The President's Daily Brief - PDB Afternoon Bulletin | January 19th, 2026: Iran TV Hijacked & Venezuela’s New Power Play
Episode Date: January 19, 2026In this episode of The PDB Afternoon Bulletin: First up— Iran’s tightly controlled propaganda apparatus suffers a rare and embarrassing breach, as hackers hijack state television to broadcas...t footage of exiled crown prince Reza Pahlavi and images of anti-government protests the regime has worked to suppress. Later in the show— CIA Director John Ratcliffe makes a high-stakes trip to Caracas, meeting with Venezuela’s interim president Delcy Rodríguez in the most senior U.S. engagement since Nicolás Maduro’s ouster. 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 American Financing: Call American Financing today to find out how customers are saving an avg of $800/mo. NMLS 182334, 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 Monday, the 19th of January. 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 stunning breach of Iran's
propaganda machine. Iranian state TV is hacked to broadcast the exiled crown prince Reza Palavi,
along with images that the regime has tried desperately to erase. I'll have those details. Later in the show,
CIA director John Ratcliffe flies to Venezuela to meet newly named President Delci Rodriguez
in the highest level U.S. engagement since Maduro's capture.
But first, today's afternoon spotlight.
For years, the Iranian regime has relied on one tool above almost all others to maintain control,
total dominance of information.
State television is not just media in Iran, of course.
It's an integral part of the regime's ability to control the population.
a carefully managed pipeline of propaganda meant to project strength and unity and inevitability.
But that pipeline sprung a leak over the weekend.
Multiple Iranian state television channels were abruptly hijacked in a coordinated cyber attack,
interrupting regular programming to broadcast footage of Reza Pahlavi,
the exiled son of Iran's last Shaw,
along with images of anti-government protests that the regime has been working relentlessly to suppress.
This breach came amid a near-total internet shutdown inside Iran, which remains in place after
weeks of nationwide protests challenging the authority of the Mullahs and the Revolutionary Guard
Corps. With social media blocked, messaging apps crippled and outside communication severely restricted,
the regime believed it had sealed the information battlefield. The cyber attack proved otherwise.
According to reporting, hackers targeted the satellite transmission feeds used to distribute
state television across the country. For viewers inside Iran, and for the regime officials monitoring
their own channels, the interruption was shocking. State media normally locked down tight was suddenly
broadcasting the face of the exiled monarchy and scenes of unrest that the regime was insisting
either don't exist or are being orchestrated by foreign enemies. Messages erred, urging Iranian
security forces not to fire on civilians, an explicit attempt to drive a wedge
between the regime and the men tasked with enforcing its rule. Iran's government moved quickly
to acknowledge the incident, confirming, quote, technical disruptions, while insisting control
had been restored, but the damage was already done. For a regime obsessed with projecting control,
even a brief loss of the narrative is a serious blow. Say television is one of the Islamic Republic's
most tightly guarded assets. Unlike social media platforms, it can be throttled or shut down,
television remains the primary source of information for millions of Iranians,
especially older audiences and rural communities.
A successful intrusion there carries weight far beyond a viral clip online.
Just as important is who appeared on screen.
Reza Pahlavi, again the son of the former Shah, carries enormous symbolic weight.
To supporters, he represents an idealized version of pre-revolutionary Iran under his father,
more secular, more open, and less isolated from the world. It remains a powerful contrast to life
under the Islamic Republic. Now, obviously, there's a significant portion of the population in Iran
that has no interest in revisiting the monarchy. Their goal is not to restore the monarchy. It's to
remove the current repressive regime and build a democracy through free and fair elections.
But to the current regime, Pahlavi's image is radioactive. The fact that his
His face appeared on state television, however briefly, cuts directly against decades of carefully
controlled official narrative. Regardless of whether Iranians support him or not, his image represents
an alternative to the Mullus and the IRGC. This incident also reveals a larger reality.
Information warfare now sits at the center of modern unrest. Tehran may control its streets with force,
but controlling the narrative is becoming increasingly difficult. Internet shutdowns, arrests, and
intimidation can slow dissent, but they can't extinguish it, or fully cut a country off from
the outside world. Whether this hack was carried out by an organized opposition group, a foreign
actor, or sympathetic insider still remains unclear. Iranian authorities have not publicly assigned
blame, but whoever was responsible demonstrated something critical. The regime's information wall
is not as solid as it once seemed. For dissidents inside Iran, the broadcast was a signal that
they're not as isolated as the government wants him to believe. For the regime, well, it was a
warning shot. When even state television can be turned against you, the grip on power may not be
as firm as it appears. Coming up next, CIA Chief John Ratcliffe meets with Venezuela's interim government
in Caracas, highlighting Washington's apparent intention to work with Delci Rodriguez. I'll be right
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Welcome back to the afternoon bulletin.
As the dust continues to settle after Nicholas Maduro's capture,
CIA director John Radcliffe sat down with newly named Venezuelan president,
Delci Rodriguez in a high-stakes meeting in Caracas, signaling where the Trump administration is
placing its confidence, at least in the short term. Now, we touched on this meeting in today's PDB,
but I wanted to dig just a bit deeper and explain why Washington is approaching this moment the way
it is. Here's what stands out. Ratcliffe isn't just the most senior U.S. official to travel to
Caracas since Madreau was captured. He's the first cabinet member to do it. The visit came just 24 hours
after President Trump spoke directly with Rodriguez by phone Thursday. And on that same day,
Trump hosted opposition leader Maria Corino Machado at the White House. Those moves offer a clear
picture of how the administration is sequencing the moment. Some opposition supporters in Venezuela
are voicing frustration that Washington hasn't moved immediately to install Machado's ally
Edmundo Gonzalez. The international community has acknowledged, of course, that Gonzalez was the winner
of the 2024 election, which, of course, Maduro then stole. His victory came after Machado was
barred from running. But what the White House appears to be signaling is that this phase is about
keeping the country from unraveling into prolonged chaos, not reshuffling leadership overnight.
And that framing is how the administration described Ratcliffe's trip. A U.S. official, speaking on the
condition of anonymity, said the CIA director traveled at Trump's discretion to deliver a
straightforward message. The U.S. is seeking an approved working relationship with Caracas.
The discussion, the anonymous official says, focused on intelligence cooperation,
economic stability, and making sure Venezuela no longer serves as a safe haven for America's
adversaries, particularly narco-traffickers. Inside the White House, the visit is viewed
less as a snub to the opposition and more as an endorsement of continuity. The thinking is that
Rodriguez, at least for now, represents a stabilizing force at a moment when Venezuela is still
absorbing the shock of Maduro's capture. As early as last summer, senior U.S. officials were
already debating how to remove Maduro without triggering a broader collapse of the Venezuelan state.
Around the same time, the Trump administration was assembling a counter-drug campaign centered
on maritime interdictions and strikes, operations which eventually led to Maduro's capture.
administration officials in those talks said Trump's objective was never in doubt Maduro had to go.
The harder question, of course, was what followed.
Some senior officials warned that dismantling the Venezuelan regime outright, even to make way for a respected opposition figure,
risked repeating the U.S. mistake in Iraq back in the day, where breaking apart state institutions
fueled years of insurgency and instability.
It was in that context that the CIA began to focus on Rodriguez.
Early assessments described her, then the vice president of Maduro, as a socialist by background,
but pragmatic rather than ideological, someone potentially willing to negotiate with Washington.
Rodriguez had also been involved in earlier negotiations with Trump's special envoy, Richard Grinnell,
and other U.S. officials as part of an effort to persuade Maduro to step aside voluntarily.
Obviously, no agreement was reached, but U.S. officials say she consistently sought common ground
even as negotiations failed to deliver a Maduro resignation.
Those assessments ultimately shaped the Trump administration's conclusion
that keeping Rodriguez in place for the time offers the best chance to avoid sustained instability.
As we've been tracking since Maduro's removal,
Trump has focused more on expanding U.S. access to Venezuela's oil sector
than on restoring democracy outright.
Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, said he supports a democratic transition
and has even praised Majado while acknowledging a reality that the administration keeps returning to.
The opposition, at least currently, lacks a governing presence inside Venezuela.
Now Rubio has said he expects Machado to have an opportunity to compete when elections are
eventually held. But for now, the administration sees Rodriguez and the remaining members of the
Maduro regime as capable of keeping control of security forces and maintaining infrastructure,
and, importantly, coordinating closely with Washington.
And that, my friends, is the PDB afternoon bulletin for Monday, the 19th of January.
If you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at BDB at thefirsttv.com.
And to listen to the show ad-free, well, you know you can do that.
It's 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.
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