Chuck Holton
Politics • Culture • News
US Coast Guard Seizes 10-Ton Narco Sub - $500M Cartel Bust
February 12, 2026
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There is an incredible war being waged against the United States, and it isn’t being fought with tanks rolling across borders or missiles lighting up the sky. It’s being fought with narcotics, with logistics networks, with corruption, and with foreign actors who know exactly what they’re doing. And they’re winning far more often than most Americans want to admit.

The narco-sub that carried half a billion dollars

On February 9th and 10th, U.S. and Colombian forces intercepted a semi-submersible “narco-sub” in the Pacific, just off Colombia. If you’ve never seen one of these things, picture a low-slung, barely-above-the-waterline boat designed for one job: move massive loads of cocaine and disappear. They are built to be disposable, and there’s so much money involved that cartels can afford to lose a few and still keep the machine running.

This particular one was carrying 10 tons of cocaine—about 22,000 pounds—with an estimated street value around $441 million.

That is one boat.

And yes, it’s good news that it got pulled off the board. Four people were arrested, and the drugs were destroyed. But don’t let a headline like that lull you into thinking the problem is being solved, because what you’re looking at is a snapshot of a much larger industrial pipeline—one that exists because there is a market here at home, and because there are enemies abroad who see our addiction as a weapon.

A joint operation—and a quiet geopolitical shift

What made this interdiction particularly notable wasn’t just the amount, but the cooperation. It was a joint U.S.-Colombian operation, and that matters because it shows how fast geopolitics can shift when the right leverage gets applied.

At the beginning of the year, the U.S. and Colombia were not exactly sharing warm hugs and handwritten valentines. I was in Bogotá. I was up near Cúcuta. I heard plenty of “Yankee go home.” President Trump and Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro were at odds, and tensions were real.

Then, like Trump often does, he blew it up publicly, forced the conversation, and later smoothed it over behind closed doors. Petro came to the White House on February 3rd, they talked immigration and drugs, and apparently they left as friends.

I’ll be the first to tell you: it’s not classy. It’s not tactful. It’s not how diplomats would do it. But it can be effective—because suddenly you’ve got more Latin American countries looking at the United States and thinking, “He’s serious. We’d better get on the right side of this.”

The scale is what should scare you

Here’s the part that should make your stomach drop.

In the last year, U.S. agencies have seized almost $20 billion in street value of drugs. Hundreds of metric tons. A mind-boggling amount of narcotics stopped before they hit American neighborhoods.

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Live Call Recording: April 25, 2026

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Israel Makes a Commercial from its Critics

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Pahlavi Speaks Out Against Leftist Journalists

The Prince hits back at the spectacularly one-sided coverage the war is getting in Europe. Powerful stuff.

00:04:24
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

Victor Marx is on Fox News right now….

In my flesh, I'm introverted and anti-social, but in Christ, I am created for connection, as is every other child of God. Let us not then embrace worldly definitions (like I'm an introvert), and allow them to dictate our life courses, but rather the truth of Scripture and His very Spirit. For as God's workmanship (Ephesians 2:10), we are being renewed in His image (Colossians 3:10), and so, like Him, we are relational creatures, made to uniquely connect with and love both God and people. And only when we consecrate our lives to this holy purpose, can we begin to spiritually flourish in Christ Jesus.

Chuck Talks About His New Book
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The Illusion of Control in a War That’s Anything But Controlled

When you spend enough time around conflict—real conflict, not the sanitized version filtered through headlines—you begin to recognize a pattern that most people miss.

At the beginning of almost every war, there is a moment when one side appears to be in control. The strikes are precise, the objectives are clear, and the narrative is simple enough for public consumption. It looks organized. It looks deliberate. It looks like someone, somewhere, has a plan. But that moment never lasts. And what we are seeing right now is the beginning of that shift.

What Looks Stable… Usually Isn’t

From a distance, the situation appears manageable. Military assets are being deployed with precision, targets are being hit, and responses are being measured—at least on the surface. But stability in war is often an illusion. Because what you’re really looking at is not control—it’s timing. Timing between actions. Timing between responses. Timing between decisions that haven’t yet been made. And once that timing breaks down, everything changes. That’s when a conflict stops being predictable and starts becoming dangerous in ways that no one can fully control.

The Problem With Modern Warfare

One of the biggest misconceptions people have about modern conflict is that technological superiority guarantees a clean outcome. It doesn’t. What it does is create the appearance of control. Precision weapons, intelligence gathering, satellite surveillance—all of these tools allow a military to operate with incredible effectiveness in the early stages. But they do not eliminate uncertainty. In many ways, they simply push it further down the timeline. Because war is not just about destroying targets. It’s about influencing behavior. And behavior is far harder to predict than infrastructure.

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This War Isn’t Slowing Down—And That Changes Everything

In a recent briefing, President Donald Trump made something unmistakably clear: this war is not operating on a timeline, and it is not approaching a natural pause. Instead, it is accelerating in both scope and intensity, moving beyond limited strikes into a sustained campaign that is beginning to reshape the strategic landscape of the Middle East in real time.

That reality alone should force a reassessment of how this conflict is being understood, because what may have initially appeared to be a short, decisive military operation is now evolving into something far more complex, with consequences that extend well beyond the immediate battlefield.

From Targeted Strikes to Sustained Pressure

The early phase of the war was defined by overwhelming force, as the United States and its allies executed a series of large-scale precision strikes against Iranian military infrastructure. Thousands of targets were hit, including missile systems, naval assets, and weapons production facilities, resulting in the significant degradation of Iran’s conventional military capabilities.

In addition to the air campaign, the United States implemented a sweeping naval blockade designed to isolate Iran economically and militarily, effectively placing the entirety of its coastline under surveillance and control.

At first glance, these actions created the impression of a decisive and controlled campaign, one in which the outcome seemed largely predetermined by the imbalance of military power.

But wars are rarely decided in their opening phase.

A War That Has Moved to the Sea

What has emerged more recently—and what the latest developments highlight—is a shift toward a more dangerous and unpredictable phase centered on maritime conflict.

The Strait of Hormuz, one of the most strategically critical waterways in the world, has become a focal point of confrontation, with Iranian forces targeting commercial vessels and attempting to disrupt global shipping lanes. In response, the United States has escalated its posture, ordering naval forces to take direct and lethal action against Iranian boats engaged in mine-laying operations.

This directive represents more than a tactical adjustment; it signals a transition into a more aggressive and persistent form of engagement, one that increases the likelihood of miscalculation and rapid escalation.

The presence of multiple U.S. warships, aircraft, and mine-clearing operations in the region underscores the seriousness of the situation, as does the growing number of incidents involving attacks on commercial shipping.

What is unfolding in the Strait is not a sideshow—it is a central front in a conflict that now directly impacts global trade and energy markets.

Why Dominance Does Not Equal Resolution

Despite the clear military advantage held by the United States, there are signs that the conflict is entering a phase where superiority alone may not be enough to achieve a decisive outcome.

Iran’s naval capabilities have been severely degraded, and a large portion of its military infrastructure has been damaged or destroyed.

And yet, the continued ability of Iranian forces to disrupt shipping, deploy mines, and conduct asymmetric attacks reveals a deeper truth about modern warfare: even a weakened adversary can remain dangerous when it adapts its strategy.

This is particularly evident in the use of small, fast-attack boats and decentralized tactics, which allow Iran to operate in ways that are difficult to fully counter through conventional means.

In other words, the battlefield has shifted from one of direct confrontation to one of persistent disruption.

The Strategic Stakes Are Global

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