Chuck Holton
Politics • Culture • News
Chuck Holton is an American war correspondent, published author, and motivational speaker.
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September 18, 2025
Benjamin Netanyahu Explains the Israeli Economy

Netanyahu was once Israeli Finance Minister - and it shows. He understands a lot about economics, and is worth listening to in order to get a sense for where Israel's economy is headed.

00:08:49
September 12, 2025
Video of Kirk’s Killer

BREAKING: The FBI and state of Utah have just released video of the Charlie Kirk kiIIer escaping from the scene following the shooting

He jumped off the rooftop, moved quickly through the parking lot, and then began walking casually to blend in before entering a wooded area.

He was wearing converse tennis shoes, a shirt with an eagle, and a baseball cap with a triangle.

00:00:43
September 07, 2025
Houthi Drone Strikes Israel - Two Wounded

Three Houthi drones were fired at Israel on Sunday. Two were shot down and the third struck the airport in Eilat, Wounding to his Israelis and causing the airspace to be shut down.

00:00:07
Episode 622 - Field Producer Dennis Azato and Chuck Reminisce

My erstwhile field producer and cameraman Dennis Azato has accompanied me on ten years of adventures across the globe. Today he joins me in Ukraine and we spend some time remembering our many trips together.

Episode 622 - Field Producer Dennis Azato and Chuck Reminisce
Cyber Monday Sale is Live!

Now’s the perfect time to go deeper with The Hot Zone.

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Trusted Christian Stem Cell Treatment That Works

I’ve had stem cell therapy through WholeLIFE’s Infinity Matrix, and it improved my eyesight. Since then, several members of my family have done the same. My son is planning to be scheduled for treatment soon to address chronic back issues.

WholeLIFE is a Christian non-profit that offers stem cell therapy at reasonable prices through clinics across the U.S. It’s a quick IV procedure that’s helping people recover from serious health problems.

If you’re even slightly curious, I recommend reaching out to Rebecca Tomlet. She’s a trusted family member and liaison for WholeLIFE and can answer your questions or get you scheduled for a free phone consultation.
Email: [email protected]

Here are some results from others who’ve gone through it:

Christina, 55, Oklahoma
"After losing 30 lbs of muscle and battling severe Lyme disease symptoms, stem cell therapy reactivated my muscles, restored my balance, cleared my brain fog, and at 5 months gave me my life back."

William, 84, Panama
...

Verse For Today

I want my life to count. Don't you?

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Russia's Psychological Warfare Against Ukraine Escalates in 2025

I went to Ukraine to see if Ukraine is crumbling under the pressure from Russia or if they are holding their own. The people on the frontline suffer from drones attacking civilians and missiles striking every day, and the people want an end to the war that won't end with them under the rule of Russia. Because if that happens, the Ukrainians will be wiped out completely. 

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What Putin Really Wants — and Why the West Still Doesn’t Get It

We’re all watching the same headlines, scrolling the same feeds, and trying to make sense of the same chaos. And yet, for all the information at our fingertips, there are still some very basic questions we aren't answering honestly — like what Vladimir Putin actually wants, why this war in Ukraine keeps grinding on, and what it really means for the United States and our allies.

If you missed the LIVE, you can watch it HERE

Do We Still Keep Our Promises?

Whenever I go live, I like to ask people where they’re watching from. It’s not just a gimmick; it tells me something important. There are folks in Poland, Germany, Israel, Armenia, and all over the United States who have skin in the game with what we’re about to talk about. They’re not watching this as an abstract discussion. For some of them, this is about whether the ground under their feet will still belong to their country five years from now.

So I asked a simple question: Should the United States keep the commitments it has already made to its allies?

I’m not talking about getting involved in every brushfire conflict on the planet. I’m talking specifically about the promises we have already put our name on — treaties we signed, obligations we accepted, and expectations we created that other nations have built their security around.

The biggest of those, of course, is NATO — the North Atlantic Treaty Organization — created after World War II for one core purpose: to keep a check on Russia. That wasn’t paranoia. That was historical memory. Russia, whether under the czars, the Soviets, or Putin, has an almost compulsive habit of invading its neighbors. In just the last few decades, they’ve gone into Georgia, Chechnya, Crimea, and now full-on into Ukraine. They’ve made no secret of the fact that they believe they have a right to dominate not only their immediate borderlands, but the wider European sphere as well.

The problem is that while Russia has been very clear about its ambitions, the West has not been nearly as clear about its resolve.

 

The War You Don’t See: Russia’s Cognitive Offensive

If you only look at maps and front-line reports, you might conclude that Russia is stumbling. Their advances are slow and costly, their equipment is getting older, and they’re losing a lot of men. But you miss half the story if you stop there, because the real battlefield — the one Putin is betting on — is not just in trenches and ruined towns. It’s in the minds of voters in the United States and Europe.

Russian intelligence and state-backed actors have poured millions of dollars into what’s now being called cognitive warfare. They’ve set up SIM farms, bot farms, and propaganda networks across multiple continents. These aren’t just a few trolls on a laptop. We’re talking about industrial-scale operations — huge racks of phones and servers churning out fake profiles by the hundreds of thousands, posing as Texans, Brits, Indians, Germans, and everything else you can imagine.

Their purpose is simple and very specific:
to quietly steer public opinion away from supporting Ukraine, to paint NATO as the real villain, and to soften the West’s will to resist Russian aggression. They don’t need most people to become full-on pro-Russian. They just need enough people to become skeptical, weary, and divided. They know that democracies often defeat themselves from the inside long before an enemy ever crosses the border.

 

Why Putin Keeps Showing Up to “Peace Talks” He Doesn’t Mean

You may have noticed something about every “peace process” floated over the last two years. Russia walks in, sits down at the table, plays the reasonable partner for a few days or weeks, and then undercuts the deal or simply ignores it.

There’s a reason for that.

Putin’s strategy is not to end the war quickly. His strategy is to drag it out as long as possible while shaping the political terrain in the West. As long as he can keep the guns firing, he believes he can:

  • Grind down Ukraine’s manpower and infrastructure

  • Burn through Western political patience

  • Deepen divisions between Europe and the United States

  • Wait for elections or leadership changes to give him a more favorable climate

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The War in Israel Isn’t Over
Is this war actually winding down, or are we just in the eye of the storm?

From where I sit, the war in Israel is nowhere near over. It has simply changed shape. What started as a shock on October 7th has become a long, grinding contest across multiple fronts, and while the headlines may have grown tired, the stakes haven’t shrunk at all.

To understand what’s coming, you have to see the whole board, not just the one square called Gaza.

 

Five Fronts, One War

Israel is not dealing with a single isolated conflict. It is facing at least five interconnected fronts, each of them fragile and potentially explosive:

  1. Gaza

  2. Judea and Samaria (what the world insists on calling the West Bank)

  3. Lebanon

  4. Syria

  5. Iran and its proxy network

They overlap, feed into one another, and are all being influenced—directly or indirectly—by Tehran. When people talk about a “ceasefire,” they’re usually talking about Gaza. But if you zoom out, you’ll notice there has never really been a ceasefire at all.

 

Gaza: A “Ceasefire” in Name Only

Let’s start with Gaza, because that’s where most cameras still point, at least when they bother to look.

On paper, there’s been a ceasefire. On the ground, Hamas has been shooting at Israeli troops almost every day. There have been firefights, mortars, IED attacks, and at least a few IDF soldiers killed since that so-called pause went into effect.

The Israelis have divided the Strip into zones: a red zone where Hamas still controls the ground, and a green zone under IDF control. You’d think the green zone would be relatively stable, but in reality Hamas fighters keep emerging from tunnel shafts inside those areas and ambushing Israeli patrols. More than forty of those fighters have been killed in these incidents alone.

So if you’re picturing neat front lines and a quiet truce, erase that image. Gaza is still a warzone, it’s just a slower, dirtier, more subterranean version of the earlier stages.

The map we’re looking at right now will probably define Gaza for the foreseeable future. Israel is unlikely to pull completely out of the green zone anytime soon. If it did, there are at least nine local militias in that territory—tribal groups that hate Hamas—who would instantly start fighting for control. You’d see a civil war inside a war.

On top of that, Hamas still holds weapons, still has command structures, and still has fighters who believe, very sincerely, that Israel has no right to exist. That’s why Israel’s second war aim—after bringing the hostages home—was to dismantle Hamas as a fighting force. They have not finished that job, and they know it.

 

The Hostages and the Narrative of “Israel is Losing”

A lot of pundits you see online—especially people like Douglas Macgregor, Scott Ritter, and some of the usual talking heads—keep repeating the line that “Israel has lost this war” and is collapsing from within.

That claim doesn’t hold up.

Israel has managed to secure the return of every single hostage except one. When this war began, I honestly didn’t think that was possible. The chaos in Gaza, the tunnel networks, the sheer brutality of Hamas made it seem almost inevitable that many captives would simply disappear—killed, buried, or used as human shields until the end.

Yet here we are: one hostage still unaccounted for, and even his remains may soon be recovered. That is an extraordinary outcome by any military or intelligence standard, and it is a victory no matter what the doom-mongers say.

At the same time, Israel has been quietly preparing for the next phase. Their defensive capabilities are actually stronger now than they were on October 6th. The Iron Beam laser defense system—something the United States and Russia both struggled to make operational—is finally being fielded. It’s not science fiction anymore; it’s an actual working layer in their air-defense umbrella. That’s going to matter a lot if this war expands into a full regional conflict.

So no, Israel is not crumbling. It is bruised, deeply divided internally in some ways, but militarily more ready than at any time since the fighting began.

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