The President's Daily Brief - PDB Afternoon Bulletin | February 24th, 2026: Intel Warning: Iran Preparing Strikes in Europe & Moscow’s Trojan Network
Episode Date: February 25, 2026In this episode of The PDB Afternoon Bulletin: Western intelligence officials warn that Iran could direct proxy terror attacks across Europe if the United States launches military strikes against... Tehran — tapping networks with proven operational history on the continent and raising concerns about asymmetric retaliation. Russian operatives are reportedly acquiring properties near military bases across Europe, creating what intelligence officials describe as a covert network of “Trojan horse” sites potentially positioned for sabotage and hybrid warfare. 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 Cardiff: Get fast business funding without bank delays—apply in minutes with Cardiff and access up to $500,000 in same‑day funding at https://Cardiff.co/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 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Tuesday, the 24th 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, Western intelligence
officials are warning that Tehran could direct terror attacks across Europe if the U.S. launches strikes
against Iran, tapping networks that already have operational history on the continent.
Later in the show, Russian operatives are reportedly buying up properties near military bases,
and other infrastructure across Europe, creating what intelligence officials describe as a network
of Trojan horse sites designed for sabotage. But first, today's afternoon spotlight.
U.S. and Western intelligence officials are monitoring what they describe as increasingly worrisome
signs that Iran could direct terrorist attacks against American targets in Europe and the Middle
East should it come under attack from U.S. forces. According to multiple security sources,
speaking to the New York Times, electronic intercepts show heightened chatter, communications suggesting
coordination and planning. Now, officials say they have not identified any specific operational
plots. There are no named targets and no confirmed timelines for attacks. But the warning signs
are sufficient to issue relevant alerts. The concern is that if President Trump authorizes
large-scale military strikes against Iran, whether limited attacks or non-military facilities or
something more expansive, Tehran could respond asymmetrically through their proxies.
In particular, Western intelligence agencies are watching several groups closely.
First up, Hezbollah. Intelligence experts fear sleeper cells inside Europe could be activated
to target U.S. embassies, military bases, or other American interests.
Chesbola has carried out lethal attacks in Europe before.
Back in 2012, a suicide bomber targeted a bus carrying Israeli tourists in Boch,
Bulgaria, killing six people. Bulgarian investigators later concluded that Hezbollah's military
wing was responsible, an attack that ultimately led the EU to designate that wing as a terrorist
organization. In 2024, British intelligence officials publicly disclosed more than 20
Iran-backed plots uncovered in the UK over the course of just a single year. In other words,
Hezbollah's infrastructure, networks, and precedent for operating in Europe already exist.
The second group being monitored are the Houthis in Yemen.
They could resume attacks on Western commercial shipping in the Red Sea,
disrupting global trade and increasing economic pressure.
Another group, well known from years past, is al-Qaeda.
A recent UN assessment warned that the group's ambition for external operations remains high.
Now, on its face, cooperation between Iran and al-Qaeda might seem unlikely.
Iran's leadership is Shia.
Al-Qaeda is a Sunni extremist organization, and historically they have been ideological rivals.
But geopolitics doesn't always follow theology.
Over the years, al-Qaeda figures have operated from Iranian territory under varying degrees of
restriction.
U.S. intelligence assessments have long noted that Tehran has at times tolerated or leveraged.
to Sunni extremist elements when it served their strategic interests.
In the event of open conflict between Washington and Tehran,
some analysts believe that al-Qaeda operatives could be encouraged,
either directly or indirectly, to carry out attacks in Europe or the Middle East,
not as an alliance built on ideology, but as a convergence of convenience against a common adversary.
So why Europe? Well, part of the answer is operational. Europe, of course, is closer to
Middle East. It has dense urban centers. The EU has had permissive open borders and immigration
policies for years with very little vetting or understanding of who they've been allowing in.
And while EU security services are certainly capable, it is often viewed as softer terrain
than the U.S. homeland. But there's also a political dimension. If Tehran wanted to raise the cost
of American military action, it might seek not only to inflict casualties, but to try and
fracture Western unity. There is historical precedent for how terrorism can reshape European politics.
Back in 2004, coordinated train bombings in Madrid killed 193 people and injured roughly 2,500.
The attack took place just three days before Spain's general election, and the political fallout was
immediate. The incumbent government lost power, and the incoming leadership withdrew Spanish troops
from Iraq. Now, there's no indication that there's a Madrid-style plot in the works, but the episode
demonstrated something important. Mass casualty attacks in Europe can shift public opinion,
alter elections, and strain alliance commitments. If Tehran believes a U.S. strike is imminent and views
it as an existential threat, it may calculate that pressure applied in European capitals could weaken
support for Washington's policy. Again, at this point, the EU is just dealing with General
warnings. As noted earlier, there are no confirmed plots and no declared timelines. All right,
coming up next, Western intelligence warns that the Kremlin may be quietly positioning assets
across Europe, purchasing homes near key military installations and other infrastructure,
in what officials fear could be a coordinated sabotage network in the making. I'll be right back.
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Welcome back to the PDB afternoon bulletin. The next phase of Russia's confrontation with the West
may not begin with tanks crossing a border, but with a threat that is already embedded within the EU.
Western intelligence agencies believe that Moscow may be acquiring properties across more than
a dozen European countries as potential launch pads for sabotage. According to serving and former
European intelligence officers interviewed by the Telegraph, this wasn't random real estate investing.
Moscow appears to have exploited loopholes and ownership laws to acquire properties near
military installations, energy grids, communications hubs, and strategic transport corridors,
sites close to key infrastructure and facilities. Security officials fear some of these properties
may already contain pre-positioned equipment, such as drones or explosives, weapons, and
encrypted communications gear.
Since Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Europe has seen a surge in sabotage incidents linked to Moscow,
including arson attacks in London and Warsaw, parcel bombs, assassination plots, and attempted
trained derailments. Some intelligence officials believe those incidents were not isolated,
one-off disruptions, but rehearsals probing for defense vulnerabilities. That's what makes this
different. This is not about armored columns rolling west. It's about operating in the so-called
gray zone. Intelligence officials warned that the Kremlin may seek to paralyze transport networks,
sever undersea cables, and fracture political unity, while maintaining enough ambiguity to complicate
NATO's ability to invoke Article 5. Britain's new MI6 chief, Blaise Metruly, warned that
the country is, quote, operating in a space between peace and war, saying Russia is testing Western
resolve just short of direct conflict. Ukrainian President Zelensky.
went even further, warning that Russian President Putin has begun what he described as a third
world war against the West through sustained hybrid pressure. Intelligence officials say the property
strategy mirrors what Moscow is suspected of doing at sea, using its shadow fleet to disrupt
critical undersea cables. On land, property ownership provides similar access, legal purchases
that can double as operational footholds in what some describe as a modern-day Trojan horse
strategy. Now, let's look at Finland as an example. In 2018, Finnish authorities conducted a raid on
properties owned by a Russian-linked company, Irisden Helmi. The firm acquired 17 sites around the
archipelago sea, many near-key maritime routes, close to Finland's naval command. Investigators found
peers and helipads, barracks-style buildings and advanced communications equipment. Now, Finland ultimately
prosecuted the owner for financial crimes.
That was an effort to avoid a direct confrontation with the Kremlin, but officials conclude the
infrastructure itself was a warning. Since then, intelligence agencies believe Moscow has shifted tactics,
replicating the model, quote, in miniature but at scale, smaller properties dispersed across Europe
that draw less scrutiny. And that pattern is especially visible across the Nordic region.
In Norway, Russia purchased cabins sitting near Arctic military installations, including properties over
looking Bardefas Air Base and other military installations. Notably, the Russian Orthodox Church,
long regarded by Western agencies as aligned with the Kremlin, acquired houses near naval bases
and radar facilities in Norway and Sweden. I'm sure that was just a coincidence. But the activity
isn't confined to the Nordic region. European intelligence agencies flag acquisitions near naval
facilities and strategic waterways in Sicily, Crete, and mainland Greece, as well as sensitive
sites in London, Paris, and Geneva. Now, Britain is viewed as particularly vulnerable. While
suspicious Russian purchases near MI6 headquarters and the U.S. Embassy have been investigated,
experts warn Russia could seek vantage points near the Trident submarine base near Scotland and
other sites central to NATO's deterrence posture. European security officials warn Moscow
is not merely enhancing their ability to spy or surveil, but to possibly strike.
The fear in European capitals is coordination, that in a future confrontation, infrastructure failures could appear simultaneously.
Dron launches from legally owned warehouses, power substations disabled from properties purchased years earlier, and communications severed from buildings that never drew attention.
So, you ask, how are the governments responding there in the EU?
Well, the answer is unevenly.
Finland imposed a near-blanket ban on property purchases by Russians, prompting similar moves in Baltic states.
Britain has stripped certain Russian-owned estates of diplomatic status and investigated suspicious acquisitions.
Yet efforts do remain fragmented. A proposed EU-wide ban, as an example of Russian property purchases,
collapsed amid resistance from member states concerned about economic fallout.
And that, my friends, is the PDB afternoon bulletin for Tuesday, the 24-4.
of February. 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, that is very easy to do. I've said it
before. 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.
