The President's Daily Brief - PDB Afternoon Bulletin | October 27th, 2025: U.S. Intelligence Split on Putin Peace & Israel’s Patience Wears Thin

Episode Date: October 27, 2025

In this episode of The PDB Afternoon Bulletin:   A major split inside America’s intelligence community. The CIA reportedly saw an opening for peace with Vladimir Putin — but the State Depar...tment’s analysts called that a fantasy, warning that Moscow has no real intention of ending the war in Ukraine.   Later in the show — the latest from Gaza, where Israeli patience is growing thin as Hamas continues efforts to recover more than a dozen bodies of hostages still inside the enclave.   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.   Birch Gold: Text PDB to 989898 and get your free info kit on gold Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:45 All right, let's get briefed. First up, we're hearing rumblings of a major split inside America's intelligence community. The CIA reportedly saw an opening for peace with Vladimir Putin, while the State Department's analysts called that a fantasy. Later in the show, news from Gaza, where Israeli patients is growing thin, as Hamas continues efforts to recover more than a dozen bodies of hostages, is still inside the enclave. At the same time, Hamas is refusing to commit to disarm and is looking to establish or re-establish their control over Gaza. But first, today's afternoon spotlight.
Starting point is 00:01:25 The question of whether or not Vladimir Putin wants or has any interest in peace remains the key question in finding a pathway to peace in Ukraine. And apparently, there's some disagreement now in Washington over Putin's mindset. According to new reporting from the Wall Street Journal, There has been a serious split between the CIA and the State Department's intelligence arm over Putin's interest in negotiating. The journal reports that the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence of Research, it's known as INR, cast doubt earlier this year on the notion that the President of Russia was ready to talk peace. Analysts there argued that Putin's goals in Ukraine hadn't changed. He still wanted domination, not diplomacy. But the CIA, according to the same report,
Starting point is 00:02:09 had a more optimistic read. Their analysts believed there might be an opening that Putin could be coaxed toward a settlement, particularly with direct engagement from President Trump. That divide reportedly showed up in the President's Daily Brief. No, not here on your favorite podcast, but the actual presidential intelligence summary that gets produced every morning for the president, that President's Daily Brief. And the divide even surfaced in briefings leading up to the Trump-Puton's summit that took place in Anchorage this past August. The journal notes that after that dissent, several of those State Department analysts were fired amid a so-called reorganization. A department official said the move wasn't targeted and that the office remains capable of doing its job. Well,
Starting point is 00:02:56 that's nice. But others inside Foggy Bottom, that's the reference to State Department, of course, because of location, see it differently, describing it as the latest example of political pressure shaping the intelligence narrative. One fourth, Former INR director told the paper that when analysts are pressured to align with policy goals, decision makers can end up with what he called a, quote, distorted view of reality, the kind of distortion that can lead to dangerous miscalculations. Well, he's not wrong. Now, this isn't the first time that the State Department's analysts have broken ranks.
Starting point is 00:03:30 Back in 2002, INR was one of the few offices that dissented from the broader intelligence community's conclusion that Saddam Hussein was rebuilding a nuclear weapons program, and they, of course, at INR, turned out to be right. That parallel isn't lost on Washington insiders or on veterans of the intelligence world, who see this latest dispute as a warning that perhaps lessons from Iraq might be fading. At issue now is how the administration reads Putin's intentions. After the Anchorage talks failed to produce progress, Trump expressed personal frustration, saying Putin had, quote, let him down. Even so, the White House kept the door to negotiations open, announcing a new meeting between the two leaders in Budapest, one that's now on hold amid doubts that Moscow is negotiating
Starting point is 00:04:18 in good faith. Here's a hint, they're not negotiating in good faith. Treasury Secretary Scott Besant hinted at that skepticism last week when he announced sanctions on Russia's major oil firms, Luke Oil and Rosneft, saying they reflected Moscow's, quote, lack of serious commitment to peace. He added, now is the time to stop the killing and for an immediate ceasefire. That backdrop of cautious optimism from some quarters and deep skepticism from others makes the intelligence rift especially significant, because if the president's advisors can't even agree on whether Putin wants peace, it raises a tougher question, how do you negotiate with someone that you can't read? And that brings us to the present moment, because while the intelligence community
Starting point is 00:05:03 debates Putin's intentions, the Russian leader seems to be sending his own message. As we reported this morning on the PDB, Moscow announced what it called a successful test of its new nuclear-powered Boervesnik cruise missile, a long-range system designed to carry a nuclear warhead and, in theory, stale off perhaps for days. When reporters asked President Trump about it aboard Air Force One, he called the launch, quote, an inappropriate step, adding, quote, he should, meaning Putin, get the war ended. A war that should have taken a week is now soon in its fourth year, that's what he should be doing instead of testing missiles, end quote. So, as the fighting rides on and Putin continues to tout new weapons, Washington's
Starting point is 00:05:48 analysts remain divided on a fundamental question. Is the Russian president signaling strength, or simply proving that peace was never on the table to begin with? Now, in the, for what it's worth category, and listeners of the PDB already know this, I don't believe Putin has any interest in anything other than winning. And the question to ask then isn't, is Putin interested in peace? The question to ask is, what does Putin consider to be a winning position? For now, based on Kremlin demands, that answer appears to be, at a minimum, all of the Donbass region, plus their existing hold, of course, on Crimea, and a variety of demands intended to ensure that Ukraine can't defend itself from future aggression. Coming up next, the grim search continues in Gaza.
Starting point is 00:06:34 Hamas works to recover the bodies of more than a dozen hostages as Israel's frustration grows. I'll be right back. Hey, Mike Baker here. Let me take just a moment to talk about your personal finances. Now, I suspect you've noticed that the cost of everything is, well, still too high. And many folks have been relying on credit cards to cover essentials. If that debt is piling up for you, well, you're not alone. Americans collectively owe over one trillion wets with a T, $1 trillion in credit card debt. So, you might have already considered reaching out to my friends over
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Starting point is 00:09:59 there's a money side to every story. And when you see the money side, you understand what others miss. Get the money side of the story. Subscribe now at Bloomberg.com. Welcome back to the afternoon bulletin. I'd like to take stock of where things stand with President Trump's peace plan. Israel now says Hamas has failed to provide the locations of four of the 13 remaining hostages' bodies in Gaza. It's a direct violation, testing both the ceasefire and the patience of Washington.
Starting point is 00:10:32 According to Israel's con public broadcaster, officials in Jerusalem have been urging Washington to pressure Hamas into resuming the handover of bodies as required under the 9 October ceasefire and hostage deal. But days have passed with no movement, and frustration is mounting in both capitals. Last week, in our coverage of Vice President J.D. Vance's visit to the Jewish state, IDF Chief of Staff from Lieutenant General Ayel-Zamir underscored the sensitivity of the issue, reminding American officials that Israel has spent more than a decade trying to recover the remains of Khadar Golden, a soldier killed in 2014, whose body is still held by Hamas. For Jerusalem, the message was clear.
Starting point is 00:11:14 Hamas's word means little without results. But Chabas says he can't find the bodies. Washington and Jerusalem see that claim differently, calling the excuse a stalling tactic. Both countries believe Hamas knows exactly where the bodies are and is withholding information. in a direct violation of the ceasefire terms in order to preserve what little leverage that the terror group has over the deal and the enclave. With that in mind, President Trump took to truth social,
Starting point is 00:11:41 warning the terror group, it would be held accountable if the truth collapses, saying he would be watching its actions, quote, very closely. And yesterday, Trump doubled down, posting, quote, Hamas is going to have to start returning the bodies of the deceased hostages, including two Americans, quickly, or the other countries involved in this great piece, will take action, most likely hinting at a resumption of military operations. That message appeared to land.
Starting point is 00:12:07 Efforts to locate and recover remains have since expanded, with Red Cross and Egyptian teams now joining the search, under Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu's approval to assist Hamas. Even Hamas's so-called shadow unit, which was tasked with guarding the hostages, was permitted to enter IDF-controlled areas in Gaza to further assist. But skepticism still runs deep. The footage published by a Katari news outlet showed shadow unit fighters and Red Cross personnel operating near Al-Mawesi, that's close to Rafah, territory still outside of Israeli control.
Starting point is 00:12:42 For many in Jerusalem, it was a scene that raised more doubt than hope. Before the truce, Hamas held the bodies of 28 hostages. Since then, the group returned 15 and released all 20 surviving captives from the 251 abducted during its 7 October 23 terror attacks in Israel that, of course, ignited this entire Gaza war. But now, as the handover stalls, so has Hamas's willingness to further comply to the peace plan. As we've been tracking in a statement to Reuters a week ago, a senior Hamas official said the group intends to maintain its security control on the strip during what he called a, quote, transitional period, insisting that, quote, it cannot commit to disarm.
Starting point is 00:13:24 That admittance, of course, raised red flags as it runs directly counter to the peace framework, which demands that Hamas release all hostages, disarm completely, and hand governance of the enclave to a technocratic committee overseen by an international body. And this week came another act of defiance from Hamas. Senior figure within the organization, Khalil Al-Haya, declared that the group's weapons are, quote, linked to the presence of the occupation, adding they would only be handed to the state once the occupation ends. Well, what occupation means, though, of course, remains deliberately vague. Whether Israel's presence in Gaza or the mere existence of the Jewish state itself is an ambiguity that officials in Jerusalem called deliberate. It appears to be another statement to counter the
Starting point is 00:14:11 terror group's immediate release of the enclave. Meanwhile, Israeli defense officials briefed lawmakers that the international stabilization force set to assume control of Gaza post-IDF withdrawal will include troops from Indonesia, Azerbaijan, and Pakistan. Indonesia and Azerbaijan have confirmed participation, though Pakistan's involvement had not been publicly disclosed until today. And that, my friends, is the PDB afternoon bulletin for Monday, the 27th of October. Now, if you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at PDB at thefirsttv.com. To listen to the show ad-free, you can do that and you can do it very simply.
Starting point is 00:14:50 just become a premium member of the president's daily brief by visiting PDB premium.com. See, I told you it was simple. I'm Mike Baker. Now be back tomorrow. Until then, stay informed. Stay safe. Stay cool. Ryan Reynolds here from Mint Mobile,
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