Inside Venezuela’s most powerful narco-terror gang ‘Cartel of the Suns’ in Trump’s crosshairs… & why it’s untouchable

VENEZUELAN tyrant Nicolas Maduro is not merely complicit in organised crime — he leads it.

From generals to judges, the very top of Venezuela’s political and military elite are deeply embedded in a powerful, sprawling cocaine trafficking network, experts say.

Dr César Alvarez states Nicolas Maduro leads the Cartel de los SolesCredit: Getty
Maduro’s military and officials accused of driving and protecting the cocaine trade through the cartelCredit: AP

Cartel de los Soles, translated as Cartel of The Suns, isn’t a cartel in the traditional sense.

It’s a web of Venezuelan military, intelligence and political elites accused of taxing, protecting and moving cocaine with state resources.

With parts of Maduro’s government deeply enmeshed in the drug trade, the lines between state power and organised crime have been blurred.

Dr César Alvarez, from Charles Sturt University, told The Sun: “Without a doubt, the leader of Cartel de los Soles is Nicolás Maduro.

Read more on the cartel wars

DRUG BLITZ

Trump cuts contact with Venezuela as US readies to step up ‘land war’


GOING TO WAR

US ‘prepares to seize ports’ in Venezuela as Trump declares war on cartels

“The involvement of the highest-ranking members of his military has been clearly demonstrated that not only government officials, but all the leaders from other criminal groups, not only in Venezuela but in Colombia, have been clearly established.”

US prosecutors first indicted Maduro in 2020 on narco-terrorism charges, accusing him and senior officials of conspiring with Colombia’s FARC guerrillas to “flood” the United States with cocaine.

The case alleges Venezuela’s state institutions — from the military and intelligence services to the judiciary — were weaponised to enable multi-ton shipments and shield traffickers from prosecution.

Maduro denies the charges and calls them politically motivated.

But a recent guilty plea by Hugo “El Pollo” Carvajal, the regime’s former intelligence chief, bolstered claims that elements of the state apparatus directly facilitated cocaine flights and armed the FARC.

His comments come as Donald Trump declared war on the cartels, reportedly moving US naval and air assets closer to Venezuelan shores in a bid to eventually seize ports and airfields in the Latin American country.

In recent weeks, tensions between Washington and Caracas have reached their most dangerous point in years.

Trump escalated the fight beyond rhetoric, declaring the US in a “non-international armed conflict” with cartel groups and cutting any sort of diplomatic contact with the country.

That rare legal framing, combined with designating several cartels and Tren de Aragua as foreign terrorist organisations, gives Washington broad wartime powers to strike, detain and kill suspected traffickers without trial.

Stealth F-35s, B-52 bombers, Reaper drones, eight warships and even a nuclear-powered submarine are lurking off Maduro’s coast.

Some 10,000 troops, military helicopters and intelligence assets from the CIA are also keeping a close eye on Venezuela, with Pentagon planners reportedly preparing contingencies to seize ports and airfields if ordered.

This week, Trump also sent America’s deadliest warplanes to Venezuela’s doorstep.

Two B-1B Lancer bombers – each capable of unleashing 75,000lb of ordnance – flew from Texas on Thursday, cutting close to Venezuelan airspace in a thunderous show of force.

Meanwhile, Maduro has made a public plea for calm after Trump warned that US forces were ready to carry out strikes on Venezuelan soil if his regime continued shielding drug traffickers.

The Pentagon confirmed at least seven drug-smuggling vessels destroyed in recent weeks off Venezuela’s coast, with dozens of suspected traffickers killed.

“There are few boats traveling on the water, so now they’ll come in by land to a lesser extent, and they will be hit on land also,” Trump said, hinting that US ground raids could follow. 

The embattled Venezuelan dictator, visibly shaken, appealed directly to Trump this week.

“Yes peace, yes peace forever, peace forever. No crazy war, please!” Maduro said before a cheering crowd of regime-aligned unions.

A wanted poster offering $50 million dollars for information leading to the arrest and conviction of Venezuela’s President Nicolas MaduroCredit: EL PAÍS
Nicolas Maduro being awarded an honorary doctorate in National Security by the Armed Forces, pictured alongside Minister of Defense Vladimir Padrino Lopez (left)Credit: Getty
Tren de Aragua GangCredit: Tiktok
The arrival of members of the Venezuelan criminal organization Tren de Aragua at the Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT) in the city of Tecoluca, El SalvadorCredit: AFP

But the plea did little to disguise his fear.

The tyrant has been boasting that Venezuela possesses 5,000 Russian-made Igla-S missiles positioned across the country, vowing to defend its skies.

And inside Caracas, intelligence reports suggest Hezbollah militants, Colombian guerrillas, and Cuban special forces are embedded with Maduro’s security apparatus — a sign, analysts say, that the embattled dictator is preparing for a siege.

America’s moves, Alvarez said, could rattle Maduro’s criminal empire — but dismantling it will take time.

Alvarez says Tren de Aragua, another major Venezuelan criminal organisation, began as a small prison gang around 2013–2014, never intended to become the sprawling multinational network it is today.

“People think that it’s relatively a new organisation,” he said.

“Tren de Aragua was born around 2013, 2014, and it grew from a relatively small gang that was being run from prison.”

Originally dealing in extortion, arms and drug smuggling, it evolved rapidly.

“It was never intended to be, from the very beginning, a transnational or international drug trafficking syndicate,” Alvarez says.

“But its evolution and the speed at which these groups started to grow is remarkable.”

Tren de Aragua’s growth was fuelled by years of impunity inside Tocorón prison, where gang leaders operated openly from a compound that featured bars, swimming pools and even a zoo.

President Trump declared a full-scale war on drug cartels, labelling them as ‘terrorist organisations’
US Military forces conducting a strike on a boat carrying alleged drug traffickers in the Caribbean SeaCredit: AFP
America’s military is preparing to seize ports and airfields in Venezuela
An MH-6 Little Bird helicopter, piloted by members of the U.S. Army’s 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (SOAR)Credit: Getty Images – Getty

Authorities claimed to have “dismantled” the group after storming the facility in September 2023, but its networks have since been detected across Chile, Peru, Colombia, Mexico and beyond — often embedded in migrant routes and informal economies.

Analysts say that while there is no formal policy of state protection, entrenched corruption and weak prison oversight allowed the gang to flourish, pointing to systemic complicity even if Maduro’s inner circle does not directly command it.

The Cartel de los Soles — literally “Cartel of the Suns”, a nod to the insignia of Venezuelan military generals — is not a traditional cartel, Alvarez explains.

It’s a broad network of military and political elites facilitating cocaine trafficking since the 1990s.

“The term ‘cartel’ is used to describe this network of the Venezuelan military and political elites being involved in cocaine trafficking,” he said

“When the president of a country like Venezuela has been indicted by the American government for this participation and this leadership in this group, it tells you about the remarkable influence and the worrying situation when it comes to democracy and governance.”

Experts caution that Cartel de los Soles is less a single, top-down organisation than a fragmented patronage network — with officials taxing, protecting or directly handling cocaine shipments in exchange for loyalty and profit.

That murky structure complicates efforts to dismantle it: even if Maduro denies involvement, the network’s reliance on state power for cover and logistics means corruption is baked into Venezuela’s institutions.

According to Alvarez, Maduro’s regime actively protects both Cartel de los Soles and Tren de Aragua.

The network stretches beyond Latin America — with money laundering operations running through West Africa, Turkey, and Iran.

“It speaks volumes about how deeply entrenched corruption and criminality have taken control of the democratic process in Venezuela.”

While exact figures are impossible to pin down, Alvarez says the cocaine trade driven by Colombia and Venezuela is enormous — easily worth tens or even hundreds of billions annually.

Colombia now produces nearly 300,000 hectares of coca crops, yielding around 3,000 metric tonnes of cocaine each year.

“If you look at the numbers, one kilo of cocaine produced in Colombia can cost around $2,000. That same kilo in New York is perhaps $50,000, and in Australian shores, about $200,000,” he explained.

By his estimate, Cartel de los Soles is involved in more than half of all cocaine trafficking activity in the region, making it “one of the most significant actors in Latin America for sure.”

As US warships move closer to Venezuelan waters, Alvarez believes the Trump administration’s offensive will unfold in three phases — short, mid, and long term.

“In the short term, the direct and clear and determined messaging from the US administration will definitely have an effect on these smuggling operations,” he said.

“If we are witnessing live activity driven by drones, where those speed boats and semi-submergibles are being attacked directly… that will create a deterrence effect.”

In the mid-term, internal cracks may start to show.

Maduro says he has millions on troops ready to defend against the Americans
Venezuelan army tanks ride during a military exercise at a highway in CaracasCredit: AFP

“There will be an increasing amount of pressure, particularly to hand over President Maduro to the US administration in order to claim that award of $50 million that is now put on his head,” Alvarez said.

“That pressure will create tension and friction within the ranks of the cartel.”

Over the long term, Alvarez predicts a potential regional reset.

COOL OFF

I’ve been to over 50 countries – here are my cheap winter sun hols with £11 hotels


UNMASKED

Chilling unheard tapes reveal how cops tore apart smirking serial killer Ted Bundy

“If the US government plays this correctly over the next three years, it will create an avenue for stabilising the security situation in the region.

“New governments in Colombia, Chile and Peru may be more inclined to apply pressure on the Maduro regime to make sure it comes to a full stop.”

Trump’s war on drugs?

By Harvey Geh, Foreign News Reporter

DONALD Trump has launched his full-scale war on drugs – favouring missiles over law enforcement.

The first day of Trump’s second term kicked off with the designation of narcotraffickers as terrorists – giving him the right to kill them before they can reach American shores.

This is the argument he has used in the face of law experts warning that his decision to strike a suspected drug-smuggling boat on Tuesday was illegal.

Washington-watchers claim that the gangsters should have been arrested – but the White House says that law enforcement is ineffective.

Trump vowed after the blitz: “There’s more where that came from.”

The US President has long spoken of his desire to enact force to take on drug cartels, which he accuses Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro of actively backing.

Maduro has denied the allegations, and the last few months have seen teetering escalations deteriorate into a tense standoff.

The US has positioned naval destroyers and soldiers around Maduro’s waters, while the Venezuelan dictator has ordered mass mobilisation of troops.

Source link

Related Posts

Load More Posts Loading...No More Posts.