The President's Daily Brief - PDB Afternoon Bulletin | February 11th, 2026: Cartel Drones Breach U.S. Airspace & U.S. Weighs Seizing Iranian Oil
Episode Date: February 11, 2026In this episode of The PDB Afternoon Bulletin: First up — cartel-operated drones breach U.S. airspace, triggering an emergency shutdown at El Paso International Airport and forcing the Departme...nt of Defense to step in. We’ll break down what happened, why flights were grounded, and what this signals about evolving threats along the southern border. Later in the show — a new report says the White House is considering seizing Iranian oil tankers at sea as part of its pressure campaign against Tehran. We’ll examine what the administration may be planning, the risks of retaliation in the Strait of Hormuz, and how this could impact global energy markets. 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 Glorify: Feel closer to God this year with Glorify—get full access for just $29.99 when you download the app now at https://glorify-app.com/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 6.196% for well qualified borrowers. Call 866-885-1881 for details about credit costs and terms. Visit http://www.AmericanFinancing.net/PDB BRUNT Workwear: Get $10 Off at BRUNT with code PDB at https://www.bruntworkwear.com/PDB#Bruntpod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Wednesday, the 11th of February.
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, cartel drones breach U.S. airspace,
triggering an emergency shutdown of a major American airport
and forcing the Pentagon to step in.
I'll have the details.
Later in the show, a new report says the White House
is considering seizing Iranian oil tankers at sea.
We'll look at what the administration may be planned,
and the risks that come with it. But first, today's afternoon spotlight. Commercial airliners were
preparing to depart a major American airport, and abruptly the federal government declared the
skies off limits. Late last night, the Federal Aviation Administration, the FAA, issued an emergency
temporary flight restriction over El Paso International Airport and nearby Santa Teresa, New Mexico.
The order grounded all flights, commercial, cargo, and private aviation, inside roughly a 10
nautical mile radius. The restriction was initially set to remain in place for 10 days. For reference,
El Paso is America's 23rd largest city. At first, the agency simply cited, quote,
security reasons for the flight ban, but didn't elaborate. The federal officials later revealed
that the grounding was due to drones, believed to be operated by Mexican cartels,
breaching U.S. airspace near the border. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy later confirmed
the security threat, stating that the Department of Defense moved to disable the drones. Within hours,
officials said the threat had been neutralized, and the FAA rescinded the restriction early Wednesday morning.
Flights resumed as normal. So let's back up and look at what we know.
Cartels using drones is nothing new. They've been doing it for years inside Mexico.
They've used them to scout law enforcement movements, monitor smuggling corridors, and even drop explosives in cartel-on-cartel violence.
In recent years, Border Patrol agents have reported frequent drone sightings near crossing points along the southern border.
What we saw yesterday was different. This wasn't a drone hovering over a remote desert corridor.
This was a breach serious enough to shut down a major American commercial airport and trigger Pentagon involvement.
And it's worth noting, El Paso International Airport sits just minutes from Biggs Army Airfield
at Ford Bliss, one of the Army's key installations in the region.
Biggs supports military transport operations, air defense training, and rapid deployment
forces.
So when an identified drones appear in that aerospace, this isn't just about civilian flights,
it's about proximity to active military infrastructure.
The FAA's notice warned that aircraft violating the restricted airspace could face enforcement
action, including the potential use of deadly force. Now, El Paso sits directly across
from Ciudadois, one of the most active cartel operating environments in the hemisphere. The region is a
major corridor for narcotics trafficking, human smuggling, and organized criminal activity. The cartel's
operating there become increasingly sophisticated, using encrypted communications, surveillance
technology, and now unmanned aerial systems as part of their overall toolkit. The question is how
far they're willing to push them, and how prepared the U.S. is to respond when those systems
encroach on civilian infrastructure. Officials have emphasized that there is no ongoing threat
to commercial aviation and that the drones were neutralized, but the fact remains. A foreign
criminal organization's aerial assets triggered a shutdown of American airspace. Airspace over the
U.S., by the way, is among the most tightly regulated and defended domains in the world. Now,
ultimately, this incident only lasted a few hours. The consequences were limited, but the implications
are larger. Cartels are no longer confined to tunnels and pickup trucks. They're evolving, adapting,
probing, and this week, that probe breached the skies over a U.S. airport. It was cartel drones
in American airspace, which begs the question, will this breach change the way that U.S.
government and military deal with Mexican cartels? Will the standard approach, meaning liaison
operations with Mexican military law enforcement be sufficient going forward, or could this lead
to unilateral operations by the U.S. military inside Mexico to proactively strike at cartel personnel
and infrastructure? Coming up next, Washington may be preparing to seize Iranian oil tankers at sea.
We'll examine what's being considered. More on that when we come back.
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Welcome back to the PDB afternoon bulletin.
According to new report.
reporting from the Wall Street Journal, the White House is weighing a new tactic against the Iranian
regime. U.S. officials are actively discussing the possibility of seizing additional tankers,
carrying Iranian oil, expanding a strategy that the administration has already used against Venezuela
and Russia's so-called shadow fleets. If implemented, the move would target vessels transporting
sanctioned Iranian crude, many of which, of course, operate under false flags and shell companies
and disabled transponders in order to conceal their origin.
More than 20 ships tied to Iranian petroleum exports have already been sanctioned this year,
laying legal groundwork for potential interdictions.
The goal would be straightforward, squeeze Tehran's primary source of revenue,
and increased pressure as nuclear negotiations remain unresolved.
But this isn't the Caribbean, and more importantly, Iran isn't Venezuela.
Iran's oil moves to one of the most volatile maritime choke points in the world,
the Strait of Hormuz, where roughly a quarter of global petroleum supply transits.
And U.S. officials, speaking to the Wall Street Journal, acknowledge that the risks are substantial.
The Iranian regime has a long history of retaliating its sea.
Iranian forces have previously seized commercial tankers, harassed shipping with fast boats and drones,
and threatened to mine the strait.
And as we reported last week, a U.S. flag tanker was approached and challenged by Iranian gunboats
in the strait.
the vessels attempted to stop the ship, ordering it to slow down and prepare to be boarded,
before it was escorted safely by U.S. naval forces.
At nearly the same time, a U.S. military fighter jet shot down an Iranian drone that
aggressively approached the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier.
Any move by Washington to begin boarding Iranian-linked vessels, well, could trigger
immediate countermeasures, potentially against ships carrying oil from U.S. allies.
And that's not just a regional problem, of course.
global energy supply issue. Oil markets have already reacted to reports of expanded enforcement discussions.
A sharp disruption in Hormuz could send prices higher, creating economic and political consequences
well beyond the Gulf. Now, as we've been reporting, the U.S. already has significant assets in place
in the region. The USS Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group is operating near Oman.
Guided missile destroyers are positioned in surrounding waters. And the U.S. Coast Guard maintains a presence
in Bahrain, the service that could take the lead on any sanctions-based boarding operations.
But operationally, of course, it would not be simple. Seizing a tanker in international waters,
requires boarding teams, escort vessels, and a destination willing to store the confiscated
crew. It means diverting ships and emitting manpower and accepting the possibility that
Iranian naval units or revolutionary guard fastboats may respond in real time. It's essentially
a maritime confrontation waiting to happen. And officials appear divided on the strategy.
Some see maritime interdictions as a way to weaken the regime economically without striking
Iranian territory. Others fear it could spark the very escalation that Washington appears trying to
avoid. Now, the administration has already demonstrated a willingness to pursue sanctioned vessels
around the globe as part of its Venezuela pressure campaign. Extending that playbook to Iran would signal a
aggressive phase of sanctions enforcement, one that carries significantly higher stakes. At the same time,
nuclear negotiations remain fragile. Tehran has expressed openness to discussions, but what it's offered
so far is very limited in scope. Targeting tankers could tighten the economic screws, but it also
places U.S. forces in closer proximity to Iranian naval units and raises the possibility, of course,
of a direct confrontation. For now, according to the Wall Street Journal, no final
decision has been made. And that, my friends, is the PDB afternoon bulletin for Wednesday,
the 11th of February. 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, and it is
very 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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