taking, and the accesses
aides had to those records remain key focus points in potential charges.
But still, even if he didn't deliberately share restricted information, prosecutors argue
Bolton could still face charges for leaving classified materials unsecured or accessible to
unauthorized individuals.
This issue, of course, is not new. It first surfaced in 2019 when Bolton assured the White House that he had no government records following his dismissal. That claim unraveled a year later when the National Security Council, reviewing his manuscript for his book, flagged its suspicious level of detail. As then NSC Director Ellen Knight wrote in a letter to Bolton's attorneys, quote, as written, the manuscript is very detailed, suggesting it was likely produced from
notes written during his service.
Another development unearthed is that the Justice Department's inquiry was quietly shelved under
the Biden administration.
There's nothing to see here, folks, a decision agents now see as politically convenient,
you think so, given Bolton's repeated criticism of Trump.
The inquiry was revived this year after Trump's return to office.
If indicted, Bolton would be among the most senior former national security officials in U.S.
history to face criminal charges over classified materials.
It's an ironic turn for one of Washington's most outspoken national security hawks,
now facing questions about his own handling of secrets.
All right, coming up next in the back of the brief.
Meta shuts down a Facebook group accused of using the platform to, quote,
docs and target ICE agents in Chicago.
More on that when we come back.
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slash PDB. In today's back of the brief, Meta has shut down a large Facebook group accused of helping
people docks and target federal immigration agents in Chicago. The group called ICE-siding
Chicago land had more than 80,000 members. Really? Do they not have jobs before it was taken offline
Tuesday? According to Attorney General Pam Bondi, the Department of Justice contacted META directly,
urging the company to take down the page. In her words, the group was being used to identify
and target immigration and customs enforcement agents operating in the area. A meta spokesman
confirmed the decision, saying the group was removed for violating policies against
what they call, quote, coordinated harm. The company didn't go into much more detail, but the phrasing
suggests this wasn't just about individual posts, it was about the organized nature of the group's
activity. This isn't the first time that the government has pressured tech companies to intervene in
the growing cat and mouse game between immigration enforcement and activists. Just last week, Apple and Google
pulled several apps from their online stores that allowed users to track ICE,
agents in real time. One of those apps called Iceblock reportedly had hundreds of thousands of
downloads. Users could post sightings of immigration officers within a five-mile radius,
essentially creating a live map of agent movements. For federal officials, that is, of course,
a major security concern. It's not rocket science to figure that out. They argue that posting an
agent's name or photo or location online can put lives at risk. On the other side,
Immigrant rights activists claim these groups and apps serve as warning systems.
They're just warning systems for families who fear being detained or deported.
The controversy touches on a larger question that's become increasingly difficult for both
law enforcement and Silicon Valley. When does sharing information cross the line into harassment
or obstruction or inciting violence? And who decides where that line is drawn, the government
or the tech companies themselves?
For now, Meta's decision marks another instance of big tech aligning with the Justice Department's enforcement positions.
But it also raises familiar debates about free speech, privacy, and the power of platforms to control what we can and can't post online.
And that, my friends, is the President's Daily Brief for Thursday, the 16th of October.
Now, if you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at PDB at thefirsttv.com.
And of course, as you've no doubt seen on billboards all around town, if you'd like to listen to the PDB ad-free, well, you can do that.
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I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today with the PDB afternoon bulletin.
Until then, stay informed, stay safe, stay cool.
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