ERIK PRINCE: Off Leash update 30 Dec
Off Leash update 30 Dec
VENEZUELA
•Pres. Trump acknowledged that a CIA drone strike about a week ago destroyed a Venezuelan dock allegedly used by Tren de Aragua drug traffickers to export their wares, marking what seems to be the first known land strike on Venezuela.
•Trump…— ErikDPrince (@realErikDPrince) December 30, 2025
VENEZUELA
•Pres. Trump acknowledged that a CIA drone strike about a week ago destroyed a Venezuelan dock allegedly used by Tren de Aragua drug traffickers to export their wares, marking what seems to be the first known land strike on Venezuela.
•Trump declined to share more details, and Nicolas Maduro’s government has only referred to the incident obliquely – perhaps to downplay concerns about escalation and calls for retaliation.
•Separately, another Operation Southern Spear boat strike in the eastern Pacific killed two yesterday.
UKRAINE
•Pres. Zelensky reported that Pres. Trump offered Ukraine 15 years of security guarantees during their meeting on Sunday. That’s far short of the indefinite guarantees Zelensky had sought, but Zelensky seemed content to compromise in the interest of resolving the remaining bigger differences of position.
•Rumors suggest Trump may next host a new round of negotiations next month with Zelensky as well as European leaders (some of whom joined by phone this time).
ISRAEL
•Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu visited Pres. Trump at Mar-a-Lago yesterday for talks that were amiable but produced no big breakthroughs on Trump’s Gaza peace plan.
•Netanyahu secured one key win, though: he got Trump’s assurance that the U.S. would back Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear sites if Iran continues to develop its weapons programs.
IRAN
•Protesters demonstrated in Tehran yesterday against rising inflation after preliminary December data showed an annualized inflation rate of 42.2%.
•Pres. Pezeshkian has repeatedly conceded that he’s out of ideas to fix Iran’s ailing economy, and the resignation of his central bank chief yesterday certainly won’t help.
•An academic paraphrased in the NYT sees two ways Iran can escape the looming inflationary spiral: “It could change its relationship with the United States in exchange for relief on sanctions…or drastically cut government spending, but neither option appears likely.” Instead, further inflation seems more probable.
CHINA
•China is seeking to supplant the U.S. as the lead peacemaker between Thailand and Cambodia. After Pres. Trump claimed a role in closing the initial 72-hour truce, China stepped in to host the next round of talks on a more permanent ceasefire yesterday and today.
•Beijing’s foreign ministry implicitly boasted that its mediation style was less pushy than the U.S. approach: “China’s efforts to promote peace and dialogue never impose on others or overstep its bounds.”



































