The President's Daily Brief - PDB Afternoon Bulletin | December 16th, 2025: US Commandos Raid Chinese Ship Carrying Cargo to Iran & Navy Carries Out More Strikes On Narco Boats
Episode Date: December 16, 2025In this episode of The PDB Afternoon Bulletin: U.S. commandos carry out a rare and highly sensitive operation at sea, quietly boarding a cargo ship in the Indian Ocean and seizing a shipment boun...d for Iran from China. We explain what was taken, why the mission stayed out of the spotlight, and how it fits into efforts to disrupt Iran’s missile rebuilding efforts. Plus—Washington escalates its campaign against narco-terror organizations in the eastern Pacific. The U.S. military says new strikes on suspected drug boats killed eight, as pressure mounts on cartel smuggling routes at sea. 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 Birch Gold: Text PDB to 989898 and get your free info kit on gold True Classic: Upgrade your wardrobe and save on @trueclassic at https://trueclassic.com/PDB#trueclassicpod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Tuesday, the 16th of December.
Welcome to the PDB afternoon bulletin.
I'm Mike Baker, your eyes and ears on the world stage.
All right, let's get briefed.
First up, U.S. Commandoes quietly boarded a cargo ship in the Indian Ocean and seized a shipment
bound for Iran from China.
No announcements, no fanfare, just a quiet operation aimed at interdicting the parts Iran
needs to rebuild its missile program.
Later in the show, the U.S. mission against drug cartels in the Eastern Pacific, while that
continues. The military says new strikes on suspected narco-terror boats killed eight as Washington
ramps up pressure on cartel smuggling routes at sea. But first, today's afternoon spotlight.
U.S. Commandos carried out a rare and highly sensitive operation at sea, boarding a commercial cargo
ship in the Indian Ocean and seizing a shipment bound for Iran from China. According to U.S.
officials, American intelligence had been tracking the vessel for weeks as it made its way from a Chinese port
toward Iran. The ship was sailing several hundred miles off the coast of Sri Lanka when U.S. Special
Operations Forces moved in. The boarding team seized the cargo, then allowed the ship itself to
continue on its journey. Officials say the shipment consisted of so-called dual-use components,
items that can be used for legitimate civilian purposes, but can also be repurposed to manufacture
conventional weapons, including missiles and drones. While the exact contents have not been publicly
detailed, U.S. intelligence assessed that the cargo was headed to Iranian intermediaries
tied to the country's weapons development programs. Compared to recent military operations in the
Caribbean, this was a stealth mission conducted off the radar. There was no dramatic video
of operators fast roping onto the deck of the ship, no press conferences, no victory laps,
kind of how clandestined or covert operations are supposed to be done. Now, as we know, during the
Iran-Israel war earlier this year, Iran launched large numbers of missiles and drones in an
effort to overwhelm Israeli air defenses. And while the U.S. strikes significantly damaged Iran's
nuclear infrastructure, Tehran's conventional weapon stockpiles also took a severe hit. Since then,
Iranian factories have reportedly been running around the clock, trying to replenish missile
and drone inventories ahead of what many analysts believe could be another round of conflict.
That's where shipments like this come into play. The U.S. has increasingly focused on cutting off
the flow of microelectronics and software and precision components that modern weapons systems rely on.
The difficulty is in their dual-use classification. We're talking about chips and sensors
and parts that have perfectly plausible civilian uses, and that makes them much harder to stop
through traditional embargoes. What makes this operation particularly notable is that a
represents a step beyond sanctions and interdictions on paper. Over the course of the war in Ukraine,
the U.S. and its allies have tried to choke off similar shipments moving from China to Russia,
but until now, that effort had not crossed the line into direct military action against commercial
shipping. This boarding and seizure happened last month, and were only now learning about it.
China has little interest in being publicly linked to Iran's illicit arms supply chain,
especially at a moment when Beijing is trying to project itself as a stabilizing force in the Middle East.
The White House, for its part, may not want to increase tensions while economic negotiations with China remain delicate.
And Iran certainly doesn't want to advertise how urgently it's scrambling to rebuild its missile program after the damage it sustained this year.
In other words, well, everyone involved had a reason to keep this quiet.
The Pentagon has declined to comment, and Indo-Pacific Command, which oversees operations in the region,
has offered no public details.
All right, coming up next, another round of U.S. strikes targeting suspected narco-terror vessels in the eastern Pacific.
More on that when we come back.
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Welcome back to the afternoon bulletin.
A now familiar refrain.
The U.S. military says it carried out three strikes against drug smuggling boats in the
Eastern Pacific, killing eight narco-terrorists under the Trump administration's sustained campaign.
According to U.S. Southern Command, this week's engagement was authorized by Secretary
of War Pete Hegset and part of an operation that, as you know, has been building steadily
since early September.
Now totaling over two dozen missions aimed at what the United States.
the White House classifies as, quote, designated terrorist organizations. In these latest strikes,
three people were killed aboard the first vessel, two on the second, and three on the third. Now,
much like past lethal strikes, Pentagon did not release independent evidence tying the boats directly
to drug trafficking. However, it did publish video, similar to other missions, showing one of the vessels
speeding across an established narco-smuggling corridor before bursting into flames. It's those
corridors, long used to move drugs to American shores that the White House argues have become
legitimate military targets under Trump's expanded approach against cartels.
Now tensions with that Venezuela continue to escalate, that of course is a fine statement
of the obvious, while lawmakers in the U.S. continued to debate the legality or constitutionality
of this narco-terror campaign. They're currently examining the 2nd of September, so-called double
tap strike that killed survivors from an initial attack on an alleged drug smuggling vessel.
That episode, of course, sharpened scrutiny of the campaign. Still, the White House has been clear
about its rationale. President Trump framed his maritime offensive as a necessary escalation
in what he openly describes as a, quote, armed conflict with drug cartels. The administration
says that lethal strikes are essential to disrupting the flow of fentanyl, often synthesized
using Chinese precursor chemicals and trafficked through Mexican cartel networks, where it arrives
in the U.S. and continues to be a leading cause of overdose deaths. Yesterday, Trump signed an executive
order, designating fentanyl and its precursor chemicals as weapons of mass destruction, elevating the drug
crisis to a core national security threat. But still, on Capitol Hill, questions persist,
as do the briefings. Lawmakers say the boat strike campaign has killed at least 95 drug runners,
across 25 known strikes since September of this year. Today, members of Congress received classified
briefings from Hexeth, Secretary of State Marker Rubio, and other senior national security officials
as they work to understand the legal footing and operational scope of a campaign that shows no signs
of slowing. As we've previously discussed, the Defense Secretary, or Secretary of War,
has been unapologetic in defending the mission. Writing on X, he said the mission is simple,
quote, the declared intent is to stop lethal drugs, destroy narco boats, and kill the narco-terrorists
who are poisoning the American people. Every trafficker we kill is affiliated with the designated
terrorist organization, end quote. And so, as the strike totals climb, so does the military footprint
in the region. As we've been monitoring here on the PDB, the U.S. has built its largest presence
in decades, pairing lethal boat strikes with expanded maritime surveillance and increasing
naval deployments across the Caribbean Sea and the Eastern Pacific.
Not to mention, although I'm about to, that President Trump has hinted that land operations
could soon follow.
And that, my friends, is the PDB afternoon bulletin for Tuesday, the 16th of December.
Now, if you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at pdb at thefirsttv.com.
And of course, to listen to the show ad-free, you can do that, and it is remarkably simple.
just become a premium member of the president's daily brief by visiting PDB premium.com.
I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back tomorrow.
Until then, stay informed.
Stay safe. Stay cool.
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