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The DSR Network

DSR Daily December 2: Trump Pardons Former Honduran President

The DSR Network

Chris Cotnoir

Government

4.51.7K Ratings

🗓️ 2 December 2025

⏱️ 25 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On the DSR Daily for Tuesday, we break down Trump’s pardon of the former president of Honduras, Hegseth and the White House scrambling in the fallout from a boat strike, Costco’s lawsuit against the administration, and more.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

To stay up to date on all the news that you need to know, there's no better place than right here on the DSR network.

0:07.0

And there's no better way to enjoy the DSR network than by becoming a member.

0:11.9

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0:21.4

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0:31.2

That's code DSR 2025 at the DSR network.com slash buy.

0:37.3

Thank you and enjoy the show.

0:39.7

Hello and welcome to the show.

0:56.8

Hello and welcome to the DSR Daily.

0:58.0

I'm David Rothkopf.

1:00.7

I'm joined by Riley Fessler and Minna Stein.

1:03.3

We're here to go over what's happening in the world.

1:06.5

What it means, Minna, kick us off.

1:13.5

Congressional and Pentagon officials are increasingly alarmed that the Trump administration may scapegoat Admiral Frank Bradley for a September 2nd strike in which two defenseless survivors on a

1:19.4

suspected drug smuggling boat were killed, following what witnesses say was defense secretary

1:24.3

Pete Hegseth's order to leave no one alive. Lawmakers from both parties have

1:29.4

opened investigations, seeking video, audio, and legal justifications, while military officials

1:35.2

expressed anger at the White House's statements, that the White House's statements appear to shift

1:40.1

responsibility onto service members. Legal experts and former military leaders say the killings

1:45.7

violated international law and could constitute murder or war crimes, intensifying scrutiny

1:50.9

as the administration withholds key evidence and defends the strike under a dispute claim

1:56.1

of armed conflict with drug cartel groups. I mean, look, you know, within the military right now, there's a debate about how to describe

2:05.0

everything that's going on with Venezuela. On the one hand, you could call it a snafu,

...

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