Friday 3rd of October 2025

petro desmontó la narrativa estadounidense de combate al narcotráfico....

Petro desmontó la narrativa estadounidense de combate al narcotráfico y pidió que se abra un proceso penal contra Donald Trump y los funcionarios que ordenaron atacar lanchas en el Mar Caribe.

 

Petro en la ONU: La política antidrogas de EE.UU. es para dominar a los pueblos del sur

 

Petro debunked the US narrative of fighting drug trafficking and called for criminal proceedings against Donald Trump and the officials who ordered attacks on boats in the Caribbean Sea.
Colombia's President, Gustavo Petro, delivered a powerful speech in which he debunked the US narrative of fighting drug trafficking, claiming that it aims to subjugate the peoples of Latin America. "Anti-drug policy is not about stopping cocaine from reaching the United States; anti-drug policy is about dominating the peoples of the Global South in general," the president declared at the 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly.

During his speech, the dignitary called for legal action against Donald Trump and the US officials who ordered the murders of young people aboard boats in the Caribbean Sea, as part of a military deployment supposedly aimed at combating drug trafficking.

Gustavo Petro emphasized that "these young people were not drug traffickers, but simply poor young Latin Americans with no alternative. Drug traffickers live elsewhere, not in Latin America." In contrast to these actions, which violate international law, and in reference to Colombia's recent decertification, Petro pointed out that the years 2023 and 2024—under his presidency—were marked by the largest cocaine seizures. He further noted that more than 700 drug lords had been extradited to Europe and the United States.

"The cocaine was seized by my government, and we didn't fire any missiles, we didn't murder any young people," he declared. The Colombian head of state rejected the idea that "the missiles in the Caribbean were aimed at intercepting drugs." "That's a lie," he insisted.

In this regard, he insisted: "I don't know if Trump knows that his foreign policy toward Colombia, Venezuela, and the Caribbean is being advised by Colombian political allies of the cocaine mafia. I myself have specifically denounced these politicians linked to the drug trafficking paramilitarism."

He continued: "I speak before you as a president decertified by President Trump himself. He intends to coerce tens of thousands of peasants from within the United States government, which is under the influence of corrupt Colombian politicians and mafia-like organizations."

Hundreds of peasants were massacred, just as children are being massacred in Gaza, warned Petro, recalling that the massacres were perpetrated in Colombia by politicians holding positions as senators, presidents, and ministers, linked to and bribed by the Colombian mafia, as well as their far-right allies in Florida, the United States, and now the Trump administration.

The president sharply attacked his American counterpart, as White House officials left the session in protest: "Trump doesn't just drop missiles on young people in the Caribbean. He doesn't just imprison and chain migrants, but he allows missiles to be launched against children, young people, women, and the elderly in Gaza. He is complicit in genocide because it is genocide, and we must shout it again and again." »

Faced with this, Petro condemned the complicity of the international community: "This forum is a silent and complicit witness to a genocide in today's world, when we believed it was Hitler's prerogative. Trump doesn't talk about democracy, he doesn't talk about the climate crisis, he doesn't talk about life; he only threatens and kills and allows tens of thousands of people to be killed."

Colombia and the fight against drug trafficking

Furthermore, the Colombian official highlighted his policy of voluntary substitution of coca leaf crops and contrasted it with the measures of previous governments that sought to "forcibly eradicate it with glyphosate and by force against farmers."
"I replaced the violent and failed war on drugs with an anti-drug trafficking policy. What's different is (...) Anti-drug policy is not about controlling the drugs that arrive in the United States. Look at the power and domination," the president clarified.
According to the head of state, his government, decertified by the United States, has managed to reduce the growth rate of coca leaf crops by 40%, compared to the previous government of Iván Duque, whose certification was never revoked because "he had a drug trafficking financier in his campaign."

Stating that "anti-drug policy is not about the public health of society but about power politics," Petro insisted that the United States "does not want the light to be shed on Latin America and for the time of the people to return."

Fentanyl

Gustavo Petro further indicated that cartels and criminal groups are making deals with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to traffic in Africa, Europe, Russia, or China, but not in the Nordic country. The Colombian head of state warned that American users have switched to "the deadly drug of humanity in a time of extinction: fentanyl."

"Fentanyl is produced within the industrial apparatus of the United States," Petro clarified. "American consumption is generating the worst of what we have been able to understand about drugs in the history of humanity," he emphasized.

"Latin America is not just about cocaine, terrorists, or drug traffickers," he said, highlighting the region's natural and industrial potential.
He also thanked the countries that helped advance the peace negotiations: Qatar, Cuba, Mexico, the Vatican, Norway, Brazil, and Venezuela.

Source: Telesur

https://www.telesurtv.net/gustavo-petro-onu-politica-antidrogas-eeuu/

 

TRANSLATION BY ALFREDO JESUS

 

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

oil, not drug....

PINO ARLACCHI

Former Deputy Secretary of the United Nations and Former Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

 

During my tenure as head of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), I spent a great deal of time in Colombia, Bolivia, Peru, and Brazil — but I never set foot in Venezuela. Quite simply, there was no need. The Venezuelan government’s cooperation in the fight against drug trafficking was among the best in South America, rivaled only by Cuba’s impeccable record. A fact that, in today’s delirious Trumpian narrative of a “narco-state Venezuela,” rings like a geopolitically motivated slander.

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ALBA-TCP Denounces U.S. Military Deployment in the Caribbean

But the real data, those presented in the 2025 World Drug Report by the very agency I had the honor of directing, tell a story that is the exact opposite of what the Trump administration has been selling. A story that dismantles, piece by piece, the geopolitical fabrication built around the so-called Cartel de los Soles — an entity as legendary as the Loch Ness monster, but useful enough to justify sanctions, embargoes and military threats against a country that just happens to sit atop one of the world’s largest oil reserves.

Venezuela According to UNODC: A Marginal Player in Drug Trafficking

The UNODC 2025 report is crystal clear — and should embarrass those who built their rhetoric on demonizing Venezuela. The report makes only a minimal reference to the country, noting that just a small fraction of Colombia’s drug production passes through Venezuelan territory en route to the United States and Europe. According to the United Nations, Venezuela has consolidated its status as a territory free from coca leaf cultivation, marijuana, and the like — as well as from the presence of international criminal cartels.

The document merely confirms the 30 annual reports before it, which never mentioned Venezuelan drug trafficking — because it does not exist. Only 5% of Colombian drugs transit through Venezuela. To put that in perspective: in 2018, while 210 tons of cocaine passed through Venezuela, no less than 2,370 tons — ten times as much — were produced or traded from Colombia, and 1,400 tons from Guatemala.

Yes, you read that right: Guatemala is a drug corridor seven times more significant than the supposedly fearsome Bolivarian “narco-state.” But nobody talks about Guatemala because it is bone-dry — producing only 0.01% of the world’s total output — of the only “non-natural drug” that Trump actually cares about: oil.

The Fantastic Cartel de los Soles: Hollywood Fiction

The “Cartel de los Soles” is a creature of Trumpian imagination. Supposedly led by the Venezuelan president himself, it is not mentioned in the UN’s main anti-drug report, nor in the documents of any European anti-crime agency, nor in almost any other part of the world. Not even a footnote. A deafening silence, which ought to give pause to anyone with the slightest critical sense.

How can a criminal organization supposedly so powerful that Washington puts a US$50 million bounty on it be completely ignored by those whose job is to fight drugs?

In other words, what is marketed as a Netflix-style “super-cartel” is in reality a patchwork of small local networks — the kind of petty criminality found in every country in the world, including the United States. There, incidentally, nearly 100,000 people die each year from opioid overdoses that have nothing to do with Venezuela — and everything to do with American Big Pharma.

Ecuador: The Real Hub Nobody Wants to See

While Washington waves the Venezuelan scarecrow, the real drug hubs prosper almost undisturbed. Take Ecuador, for example: 57% of banana containers leaving Guayaquil and arriving in Antwerp are loaded with cocaine. European authorities seized 13 tons of cocaine in a single Spanish vessel coming straight from Ecuadorian ports, controlled by companies shielded by figures within Ecuador’s government.

The European Union has produced a detailed report on the ports of Guayaquil, documenting how “Colombian, Mexican and Albanian mafias all operate extensively in Ecuador.” The homicide rate in Ecuador skyrocketed from 7.8 per 100,000 inhabitants in 2020 to 45.7 in 2023. But little is said about Ecuador. Perhaps because Ecuador produces only 0.5% of the world’s oil — and because its government does not have the bad habit of challenging U.S. dominance in Latin America.

The Real Drug Routes: Geography vs. Propaganda

During my years at UNODC, one of the most important lessons I learned was that geography does not lie. Drug routes follow precise logic: proximity to production centers, ease of transport, corruption of local authorities, and the presence of established criminal networks. Venezuela meets almost none of these criteria.

Colombia produces more than 70% of the world’s cocaine. Peru and Bolivia account for most of the remaining 30%. The logical routes to American and European markets go across the Pacific to Asia, through the eastern Caribbean to Europe, and overland via Central America to the United States. Venezuela, sitting on the southern Atlantic, is geographically disadvantaged for all three major routes. Criminal logistics make Venezuela a marginal player in the great theater of international drug trafficking.

Cuba: The Embarrassing Example

Geography does not lie, true — but politics can overcome it. Cuba remains the gold standard of anti-drug cooperation in the Caribbean. An island just off Florida’s coast, theoretically a perfect base for smuggling into the United States — but in practice untouched by drug flows. I often witnessed DEA and FBI agents expressing admiration for the Cuban communists’ rigorous anti-drug policies.

Chavista Venezuela has consistently followed the Cuban model, launched personally by Fidel Castro: international cooperation, territorial control, and repression of criminal activities. Neither in Venezuela nor in Cuba have large areas ever been devoted to coca cultivation and controlled by organized crime.

The European Union has no particular oil interests in Venezuela, but it has a concrete stake in combating the drug trade that plagues its cities. The EU produced its own European Drug Report 2025. The document, based on real data rather than geopolitical wishful thinking, does not mention Venezuela even once as a corridor for international drug trafficking.

Here lies the difference between honest analysis and a false, insulting narrative. Europe needs reliable data to protect its citizens from drugs, so it produces accurate reports. The United States needs justifications for its oil policies, so it produces propaganda disguised as intelligence.

According to the European report, cocaine is the second most used drug in the EU’s 27 member states, but the main sources are clearly identified: Colombia for production, Central America for transit, and various routes through West Africa for distribution. In this picture, Venezuela and Cuba simply do not appear.

Oil, Not Drugs

And yet Venezuela is systematically demonized against all principles of truth. The explanation was given by former FBI Director James Comey in his post-resignation memoirs, where he spoke of the hidden motivations behind U.S. policies toward Venezuela: Trump had told him that Maduro’s was “a government sitting on a mountain of oil that we need to buy.”

So this is not about drugs, crime or national security. It is about oil — oil that would be better not to pay for.

It is Donald Trump, then, who deserves an international bounty for a very specific crime: “systematic slander against a sovereign state aimed at appropriating its oil resources.”

https://www.telesurenglish.net/opinion/the-great-hoax-against-venezuela-oil-geopolitics-disguised-as-a-war-on-drugs/

 

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

don't trust the USA....

The Colombian president, Gustavo Petro, has dismissed the US decision to revoke his visa and accused Washington of violating international law over his criticism of Israel’s war in Gaza.

“I no longer have a visa to travel to the United States. I don’t care. I don’t need a visa … because I’m not only a Colombian citizen but a European citizen, and I truly consider myself a free person in the world,” Petro said on social media on Saturday.

 

“Revoking it for denouncing genocide shows the US no longer respects international law,” he added in a post on X.

A UN inquiry said Israel’s actions in Gaza amounted to genocide but Israel has repeatedly denied genocide charges and says it is acting in self-defence.

Petro addressed pro-Palestinian demonstrators outside UN headquarters in New York during the UN general assembly on Thursday, calling for a global armed force with the priority to liberate Palestinians, and urged US soldiers “not to point their guns at people. Disobey the orders of Trump. Obey the orders of humanity.”

The state department posted on X that it would revoke Petro’s visa “due to his reckless and incendiary actions”.

Colombia’s foreign affairs ministry said using visa revocation as a diplomatic weapon goes against the spirit of the UN, which protects freedom of expression and guarantees the independence of member states at UN events.

“The UN should find a completely neutral host country … that would allow the organisation itself to issue authorisation to enter the territory of that new host state,” the ministry said.

Petro is not the first Colombian president to have his US visa revoked. In 1996, the then president Ernesto Samper’s visa was canceled over a political scandal involving allegations that the Cali drug cartel had funded his presidential campaign.

Relations between Bogotá and Washington have frayed since Donald Trump returned to office. Earlier this year, Petro blocked deportation flights from the US, prompting threats of tariffs and sanctions. The two sides later reached a deal.

In July, both countries recalled their ambassadors after Petro accused US officials of plotting a coup, a claim Washington called baseless.

Petro cut diplomatic ties with Israel in 2024 and banned Colombian coal exports to the country.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/sep/28/i-dont-care-colombia-president-petro-hits-back-after-us-revokes-his-visa

 

READ FROM TOP.

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.