The President's Daily Brief - September 29th, 2025: Mystery Drone Swarms Spark Chaos Across Europe & Iran Sanctions Snap Back
Episode Date: September 29, 2025In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: Europe reels from a wave of unidentified drones that shut down airports, hovered over military bases, and even breached the airspace above a Finnish... hydroelectric plant. The United Nations reinstates sanctions and an arms embargo on Iran over its nuclear program, prompting a furious response from Tehran. President Trump orders the deployment of U.S. troops to Portland, Oregon, following ongoing unrest and disputes over federal enforcement. And in today’s Back of the Brief—a familiar name returns to the spotlight as former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair is reportedly in talks to lead a transitional authority in Gaza. 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 TriTails Premium Beef: Reclaim dinner from the jaws of school-year chaos 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
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It's Monday, the 29th of September.
Look at that.
We are almost through the month.
Welcome to the President's Daily Brief.
I'm Mike Baker, your eyes and ears on the world stage.
And, of course, big congratulations to Ole Miss for a win over LSU this weekend,
great game, keeping them undefeated.
Hotty-Taddy.
All right, let's get briefed.
First up, Europe's skies were crowded this weekend, unidentified drones, shut down airports,
and buzzed military bases.
I'll have those details.
Later in the show, Iran is back under UN sanctions after European powers
triggered a sanctions process over its nuclear program.
The Iranian regime, apparently, isn't happy about the renewed sanctions, recalling ambassadors
and threatening retaliation.
Plus, unrest in Portland has prompted President Trump to order the deployment of troops to the
city, although the Democrat leaders of the city and state are pushing back, saying they don't
think they've got a problem.
And in today's back of the brief, a familiar name returns to the world stage as former
UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, remember him, is reportedly in talks to.
to lead a transitional authority in Gaza.
But first, today's PDB spotlight.
It was a tense weekend across Europe with unidentified drones, causing havoc in at least seven
different nations around the continent.
Airports, military bases, and even a hydroelectric power plant, all targeted by what
some leaders are calling hybrid attacks.
First, in Denmark, where drones appeared over the corrupt air base, the nation's largest
military installation, housing the armed forces, helicopters, airspace, surveillance, and parts of the
Danish Defense Command. Prime Minister Mente Frederikson didn't mince words, calling the incident's
hybrid attacks. Denmark's justice minister went even further, saying the goal was clear to spread
fear, divide the population, and frighten the public. And Denmark wasn't alone this weekend.
Oslo Airport in Norway was forced to halt operations as well for several hours after unidentified
drones were spotted in its airspace. In Lithuania, three drones disrupted seven flights in and out
of Vilnius. And it wasn't just military installations and airports. Also, civilian energy facilities
were targeted. In Finland, a drone flew directly over a major hydroelectric power plant,
a designated no-fly zone because of the obvious risks to critical infrastructure.
Sweden reported its own drone incursions near Kalskrona, home to the country's main naval base.
Witnesses described drones with flashing red and green lights flying low over the base,
the same pattern seen in Denmark and elsewhere.
Police have opened a case, but none of the drones have been recovered.
Meanwhile, in Germany, authorities confirmed drone sightings in Schleswig Holstein,
the northern state that borders Denmark.
The German Interior Minister warned that the drone threat is high,
calling for changes in law that would allow the military to shoot down hostile drones.
And finally, in France, drones are...
are spotted over the Mormelon-Legroen military camp. That sounds actually a lot better if I'm
smoking a gall wall when I say it, home to the 501st tank regiment and a key training site
for Ukrainian soldiers. The French military has not disclosed details about the drone's origin
or flight patterns, but an investigation into the breach is underway. Across the map, the pattern
was the same, mysterious unauthorized flights over sensitive sites, military bases, airports,
energy infrastructure. And in every case, the same unanswered questions. Where are they coming from,
who's controlling them, and what exactly is their purpose? Now, NATO officials say they strongly
suspect Russia is behind these mysterious drones, though Moscow denies it. There's a surprise,
calling the accusations a staged provocation. But European leaders are treating the incursions
as a coordinated campaign. The French, Danish, and Lithuanian governments all describe them as
hybrid warfare, low-level,
deniable acts of aggression meant to probe defenses,
disrupt civilian life, and test how quickly NATO will respond.
For context, NATO has already stepped up its Baltic sentry mission,
deploying surveillance aircraft, naval drones,
and even an air defense frigate to the region.
In addition, a new eastern sentry mission
is also underway to guard against further Russian drone incursions into Poland.
And within the European Union,
10 defense ministers have agreed to build what they're calling a, quote, drone wall stretching across the
continent's eastern flank. The idea is to integrate detection and neutralization systems from
Scandinavia down to the Black Sea, essentially a continent-wide counter-UAS shield.
But the problem right now is that Europe is playing catch-up. As one Danish official put it,
what we're witnessing is an arms race, drones versus anti-dron defenses, and the threat is evolving
faster than governments can respond. This strategic purpose appears to be clear. By sending swarms of
drones over airports and bases, the suspected adversary is forcing Europe to choose between two bad
options, shoot them down and risk escalation, or let them fly and risk looking weak. Either way,
chaos tends to spread. Flights get cancelled, power plants get rattled, and public concern grows.
Hybrid warfare isn't about outright destruction. It's about eroding confidence,
sowing doubt and leaving your adversary constantly on edge.
And across Europe this weekend, well, it appears to have worked.
All right, coming up next, UN sanctions snap back on Iran,
and President Trump orders National Guard troops to Portland, Oregon,
looking to emulate the crime-fighting effort that was implemented in Washington, D.C.
I'll be right back.
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The much-anticipated return of UN sanctions on Iran arrives Sunday as European powers
pulled the snapback trigger, restoring harsh penalties as the 2015 nuclear deal collapses
and patience with the mullahs runs dry.
The move with the Security Council, led by Britain, France, and Germany
came after years of the Iranian regime's stonewalling inspectors
and openly thumbing its nose at the decade-old nuclear accord.
European diplomats said the decision reflected a growing recognition
that Iran never intended to abide by the deal's commitment,
so that didn't take them long to figure out,
instead using the deal as a cover to push its nuclear and missile programs forward.
The sanctions, as we've covered here on the PDB, are sweeping.
Militarily, they reimpose a broad arms embargo, ban uranium enrichment, and processing, and curb ballistic missile development.
Politically and financially, they slap travel bans on dozens of regime officials,
freeze assets tied to insiders and entities, and block any supply lines feeding Tehran's nuclear drive.
Together, they cut straight to the core of Iran's military and economic lifelines.
These measures revived Security Council resolutions first adopted between 2006 and 2010,
effectively dismantling the remnants of that joint comprehensive plan of action, the JCPOA,
once signed by Iran, the Europeans, Washington, Russia, and China.
As our regular PDB listeners will recall, Western diplomats had offered Tehran a six-month off-ramp
to restore international inspector access and scale back in Richmond.
instead, the Islamic regime doubled down, stockpiling uranium and hardening its nuclear sites.
And the snapback mechanism wasn't without drama. In an 11th hour effort, Iran's allies, Russia and
China, tried to buy the regime more time, floating of a proposal to delay the snapback sanctions
until April. But it failed to win traction at the Security Council, triggering the sanctions.
Moscow's top diplomat, Sergei Lavrov, blasted the snapback trigger as quote,
unlawful. And this is from the country that invaded Ukraine and has been waging war for the past
three years. But the optics told a different story. With Europe, Washington, and much of the West aligned,
Iran's listed defenders only underscored the Moa's growing isolation. Still, European leaders
were careful to stress that diplomacy isn't completely dead. In a joint statement, Britain, France,
and Germany insisted the sanctions were, quote, not the end of diplomacy and urged Iran to, quote,
returned to compliance. According to EU foreign policy chief, Kayakalas,
she vowed enforcement of the snapback mechanism would begin, quote, without delay.
In Washington, Secretary of State Mark Arubio backed the snapback,
stressing that President Trump has made clear that sanctions must be enforced, quote,
immediately, though he noted the U.S. would engage in talks if Tehran negotiates in good faith.
Inside the Islamic regime, leaders struck a predictably defiant tone. President Musashkian
said Iran would remain a member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,
brushing off claims that the regime seeks nuclear weapons,
even as Tehran's enrichment levels have long exceeded civilian thresholds.
Iran's foreign ministry ridiculed the snapback as, quote,
legally baseless and unjustifiable.
Dismissing Western coverage is an invented, quote, monster to frighten the Iranian people.
Foreign Minister Abbasarachi, likewise tried to downplay the sanctions
as exaggerated threats meant to extract concessions.
But the regime's bluster collides with economic reality.
The Iranian currency, the Rial, slid to a record low over the weekend,
hammered by the combined weight of the new U.N. penalties
and existing U.S. sanctions that date back to Trump's 2018 exit from that JCPOA deal.
Meanwhile, Iran's parliamentary speaker threatened, quote,
serious reciprocal action against Britain, France, and Germany.
But the reality is Tehran's.
retaliatory toolbox looks increasingly bare, given its depleted missile supply, limited economic
leverage, and the still unknown state of its nuclear sites. Okay, turning to the U.S.,
President Trump announced that he plans to send troops to Portland, Oregon, intensifying his
administration's crackdown on crime in a city that he's long branded as lawless. The president
said over the weekend that he directed Secretary of War Pete Hegseth to, quote, provide all necessary
troops to secure federal facilities and restore order, warning the mission will have authority to use,
quote, full force if necessary. In a post-to-truth social, Trump went even further, describing Portland
as, quote, war-ravaged and claiming immigration enforcement sites were under siege by Antifa and, quote,
other domestic terrorists. Trump's fixation on Portland is nothing new. For years, the president has
used the city as a prime example of what he calls democratic mismanagement. Just last week, he told
reporters in the Oval Office that, quote, people die out there. It's amazing anybody lives there.
Trump has repeatedly branded the city a, quote, anarchist jurisdiction, vowing to continue to make
law and order a centerpiece of his second term by cleaning up the West Coast City. And the numbers
do tell the story. Portland's violent crime rate sits at 720 incidents per 100,000 residents,
far above the national average, while its property crime rate ranks second among major U.S.
cities at 30 per 100 residents, only behind Memphis, and that's another city that Trump has authorized
federal troop deployment for. This year, Portland is on pace to match 2024's highs in both violence
and theft. Pentagon officials admit they were blindsided by Trump's announcement. They had no
immediate clarity on whether National Guard or active duty troops would be used. Still, Pentagon spokesman
Sean Parnell stressed readiness, saying that the Department of War would, quote, stand
ready to mobilize U.S. military personnel and support DHS operations in Portland at the
president's direction. Oregon Democrats, unsurprisingly, lashed out. Governor Tina Kotech called the looming
deployment, quote, inconceivable and dismissed Trump's description of the city as war ravaged.
Kotech said she told the president directly there was no insurrection in Portland. Trump's reply
reportedly was, quote, well, let's keep talking. Kotech added that she's exploring.
legal options with the state attorney general to resist Trump's order. Portland's mayor warned a
troop presence would quote, harm commerce and prosperity and pledged to sign a joint statement with
regional mayors to announce what he labeled an occupation. Now, as an aside, I traveled to Portland
fairly regularly for business. I had family there as well. And the truth is that what's harmed
commerce and prosperity in that once great city is the crime, no consequences for bad behavior,
homelessness and poor city management. That's what has hurt Portland's commerce and prosperity.
For Trump, Portland is another battlefront in his wider crackdown on crime. In Washington,
D.C., his surge of federal law enforcement drew rare bipartisan credit for reducing crime. In Memphis,
Republican Governor Bill Lee welcomed the deployment, which is set to begin this week.
So with Portland's crime rate among the worst in the nation, Trump is once again betting that
federal troops on the street will spotlight Democratic failure on public safety and bolster his message,
that law and order can only be restored through stronger federal action. Well, that, of course,
and also city management that understands that their primary responsibility is ensuring the safety
of their residence. All right, coming up next in today's back of the brief, Tony Blair, the former
British Prime Minister, remember him, is being discussed as the possible head of a post-war governing
authority in Gaza. More on that when we come back. Hey, Mike Baker here. Let me ask you a question
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In today's back of the brief,
former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair has reemerged on the world stage.
This time, as the frontrunner to lead a post-war transitional authority in Gaza.
That's an idea reportedly carrying the White House's blessing.
According to reports in the Economist and Israeli media,
Blair is being floated to lead what's dubbed the Gaza International Transitional Authority,
That's a mouthful. It's a U.N. mandated body backed by Gulf states that would serve as Gaza's, quote,
supreme political and legal authority for up to five years before handing the reins to the Palestinians.
The design borrows from precedent. Modelled on U.N.-backed administrations in East Timor and Kosovo,
the authority would first operate out of Egypt and then move into Gaza, alongside a multinational force,
once conditions in the enclave stabilize. Blair's office acknowledged his role in disqualify.
but stressed he would not support any plan that displaced Palestinians.
Back in August, Blair joined a White House session with President Trump to hash out Gaza's future.
A meeting U.S. Middle East envoy Steve Whitkoff later praised as, quote, very comprehensive,
though he declined to further elaborate.
The proposal arrives amid a crowded field of competing ideas for the enclave.
Back in February, Trump toyed with the idea of a long-term U.S. ownership of Gaza
and an idea to recast the strip into the, quote, Riviera of the Middle East.
By March, Arab states countered with a reconstruction plan
led by independent Palestinian experts, warmly received by Hamas,
that's always a problem, and the Palestinian Authority,
but flatly rejected by Washington and Jerusalem.
Then in July came the New York Declaration,
a France-Saudy initiative endorsed by a majority of the UN General Assembly,
calling for a transitional committee under the Palestinian Authority's umbrellas.
so many competing ideas. But layered over these initiatives is Washington's latest blueprint.
Just last week at the UN General Assembly, Trump and Whitkoff unveiled the 21-point framework,
hailed by Arab leaders as the most serious U.S. peace push to date. The plan outlines principles
for ending the war, but left open the question of interim governance, making Blair's potential
appointment one piece of a still complex puzzle. For Blair, this wouldn't be uncharted territory.
After leaving office in 2007, he served on the Quartet of International Powers, the U.S.,
the U.N., where he focused on Palestinian economic development as part of a broader two-state
solution effort.
And that, my friends, is the president's a daily brief from Monday, the 29th of September.
If you have any questions or comments, and I hope you do, please reach out to me at pdb at
thefirsttv.com.
And I hope you had the chance to catch our latest episode of the PDB Situation Report this
weekend. Our guests included retired
Lieutenant General Ben Hodges,
former commanding officer of U.S. Army, Europe,
and Art Arthur from the Center
for Immigration Studies. We covered
a lot of turf. Now, you can catch
that and past episodes
on our YouTube channel at
President's Daily Brief, and of course
podcast platforms everywhere.
Finally, if you love the PDB
and honestly, how could you not?
Consider becoming a premium member. You'll get
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visit pdbbpremium.com.
I'm Mike Baker. I'll be back later today with the PDB afternoon bulletin. Until then,
stay informed. Stay safe. Stay cool.
