The President's Daily Brief - PDB Afternoon Bulletin | December 19th, 2025: Ukraine Blows Up Russian Ship In The Mediterranean & Brown University Killer Found Dead
Episode Date: December 19, 2025In this episode of The PDB Afternoon Bulletin: First—a major expansion of Ukraine's campaign against Russia's shadow fleet of oil tankers. For the first time in the war, Ukraine has struck a ...Russian tanker in the Mediterranean Sea, delivering another significant blow to Moscow's energy revenues and their clandestine global shipping network. Later in the show—The manhunt for the Brown University shooter has come to an end. The suspect, who is now also linked to the murder of an MIT professor, has been identified and found dead. But key questions about motive remain unanswered. I’ll have the details. 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 Birch Gold: Text PDB to 989898 and get your free info kit on gold Debt Relief Advocates: Learn what debt reduction you may qualify for. Go online and visit https://DRA.com/podcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Friday, the 19th of December,
and I do hope you're having an excellent holiday season.
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, a major expansion of Ukraine's campaign against Russia's
shadow fleet of oil tankers. For the first time in the war, Ukraine has struck a Russian
tanker in the Mediterranean Sea, delivering another significant blow to Russia's energy revenues
and their clandestine global shipping network. Later in the show, the manhunt for the Brown University
shooter has come to an end. The suspect, who is now also linked to the murder of an MIT professor,
has been identified and found dead. But key questions about motive, while they remain unanswered.
I'll have the details. But first, today's afternoon spotlight. We've been tracking Ukraine's increasingly
aggressive campaign against Russia's so-called shadow fleet, that's the armada of tankers that
Moscow relies on to quietly move sanctioned oil around the world. And this week, Kiev crossed an important
new threshold. For the first time since the war began, Ukraine struck a Russian shadow fleet tanker
operating in the heavily trafficked waters of the Mediterranean Sea, dramatically expanding the geographic
scope of its maritime campaign and signaling that no part of Russia's sanctions evasion network
is beyond reach. An anonymous official with Ukraine's security service, the SBU, announced a successful
strike on Friday, telling Reuters the attack targeted an Oman-flagged tank.
tanker called the Kendall, which, despite its flag, operates as part of Russia's covert oil export system.
The vessel was reportedly empty when it was hit by long-range explosive-laden aerial drones,
but sustained critical damage forcing it out of operation. That's according to the SBU official.
The source declined, however, to specify when the attack took place or to give the precise location
of the tanker. But data from marine traffic showed the Kendall in the eastern Mediterranean
near Crete as it traveled to a Russian port in the Baltic Sea from the Indian port of Sika.
India, as our regular PDB listeners know, remains a major buyer of Russian oil,
providing an ongoing financial lifeline to the Kremlin,
although those purchases have been squeezed by sanctions imposed from the Trump administration
in late October. It also remains unclear how the drones reached their target,
though the official said the operation involved, quote, multi-stage measures.
But the official did disclose that the vessel was more than 1,250 miles from Ukraine's borders
at the time of the strike, showcasing the vast reach of Kiev's drone army far beyond the
traditional battle space of the Black Sea. And that's what makes this strike so significant.
Until now, Ukraine's maritime attacks have largely been concentrated in or near the Black Sea using
naval drones. In recent weeks, Kiev has used these small unmanned vessels to hit three
shadow fleet tankers helping to keep sanctioned oil flowing. They have also been used to strike
Russian warships, energy infrastructure, and strategic ports. Those strikes alone have already
had measurable effects, from crippling individual vessels to driving insurance costs sharply higher,
making Russian oil exports, of course, more expensive and risky. But the use of aerial systems
against Moscow's maritime assets in the Mediterranean, well, that's an unprecedented expansion
of Kiev's campaign. It's not Russian.
Russia's backyard. Obviously, it's a global maritime crossroads, one patrol by NATO navies,
commercial shipping giants, and international insurers. By hitting a shadow fleet tanker here,
Ukraine is effectively telling Moscow and the market that geography no longer provides safety.
The message is simple. If you're moving Russian oil and violation of sanctions, you're now a target,
anywhere. As we've been tracking on the PDB, Russia's shadow fleet is central to the Kremlin's war economy.
These vessels operate under murky ownership structures, flags of convenience, and often with their
tracking systems disabled. Their purpose is not exactly subtle, evade Western sanctions, sell
discounted oil to willing buyers, and funnel hard currency back into Russia's war machine.
That money matters to the Grimmonis, oil and gas revenues remain one of Moscow's last
reliable sources of revenue, as the conflict, Putin's invasion, drags on and costs climb,
which is why Ukraine is increasingly chosen to fight this war asymmetrically.
Rather than trying to match Russia man-for-man or missile-for-missile,
Kiev is focused on attacking the economic arteries that sustain Moscow's war,
refineries, export terminals, and the tankers themselves.
Just last week, for example, Ukrainian drones struck a luke oil-operated offshore oil platform
in the Caspian Sea, nearly 1,000 miles away from the front lines,
halting operations on one of Russia's most important offshore assets.
Now, we've already seen the economic ripple effects of Kiev's intensifying campaign against
Russian energy. In recent weeks, insurance premiums for vessels operating near Russian ports
have surged, and some insurers have pulled back entirely. Analysts have noted that Russia
is now being forced to offer steeper discounts on its oil, not because they can't find buyers,
but because the costs and risks of moving that oil keep rising. And the Mediterranean strike
adds another layer of pressure. Shadowfleet tankers operating in distant waters have long assumed
that Ukraine's reach was limited. That once oil left the Black Sea, it was effectively safe. That
assumption has now been effectively torpedoed by Ukraine's security service. See what I did there?
I used the word torpedoed in a story about hitting a tanker. Yeah, you welcome.
Embarrassingly, for Russian President Putin, the announcement of the strike came while he was holding his
annual end-of-year press conference. During the press conference, Putin, with a straight face and
apparently no sense of irony, declared that Ukraine is not ready for peace, despite the fact that
Kiev has offered up major concessions like abandoning their NATO ambitions, not to mention
that Ukraine's leadership continues to engage with U.S. officials on ironing out a potential
ceasefire framework. Putin, who has consistently rebuffed efforts by the Trump administration to
negotiate a settlement, claimed that Russia would, quote, love to live in peace next.
here, of course, Putin would, but only if Ukraine essentially surrenders much of their territory
to Moscow, and foregoes Western security guarantees. As for Keystrike in the Mediterranean, Putin vowed a
response, but attempted to downplay its impact, saying Ukraine was attempting to raise insurance
premiums, but that their efforts were largely futile and would not significantly disrupt
Moscow's oil trade. But the facts, well, they tell a different story. With costs spiking and the
pool of international oil buyers shrinking, the Kremlin is an increasingly dire financial straits.
Coming up next, after nearly a week, the manhunt for the Brown University shooter has come to an end.
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989-898. Welcome back to the afternoon bulletin. The manhunt for the Brown University shooter has come to an
end, with authorities confirming the gunman has been identified and found dead. But the mystery has only
deepened, as investigators also link the gunman to the murder of an MIT professor earlier this week.
Police have identified the suspect as Claudio Nevis Valenti, a 48-year-old Portuguese national and former Brown student
whose body was discovered Thursday night in a storage facility in Salem, New Hampshire.
Authorities say he died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Authorities said they believe Valenti was acting alone when he entered Brown's engineering building
during a final exam review session last Saturday and opened fire, killing two students and
wounding nine others. Investigators said they recovered two guns on Thursday that were found next to
Valente's corpse, including a nine-millimeter pistol, they believe, was used in the shooting. Now, this is where
the case takes a strange turn. Two days after the mass shooting at Brown, investigators say Valente
killed MIT physicist Nuno Lurero, and at his home in Brookline, Massachusetts. As we reported earlier
this week on the PDB, Lerero died Tuesday morning at a Boston hospital after he was
shot inside his Brooklyn home the night before. So, now how are the two shootings connected?
Well, authorities have not yet disclosed many details about the evidence linking Valente to
Lerreiro's murder, but said they are sure that they have their men. Prosecutors in Boston say a rental
car linked to Valente was seen near Lerero's home and that an IP address associated with the
killer's phone accessed the internet in the area. The two had also reportedly crossed paths
decades ago. According to our report from Reuters, Valente and Lerreiro had attended the same academic
program in Lisbon, Portugal, between 1995 and 2000. While what that relationship amounted to, if
anything, remains unclear. Officials said they believe Valente specifically targeted Lerrero.
While the officials said there is no longer an ongoing threat to the community, many of the most
pressing questions remain unanswered, chief among them. What was his motive? At a press conference
Thursday night, Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Norona said, quote, I don't think we have any idea
why now or why Brown or why these students or why in this classroom. As to how Valente managed to evade
authorities for so long, officials said he was relatively sophisticated in hiding his tracks.
Prosecutors said he used a phone that was harder to track and avoided using credit cards linked
to his name. At one point, he also switched the license plates on his rental car to evade authorities. It's also
worth remembering that from the start, the case was hampered by a very thin, evidentiary trail.
Early on, officials acknowledged the campus had limited surveillance coverage,
forcing detectives to lean heavily on public and residential security footage to build a timeline.
So after nearly a week-long manhunt, how did authorities finally crack the case open?
Well, I'm glad you asked.
Oddly enough, the breakthrough is largely thanks to a local homeless man,
with keen eyes who flagged suspicious activity on the day of the Brown's shooting,
which he later posted to Reddit.
The New York Post reports the man, known only as John,
noticed a vehicle with Florida plates that he saw Valente unlock near the Brown campus.
He also briefly interacted with Valenti, who he said was behaving oddly.
Police say his tip blew this case right open and helped steer investigators toward the suspect's trail.
It's a reminder that even in an era dominated by advanced forensics and digital tracking,
old-fashioned observation and, of course, a willingness to see.
speak up can still play a decisive role. And that, my friends, is the PDB afternoon bulletin for Friday
the 19th of December. And 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, well, you can do that. Just become a
premium member of the president's daily brief by visiting pdbpremium.com. And finally, of course,
today is Friday, and we all know what that means, a brand new episode of our extended weekend show,
the PDB Situation Report launches tonight at 10 p.m. on the first TV. Of course, you can also
catch it in past episodes on our YouTube channel. Please check that out and subscribe. You can find
that on YouTube, of course, at President's Daily Brief, and of course, also on podcast platforms everywhere.
I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back over the weekend with the PDB Situation Report. Until then,
stay informed. Stay safe. Stay cool.
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