Chuck Holton
News • Politics • Culture
Chuck Holton is an American war correspondent, published author, and motivational speaker.
Interested? Want to learn more about the community?
Great Sunset Tonight in Panama

There’s no place like Home

post photo preview
Interested? Want to learn more about the community?
What else you may like…
Videos
Podcasts
Posts
Articles
IDF Operating in Hebron

Notice how they are running down the middle of the street. Normally in urban operations, you want to move from cover to cover, but when you are moving, you don’t want to stay along a wall because bullets tend to travel down the wall and you are more likely to get hit. It’s very difficult to shoot a man who is running.

00:00:09
Panama’s Migrant Crisis: Stranded After U.S. Deportations

Dozens of migrants from China, Russia, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, and Nepal were released in Panama after being deported from the U.S. Now, they face uncertainty with no money, no resources, and a 30-day deadline to leave.

“We don’t have money, we can’t do anything. And they (IOM) said that we are responsible (for ourselves),” said Hayatullah Omagh, a 29-year-old Afghan migrant.

These migrants chose to bypass multiple countries to reach the U.S. but were caught and deported under a deal between the Trump administration, Panama, and Costa Rica. While some can extend their stay by 60 days, returning home is not an option for many.

The big NGOs that helped them get to the U.S. border are now largely absent, leaving them to navigate their next steps alone. Having attempted illegal entry, they must now decide on their second choice.

For more on immigration policies, visit U.S. Customs and Border Protection or International Organization for Migration.

00:01:41
Chuck on Newsmax

With Tom Basile

00:02:09
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
Israel Delivers Aid to Syrian Druze

Over 10,000 packages in recent weeks.

post photo preview
Trump Makes Military Plans to Take Panama Canal?

"I'll take 'bad ideas' for $100, Alex!"

The Trump Administration has reportedly ordered U.S. Southern Command to begin drafting military options for the Panama Canal, with plans including the forcible seizure of the canal by military means, similar to parts of “Operation Just Cause” in 1989, or a defensive partnership between the U.S. Armed Forces and the Panamanian Public Forces.

I mean, I guess if Trump wants to be the only US President ever to invade an ally, then have at it, but I don't think they'd be happy with the results. If the canal even kept operating after all 11,000 Panamanian employees (the only ones who know how to operate today's canal) walk off the job, the entire world would likely boycott it.

post photo preview
Venezuela to Stop Accepting U.S. Deportation Flights Amid Sanctions Fight

Tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela are escalating—again. The Venezuelan government has reportedly told the Trump administration it will no longer accept deportation flights after Washington ramped up economic sanctions, forcing Chevron and other foreign oil companies to leave the country.

Why Is Venezuela Pushing Back?

In recent months, Venezuela took back three groups of deported nationals, including flights from Texas, Guantánamo, and Mexico. But now, with the U.S. cracking down on its oil industry, Caracas is refusing further cooperation.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration has revoked Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Venezuelans, putting 600,000 people at risk of deportation. This move has sparked controversy, especially among Florida lawmakers who support tougher sanctions on Venezuela but opposed the TPS rollback.

What’s Next?

With Venezuela refusing deportation flights and Washington tightening sanctions, the situation is getting more complicated. For Venezuelan migrants ...

post photo preview
post photo preview
The Syrian Conflict:
Alawites, Hezbollah, and the Struggle for Power

 

The Syrian conflict is one of the most complex and misunderstood wars of the modern era. While recent massacres of Alawites and Christians have drawn international condemnation, it is crucial to understand the deeper historical and sectarian dynamics at play. The Assad regime, dominated by the Alawite minority, has long been allied with Hezbollah, an Iran-backed Lebanese militant group, to maintain power in Syria. Meanwhile, the Sunni majority has suffered decades of brutal repression, and the Christian minority finds itself caught in the crossfire, suffering regardless of who is in control.

The Sunni-Shia Divide in Syria

Syria’s population is primarily Sunni Muslim (about 74%), but its ruling elite belongs to the Alawite sect, a branch of Shia Islam. Historically, the Alawites were a marginalized group, but under French colonial rule (1920-1946), they gained influence through military service. By the time Hafez al-Assad seized power in 1970, the Alawites had entrenched themselves within the military, intelligence services, and government bureaucracy.

This created deep resentment among the Sunni majority, who viewed Alawite rule as illegitimate and oppressive. The Sunni-Shia divide has been a driving force of conflict in Syria, with Sunnis leading opposition movements and Islamist groups seeking to overthrow the regime, while Alawites, fearing persecution, have clung to power by any means necessary.

The Assad Regime’s Alliance with Hezbollah

Hezbollah, a Lebanese Shia militia and proxy of Iran, has played a crucial role in propping up the Assad regime. While Alawites and Shia Muslims historically had distinct religious traditions, Iran has embraced Alawites as part of the Shia fold to expand its influence in Syria.

Hezbollah’s Military Role in Syria

When the Syrian civil war erupted in 2011, Hezbollah intervened decisively on Assad’s behalf. The group provided:

  • Elite fighters to reinforce Assad’s struggling army.

  • Urban warfare specialists to retake rebel-held cities.

  • Advanced weaponry and logistics supplied by Iran.

  • Assassination squads to eliminate opposition leaders.

One of Hezbollah’s most significant interventions was during the Battle of Qusayr (2013), a strategic town on the Lebanese border. Hezbollah fighters spearheaded the regime’s assault, demonstrating how deeply the Alawite regime depended on its Shia allies.

Alawite Rule and the Systematic Persecution of Sunnis

While recent killings of Alawites by Sunni jihadist groups have garnered international attention, it is essential to recognize that the Assad regime’s repression of Sunnis has been far more extensive and systematic. Some key examples include:

  • The Hama Massacre (1982): Hafez al-Assad’s forces killed between 10,000 and 40,000 Sunnis to crush an Islamist uprising.

  • The Syrian Civil War (2011-Present): Assad’s forces have bombed Sunni-majority cities, used chemical weapons (e.g., Ghouta, 2013), and displaced millions.

  • The Role of Pro-Regime Militias: Alawite militias like the Shabiha carried out mass executions, rapes, and looting in Sunni neighborhoods.

Despite these atrocities, many Western observers fail to see the Alawite regime as a primary aggressor, instead focusing on the war crimes of jihadist factions. However, the Syrian government’s brutality fueled the rise of extremism, as moderate Sunni opposition groups were wiped out or radicalized in response to the regime’s scorched-earth policies.

The Forgotten Suffering of Syria’s Christians

Syria’s Christian minority has been disproportionately affected by the war, suffering no matter who is in charge.

Assad’s Repression of Christians

While Assad has portrayed himself as a protector of Christians, his regime has also persecuted Christian political activists, imprisoned church leaders who refused to endorse him, and bombed Christian-majority areas when they aligned with the opposition.

Jihadist Persecution of Christians

On the other hand, radical Sunni groups like ISIS and Al-Nusra Front have targeted Christians, forcing them to convert, flee, or be executed. Christian churches have been destroyed, and entire communities wiped out.

The Exodus of Syrian Christians

Before the war, Christians made up about 10% of Syria’s population (1.7 million people). Today, that number has plummeted to 300,000-500,000, with most fleeing to Europe or Lebanon. More than a million Christians have been displaced, caught between the brutality of the regime and the extremism of Islamist groups.

Conclusion: A War of Power, Not Just Religion

The war in Syria is not just a battle between Sunnis and Shia-aligned Alawites; it is a power struggle where religious identity is often exploited for political gain. The Assad regime and Hezbollah’s alliance has ensured the Alawites’ grip on power, while Sunnis continue to resist their rule. Meanwhile, Syria’s Christians have been devastated, used as pawns by all sides and left without a safe future in their own homeland.

Understanding these dynamics is crucial to seeing the full picture of Syria’s ongoing tragedy. The Alawites may face retaliation today, but for decades, they were the ruling elite who repressed millions. Meanwhile, the Christians—who posed no political threat—continue to suffer, no matter who controls Damascus.

Read full Article
post photo preview
The USAID-Terror Connection
This isn't a scandal--it's a feature

For years, we’ve exposed how the U.S. government has been funneling taxpayer dollars to organizations with ties to terrorism. The patterns were obvious. The red flags were everywhere. And yet, Washington kept writing the checks, ignoring the warnings from watchdogs and intelligence experts.

Now, the Middle East Forum has provided undeniable proof of what we’ve known all along. Their multi-year investigation has uncovered at least $164 million in approved grants to radical organizations, with $122 million going directly to groups aligned with designated terrorist entities. This isn’t some bureaucratic oversight—it’s a deliberate, systemic problem that’s been allowed to fester for decades.

The good news? The pipeline is finally being shut down.


USAID: A Global ATM for Terrorists

USAID—the agency that claims to provide humanitarian aid—has in reality served as a slush fund for terrorist-adjacent groups for years. This investigation uncovered millions of taxpayer dollars being handed directly to organizations operating in Hamas-controlled Gaza—and not by accident.

  • USAID officials have visited the offices of Hamas-linked groups and launched joint programs with them.
  • USAID funding has gone to organizations whose leaders have called for their land to be “cleansed from the impurity of the Jews.”
  • USAID beneficiaries openly glorify violence and celebrate terrorist attacks.

The worst part? The federal government knew all of this. And still, the money kept flowing.


State Department Complicity in Domestic Terror Funding

It’s not just foreign terrorist groups benefitting from U.S. taxpayer dollars. This report also confirms that the State Department has been funneling money to radical domestic organizations that fuel extremism right here in the U.S.

Take the Tides Foundation, which members of Congress have accused of funding pro-Hamas, anti-Jewish violence on college campuses across America. The very same mob that harasses Jewish students and disrupts universities? Subsidized with your tax dollars.

Then there are the major aid organizations like World Vision and Catholic Relief Services, which receive billions in federal funding but partner with terror-linked groups over and over again. These are organizations that, at best, don’t bother to vet their recipients—and at worst, know exactly where the money is going and do it anyway.


Systemic Corruption, Zero Oversight

The MEF report also confirms how deeply broken the system is when it comes to transparency and accountability.

  • USAID records are incomplete, missing, or outright deleted.
  • Millions in grants go to “anonymous beneficiaries” in terrorism hotbeds.
  • No real vetting process exists to ensure U.S. money isn’t funding radicals.

USAID’s own Office of Inspector General (OIG) has repeatedly warned about the failures in the system—stating outright that armed groups are taking advantage of U.S. funding, and that USAID’s grant process fails to catch extremist ties.

But for years, no one in charge cared enough to fix it.


Now, It’s Finally Being Shut Down

For those of us who have been calling this out for years, the revelations in this report are no surprise. What is different now is that, for the first time, something is actually being done about it.

The Trump administration is dismantling USAID as we know it, freezing most of its operations, and gutting the bloated bureaucracy that has kept this corruption alive. The decision to roll much of USAID’s functions into the State Department is a direct response to this kind of waste, fraud, and terror funding.

For years, the establishment resisted shutting down USAID’s corrupt pipeline, even as proof of its failures piled up. Now, the money is finally drying up.

Of course, there are critics—those who claim that cutting off funding will hurt genuine humanitarian efforts. But let’s be clear: there was nothing “humanitarian” about subsidizing organizations tied to Hamas. The same bureaucrats and NGO leaders who enabled this fraud are the ones crying the loudest now that their gravy train is ending.


This is Vindication—But the Fight Isn’t Over

This MEF report is the final nail in the coffin of any argument that USAID was just making mistakes or that these grants were slipping through the cracks. This was deliberate. This was systemic. And we’ve been right about it all along.

But even with USAID being dismantled, the fight isn’t over.

  • How much of this funding has already fallen into the wrong hands?
  • What other agencies are still enabling this corruption?
  • Will the same bad actors just find new ways to funnel money to extremists?

USAID may be going away, but the people who allowed this to happen are still in Washington, and they will try to keep the money flowing any way they can.

This is why full transparency and accountability must be the next step.

  • Every single grant tied to terrorism must be exposed.
  • Every bureaucrat who enabled this must be held accountable.
  • Every agency that funds NGOs must be forced to show exactly where the money is going.

Shutting down USAID’s corruption is a major victory, but if we don’t stay on top of this, the same criminals will just find a new way to keep the scam going.

The truth is finally out. The pipeline is shutting down. Now, it’s time to make sure it stays that way.

Read full Article
Surviving the Hot Zone: A Firsthand Look at Israel’s Ongoing Conflict

I just returned from Israel, and let me tell you—things are heating up over there. The sheer volume of daily attacks coming out of Judea, Samaria, and Hebron is staggering, but it barely makes international news anymore. While there, I got an incredible firsthand look at what Israelis are facing, and I want to share one story that highlights the reality on the ground.

An American Marine vs. a Terrorist with a WWII Submachine Gun

One of the most remarkable interviews I did was with Dave, a former U.S. Marine who made aliyah to Israel and now serves as a security coordinator in Samaria. A few days ago, he was driving with his wife when a terrorist armed with a World War II submachine gun stepped into the road and opened fire on their windshield.

But Dave wasn’t your average target. He had his hand on his weapon, trained and ready. The second the gunman fired, Dave shot back through his own windshield, hitting the attacker multiple times and neutralizing him. If it had been almost anyone else, they likely would have died on the spot.

This story underscores why Israelis need self-defense training. While I was there, I visited a new training center being built to help Israeli civilians prepare for these daily threats. It’s not a luxury—it’s a necessity.

Israel’s Response: Destroying Terrorist Homes, But Is It Enough?

Israel’s current policy is to demolish the homes of terrorists as a deterrent. The problem? It doesn’t work. The Palestinian Authority immediately rebuilds these houses, and the families receive financial rewards. Instead of stopping terror, this system encourages it.

According to Dave, Israel should take a more decisive approach—seizing entire neighborhoods where terrorists come from and driving out their supporters. Harsh? Maybe. But in a war for survival, half-measures won’t cut it.

The Chaos in Syria: Massacres and Misinformation

Meanwhile, Syria is in flames. Reports indicate that over 10,000 people have been massacred, but independent verification is nearly impossible. Terror groups like Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS)—a rebranded version of Al-Qaeda—are systematically wiping out Alawites and Christians.

What makes it worse is the flood of fake videos spreading online. Russian, Iranian, and North Korean-backed bot farms are muddying the waters, making it nearly impossible to separate truth from fiction. This is modern information warfare, and it's working.

The U.S. Pullout from Syria: A Dangerous Power Vacuum

One of the biggest geopolitical shifts happening right now is the U.S. withdrawal from Syria. The Kurdish forces, once strong U.S. allies, are now being forced to submit to HTS just to survive. That means thousands of ISIS fighters currently imprisoned could soon be back on the battlefield.

As I’ve warned for years, when America creates a power vacuum, extremists fill it. We may soon regret pulling out, just like we did in Afghanistan.

 

 

 

Read full Article
See More
Available on mobile and TV devices
google store google store app store app store
google store google store app tv store app tv store amazon store amazon store roku store roku store
Powered by Locals