As others are saying, you need to make sure all the colleges on your list have ANY offers of the sort you need. But I understand giving it a shot even if they only have a few.
An additional note: I would just keep in mind most highly-selective holistic review US colleges are in the broader liberal arts tradition. This implies certain things about how they see an undergraduate education, not least the “general education” part of that education, meaning the stuff outside of just your major. They are also typically looking for students who will contribute a lot to their college community outside of just academics.
I am mentioning this because like many highly successful International students, your profile reads as very strong and focused in a certain specific cluster of academic areas. This is usually the optimal strategy for admissions to universities in most of the world.
But in the US–while this is not necessarily a bad thing per se, it is also not necessarily sufficient for something as competitive as the offers you are hoping to get. Again, they are going to be looking for kids who are interested in a broader education too, and also kids who are likely to contribute a lot non-academically.
Again, in most of the world, that is a non-concern. But I would keep that in mind as you are applying to US colleges.