Chuck Holton
Politics • Culture • News
Chuck Holton is an American war correspondent, published author, and motivational speaker.
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Hezbollah Rocket Attacks on Christian Village

This was from an attack on the Maronite Christian Village of Jish in Northern Israel, where I am staying today. This happened about two weeks ago.

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Day 2 Syria
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Disney Land for Men in Iraq.
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Pray for the Kurdish people in Syria

A great evil is unfolding across Syria as forces loyal to Ahmed Al Sharaa attack the Kurdish people in eastern Syria. Jihadi fighters are now unarmed and are allying themselves with ISIS once again, killing and beheading civilians in the streets. They also released thousands of ISIS fighters from prisons that were being guarded by the Kurds.

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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
Calling Young Men to Lead: Join The Forge This Summer

We’re launching our very first Forge Field Leadership Camp this summer!

The Forge is a one-week, field-based camp for young men (ages 13–17), built on a biblical foundation. It’s designed to train real-world skills—navigation, survival, building, leadership—while shaping character, discipline, and faith.

This is more than a summer camp. It’s a call to rise.

Led by veterans and experienced mentors, these young men will be challenged to grow stronger in every way—physically, mentally, and spiritually.

Dates: August 2–9
Ages: 13–17
Apply now: https://www.frontierforge.org/

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Highly Recommend Subscribing to Alana Moor's New Podcast

Want to hear a shocking, horrifying and amazing story of a Canadian girl who found herself in a Panamanian prison for four years? Check out my friend Alana Moor's new podcast. Seriously, this girl has an incredible story. Go subscribe and give her some love.

https://www.youtube.com/@FromScratchWithAlanaMoor

“If you notice this, call the police.
[YouTube] The Watch Floor”

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Sad News
In Loving Memory of Lia Brits

With deep sorrow, we share that precious Lia Brits, at the tender age of 9 years old,

has passed away after her courageous battle with cystic fibrosis.

Because of your extraordinary generosity, and despite many unforeseen obstacles,

Lia was able to receive the stem cells. However, just before her therapy began, she

contracted an unexpected and aggressive infection. This complication caused a delay

in treatment and led to a rapid and devastating decline.

Lia was receiving care in a severely under-resourced hospital environment, where

critical limitations made an already fragile situation even more difficult. Despite every

effort made, circumstances beyond our control unfolded, and three days ago she went

home to the Lord.

Your donations made a profound and tangible difference during this unimaginably

difficult season. They provided critical resources and brought relief and necessary

support to Lia’s family. The Brits family is deeply grateful for your compassion,

generosity, and faithful prayers.

Our hearts are broken, yet we trust the Lord who now holds Lia in His care. Please

continue to pray for her family in this time of deep grief.

“To be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord.” 2 Corinthians 5:8

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Reporting From Syria, But The Bigger Story is Back Home

I’m coming to you from northeastern Syria—out here in a town called Kamishi—where the last couple of days have been… eventful. The kind of “eventful” you feel in your chest before you can put it into words. There are things shifting on the ground, and when you’re standing in the middle of it, you can tell when the air changes.

But the truth is, what I’m watching overseas isn’t the biggest immediate threat to Americans right now.

The bigger story is back home—quiet, underreported, and sitting right inside the United States: illegal biolabs being discovered in residential neighborhoods, linked again and again to Chinese nationals and networks tied back—directly or indirectly—to the PRC.

If you’ve missed the headlines (or noticed how quickly they disappeared), you’re not alone. That’s exactly the problem.

 

 

“Biolab” shouldn’t be a scary word… until it is

Let’s lower the temperature for a second, because “biolab” has become a loaded term. A “biolab” can be a veterinary clinic lab. It can be a hospital lab. It can be a university lab doing legitimate work.

But here’s where it becomes a serious problem:

When authorities find unlicensed, clandestine labs in houses or warehouses—stocked with unlabeled vials, unknown agents, and unsafe storage—then we are no longer talking about normal science. We’re talking about a public safety threat.

And when those operations keep showing ties to PRC-linked individuals and funding streams, we’re talking about something bigger than “some guy doing weird experiments in his garage.”

 

The Las Vegas bust: what we know so far

The newest case—just days ago—was in the Las Vegas area. A SWAT team and the FBI executed search warrants after reports of a possible biological laboratory. Investigators found refrigerators containing vials of unknown liquids, unmarked and unidentified, and hazmat teams were brought in. At least one person on scene was detained, apparently a caretaker, and investigators traced links to an LLC associated with a Chinese national using an alias.

Here’s the key point:

Even before we know exactly what’s in those vials, we already know this is serious—because unlabeled biological materials in a residential setting force responders into a worst-case posture. Testing becomes slower, more dangerous, and more complicated, because you can’t assume anything.

And Las Vegas isn’t isolated.

 

Smuggling biological materials into U.S. research ecosystems

When you back up and look over the last couple of years, the same themes repeat:

  • Biological materials brought in illegally

  • False statements to Customs and Border Protection

  • Shipments concealed to evade inspection

  • Connections to PRC institutions, or individuals with CCP/PLA ties

  • Work funneling toward U.S. lab capacity—because our labs are often more advanced

Some of the cases discussed involve smuggling parasite samples (including roundworm-related materials) and a dangerous crop fungus. Even if you strip away speculation, one fact remains:

Smuggling biological agents into the United States is not a paperwork mistake. It’s a red-flag behavior.

And the agricultural angle matters more than most people realize. If someone wanted to cause chaos and suffering without firing a single shot, they wouldn’t start with tanks. They’d start with food supply disruption—crops, livestock, transport, processing.

That’s not sensationalism. That’s simply understanding how fragile modern systems can be when a single link breaks.

Reedley, California: the case that should have changed everything

The most chilling example brought up in the discussion is the earlier discovery of an unlicensed lab in Reedley, California—uncovered in late 2022 and publicly discussed later as investigators tested and expanded the case.

What was found there was the kind of thing that should make every American ask: How did this exist on U.S. soil at all?

Reports discussed:

  • Large numbers of unmarked vials

  • A range of pathogens identified in testing

  • Hazardous chemicals improperly stored

  • Medical waste

  • Improvised, unsafe lab conditions

  • A significant number of genetically altered mice used for research purposes

Whether the operation was profit-driven, espionage-driven, or both, you don’t end up with that kind of setup by accident.

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When the Night Gets Quiet in Syria

It’s about eight o’clock at night in northeast Syria when I go live.

Outside, the darkness is thick and the cold has teeth. Inside, the concrete walls hold the day’s chill like a grudge. I stay indoors—not for comfort, but because this is what nights in conflict zones tend to do: they sharpen everything. Sounds carry. Thoughts linger. And you learn to pay attention.

Before I talk about Iran, Syria, or the wars that may or may not start in the coming days, I stop and ask people to pray.

Because none of this matters if we forget the human cost.

There’s a nine-year-old girl named Leah. She has cystic fibrosis. Many of you helped raise money so she could receive stem cell therapy—hope, in a syringe. But tonight she’s in a hospital bed instead, fighting a lung infection, hooked to high-dose oxygen. If she can’t stabilize, she may lose her chance at treatment altogether.

So we pray. For healing. For wisdom for the doctors. For strength for her family. For a miracle.

 

A Regime That Looks Strong—Until You Look Closer

Iran is on the edge of something big.

From where I’m sitting, it looks less like a sudden crisis and more like a long-delayed reckoning. The United States is clearly positioning itself for a major military operation, and Israel would almost certainly be involved. Regional players—Jordan, the UAE—are lining up. Western European aircraft are moving. Carrier strike groups are already in theater, with more on the way.

On paper, Iran is preparing for war. In reality, the regime is barely holding itself together. Its economy is in freefall. Inflation is crushing ordinary people. Savings are evaporating. Paychecks don’t stretch far enough to cover food, transportation, or schooling. Water insecurity—unpredictable schedules, low pressure, rationing—adds another layer of daily anxiety.

People are in the streets not because they want chaos, but because the math of survival no longer works. And instead of fixing any of this, the regime keeps doing what it has always done: funding proxies, posturing against Israel, and murdering its own people when they dare to protest. From the outside, authoritarian states often look solid. Fear does that. Propaganda does that. But when people keep marching even after you try to kill them, that’s not strength anymore. That’s desperation.

 

Water Teaches You Things in the Middle East

Here in Syria, water doesn’t come from a faucet you trust. You don’t build a house and assume the city will provide. You build a cistern—usually on the roof—and make it as large as you can afford. When electricity flickers on, you pump water upward. When the city supply isn’t enough, you pay a truck to bring water from somewhere else, no questions asked, at a price that hurts. That’s normal here. It’s becoming normal in parts of Iran too. And every workaround—every truck delivery, every rationing schedule—is another quiet stressor that erodes patience and trust. Revolutions don’t always start with slogans. Sometimes they start with empty buckets.

 

Oil, China, and a Narrow Lifeline

Iran still exports oil. That fact gets repeated a lot, usually as proof that sanctions “don’t work.” But context matters. Those exports are increasingly concentrated. Most of that oil goes to one customer: China. And China buys it cheap, because Iran has no leverage. That relationship keeps the regime afloat—but it also makes it fragile. People keep saying that if war breaks out, Iran will close the Strait of Hormuz. It sounds dramatic. It makes headlines. But it ignores a basic reality: China’s oil supply depends on that route. Shut it down, and Iran strangles its best customer. And in a real shooting war, Iran’s navy—while capable of harassment—would not survive long against what the U.S. can bring to bear. Threats are easy. Sustained control is another matter entirely.

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