The President's Daily Brief - PDB Afternoon Bulletin | November 25th, 2025: China’s Taiwan Invasion Rehearsal Caught On Satellite & U.S.-Russia Face-To-Face Talks
Episode Date: November 25, 2025In this episode of The PDB Afternoon Bulletin: New satellite imagery reveals China practicing the exact beach-landing maneuvers required for a Taiwan invasion, using civilian ferries in a coordin...ated amphibious drill. We’ll walk through what the images show and why analysts say this marks a major escalation in Beijing’s preparations. The United States revives shuttle diplomacy, dispatching officials to Abu Dhabi for rare, face-to-face talks with Russian counterparts over a possible Ukraine peace framework. We’ll explain what prompted the meeting and what’s known about the discussions. 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 Nobl Travel: Protect your gear and travel smarter—NOBL’s zipper-free carry-on is up to 58% off at https://NOBLTravel.com TriTails Premium Beef: Feed your family and your legacy. Grab your Black Friday gift before it’s gone! Visit https://trybeef.com/pdb Birch Gold: Text PDB to 989898 and get your free info kit on gold Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Looking to diversify and protect your hard-earned assets, well, schedule a free consultation with
the Birch Gold Group. They're the precious metal specialists. Just text PDB to 989-898, and you'll receive a free,
no-obligation information kit, and you'll learn how to convert an existing IRA or 401k into a gold IRA.
Again, text PDB to 989-89-89. It's Tuesday, the 25th of November. 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, new satellite images capture the Chinese military, practicing the sort of beach landings
that it would likely need to conduct during an invasion of Taiwan, using civilian ferries
in a coordinated amphibious operation. I'll have the details.
Later in the show, the United States turns to shuttle diplomacy, sending officials to Abu Dhabi
for rare face-to-face talks with Russian counterparts on a potential Ukraine peace deal.
But first, today's afternoon spotlight.
We're starting with new reporting that suggests China is possibly moving beyond theoretical planning
when it comes to Taiwan.
Satellite imagery has captured what analysts believe is the clearest evidence yet that Beijing
is rehearsing the early stages of a potential invasion.
Now, these are not predictions or leaked to rumors.
The report is based on actual movements at sea caught on satellite and showing China,
using a mix of military and commercial ships to practice the kind of amphibious landings that it would
need in order to take the island. So here's what we've learned. According to new analysis from Reuters,
a dozen Chinese vessels, including large roll-on-roll-off cargo ferries, were recently spotted off the coast of Guangdong
province. Now, these aren't normal shipping routes. Instead, the ships moved in a deliberate formation
toward a beach near a town called Chi Shang. That location matters because it's one of the
the Chinese military's known training sites for amphibious landings. Satellite photos show several of
them lowering ramps directly onto the shoreline, all floating vehicles and equipment. Previous satellite
imagery shows similar drills in the same area throughout the year. Now one key development,
China appears to be integrating its civilian shipping fleet, the so-called shadow navy, into military
exercises. These civilian ferries and cargo carriers can move massive amounts of hardware. They're not
glamorous, but they're essential. They're the workhorses that turn strategy into an actual operation.
And here's why that matters. For years, military planners have pointed to China's lift capacity
as the biggest limitation in a Taiwan invasion. In other words, the Chinese military simply doesn't
have enough purpose-built amphibious landing ships to transport the tens of thousands of troops
and mountains of equipment needed to take and hold an island the size of Taiwan. That's why, up until now,
serious analysts have said China is still years away from being able to pull off such an operation.
But these latest drills suggest Beijing is trying to close the gap.
China's civilian shipping companies operate hundreds of large ferries and roll-on, roll-off vessels
that can carry tanks and armored personnel carriers, fuel trucks, and logistics convoys.
By folding those ships into military exercises, China is effectively turning the commercial maritime sector
into an auxiliary invasion force. It's, well, relatively speaking, classic Chinese strategy,
blur the lines between civilian and military capabilities, build dual-use infrastructure that
looks harmless until the moment that it's not, and maintain just enough opacity that outsiders
can't be certain what's coming next. Now, it's worth noting, these exercises don't prove that
an invasion is imminent. They don't establish a timeline, and there are still a normal,
hurdles that Beijing would have to overcome. Sea control, air supremacy, weather windows, and the
basic challenge of moving hundreds of thousands of troops across 100 miles of open water, likely under fire.
Still, this is a meaningful shift. Analysts quoted in the report put it plainly,
China is moving from capability development into operational planning, and that's a significant
distinction. You don't practice offloading vehicles onto a beach in formation unless you're preparing
for scenarios where you might actually need to do it. So, what does this mean for U.S. policymakers?
Well, first, this should sharpen the Pentagon's focus on maritime surveillance, specifically
the movements of Chinese civilian ferries along the Taiwan Strait. These ships may become the early
warning indicators of something larger. Second, this will factor into U.S. deterrence planning.
If China is building the Practical Logistics Foundation for an invasion, then American strategy will shift
toward raising the costs before those plans ever reach execution.
Third, expect discussions with allies in Japan and Australia and the Philippines to intensify.
They're watching the same satellite images, and they have as much at stake in keeping the region
stable as the U.S.
And finally, here's what to watch going forward, increased frequency of these drills,
more civilian ships participating, and any signs of integration with Chinese air and missile units.
If those elements all start showing up together, that's when concerns move from interesting
development into potential warning sign. For now, the message is simple. China is rehearsing.
All right. Coming up next, U.S. and Russian officials meet in Abu Dhabi for a fresh round of diplomacy
focused on a potential Ukraine peace agreement. I'll be right back.
Hey, Mike Baker here. Now, BDB regulars know that I'm a
on the road constantly. I mean, a lot. So I want to take a moment to talk about something that I
feel like I know a lot about. Luggage, right? And specifically, I want to tell you about a great
company out there designing and making terrific luggage. And that would be Noble travel, N-O-B-L,
noble travel. Look, their products are smart, they're thoughtfully engineered, and they're secure.
What do I mean by secure? Well, now, I'll bet most of you, as an example, have rollerboards
or suitcases that use zippers, right? And maybe you use a luggage lock, and that's a good thing. But the
problem is those zippers are the weak link. They can be breached in seconds, even with a simple
ballpoint pen. And just like that, then, your stuff is gone. And that's why so many experienced
travelers and frequent flyers travel with the noble all in one. There's zero zippers. They don't
use zippers. The bags use latches, secure, and impossible to pry open. And the noble all in one
has everything you need. It's got a charger, cup holder, front laptop, pocket, 360-degree wheels.
look, over 12,000 pilots, that's 12,000 pilots and crew carry it,
and it's the number one rated on trust pilot with a lifetime guarantee, right?
A lifetime warranty, come on, think about that.
Their biggest sale ever is now live.
It's up to 58% off sitewide.
Just hit nobletravel.com.
Again, that's nobletravel.
When they ask who sent you, well, tell on the PDB.
Mike Baker here with a message from my friends over Tri-Tales beef.
All right, here's the deal.
Tritails Premium Beef, a terrific fifth-generation Texas ranching family, is running their biggest Black Friday event of the year.
And you've got to check out Tritails. I'm serious about this. They're all about raising cattle the right way and delivering delicious beef right to your door.
Their steaks, I love them. Fantastic. Roasts, excellent. The quality is amazing. Look, here's the deal. With every qualifying purchase, you're getting a gift added to your order. No gimmicks, no runaround. Just spend and get rewarded. It's about putting the best tasting beef you've ever had.
on the table. Ribs, fillets, roast, steaks, and getting something extra while you're at it.
If you've been waiting to stock up, well, now's the time. Feed your family and grab your Black
Friday gift before it's gone. Just head on over to trybeef.com slash PDB. Again, that's
tribeef.com slash PDB.
Kayak gets my flight, hotel, and rental car right, so I can tune out travel advice that's
just plain wrong.
Bro, Skycoin, way better than points.
Fly during a Scorpio full moon.
Just tell the manager you'll sue.
Instant room upgrade.
Stop taking bad travel advice.
Start comparing hundreds of sites with kayak.
And get your trip right.
Kayak.
Got that right.
This is a Bose moment.
You've been there.
Small talks going nowhere, but then the Bose speaker kicks in.
Music you can feel fills the room.
And no more chat with Danny from accounts.
Your life deserves music.
Your music deserves Bose.
Find your perfect product.
Welcome back to the afternoon bulletin.
The U.S. has entered a new phase of shuttle diplomacy, sending Army Secretary Dan Driscoll to Abu Dhabi to meet Russian officials just hours after Washington and Kiev hammered out a revised 19-point peace plan during discussions in Geneva.
American officials confirmed the meeting, describing it as the latest sign of Washington's desire to move swiftly.
What began as an effort to call Keev, after Axios published Trump's original 28-point proposal last week,
has turned into a kind of diplomatic relay race. That original 28-point plan, of course, heavily favored the Kremlin.
After the recent Geneva sessions in which U.S. and Ukrainian negotiators rewrote that 28-point document, point-by-point,
Driscoll's sudden appearance in the UAE caught more than a few players off guard,
especially since Ukraine and Russian intelligence chiefs were already scheduled to meet there on another matter.
Instead of parallel tracks, the U.S. arrival put everyone into the same cramped diplomatic dance,
so that sounds comfortable, with the Ukrainian delegation headed by the country's military intelligence chief
now drawn into discussions with both the American and Russian teams.
Driscoll touched down yesterday in Abu Dhabi and has been in talks with Russian officials throughout today,
According to his spokesman, Tolbert told Axios, quote,
Secretary Driscoll and team have been in discussions with the Russian delegation
to achieve a lasting peace for Ukraine.
The talks are going well, and we remain optimistic, end quote.
For now, it's still unclear exactly who is sitting across from the Americans on the Russian side.
As we've been tracking, the Geneva revisions left Washington and Kiev more aligned
on what both call a, quote, updated and refined peace framework. But while a U.S. official insists
that the Ukrainians, quote, have agreed to the peace deal, Kiev has avoided endorsing it in those
terms. Even so, the Ukrainian tone is shifting. Zelensky's national security advisor,
Rostam Umarov, said the two sides had, quote, reached a common understanding on the core terms
of the agreement discussed in Geneva, and noted that the U.S. strengthened a draft security
guarantee that accompanies the plan. Still, I want to emphasize that the biggest hurdle,
which is territorial concessions, well, that remains untouched. That issue is being held back
for a direct leader-level discussion between Trump and Zelensky. And it won't be an easy sell
for Zelensky. Ukrainians back home remain deeply wary of any deal that even hints a trading
land for peace, particularly as Russian drones and missiles continue pounding cities across Ukraine.
As for Russia, the Kremlin is signaling its own limits.
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned that if the revised document drifts from what
Russian President Putin believes he agreed to with Trump during their August meeting in Alaska,
Moscow will not accept it.
Putin hasn't strayed from his maximalist demands for most of the war, and it appeared he was
close to getting those demands with that original 28-point peace plan.
Now that the document has been revised and reportedly is more in line with Ukraine and the EU
at NATO's concerns, now it's likely that Putin will be a hard sell.
Zelensky is expected to visit the U.S. in the coming days, and Umerov, said Kiev hopes to arrange
that trip before the end of the month in order to finalize the 19-point deal with President
Trump. But still, no date has been set, and Ukrainian officials close to Zelensky admit that
producing a final document will be difficult, especially as Russia's relentless aerial barrages
leave many skeptical that Putin has any serious intentions regarding peace negotiations.
And that, my friends, is the PDB afternoon bulletin for Tuesday, the 25th of November.
Now, if you have any questions or comments, and I hope you do, just reach out to me at
at thefirsttv.com. And 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 PDP.
be Premium.com. I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back tomorrow. Until then, stay informed. Stay safe.
Stay cool. Hey, Mike Baker here with a message from our pals over at Birch Gold Group.
Look, it's that time of year again, and you say, what time of year is that? I'll tell you.
It's the one time of year that Birch Gold Group gives away free gold with every qualifying purchase.
That's right. For Black Friday, when you convert an existing 401k or an IRA into a tax-sheltered IRA and gold,
Birch gold will send free gold to your home for every $20,000 purchased. How about that?
Look, gold started this year around, what, $2,600 an ounce, and by October it was over $4,000 an ounce.
And you say, well, why is that? Well, for the most part, global uncertainty.
2025, of course, has been defined by trade wars and real wars and just general unease,
and central banks are pulling away from the U.S. dollar as the global reserve currency.
So as you probably know, gold thrives in times of uncertainty.
If you're looking to diversify your savings,
birch gold can help.
Plus now through November 30th, you can get free gold with a qualifying purchase.
Just text BDB to 989-898 to claim your eligibility and for a free information kit on gold.
But your opportunity for free gold with purchase ends on November 30th.
So don't wait.
Text BDB to the number 989-898 for all the details.
Yamava Resort and Casino at San Manuel is California's number one entertainment destination for today's superstars.
Catch the Jonas Brothers return to the Yamava Theater stage on April 30th,
the powerful vocals of Demi Lovato on May 17th,
and the signature Southern Country Rock of Eric Church on July 19th.
Tickets on sale now at Yamavat Theater.com, only at Yamava Resort and Casino,
celebrating its 40th anniversary.
You in? Must be 21 to enter.
