
403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were looking for doesn't exist.
Venezuela's 'Organized Crime Reset' Appears Aimed At Opposition, Not Cartels
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Venezuela says it is overhauling its fight against organized crime just as tensions with the United States intensify.
This week, Interior and Justice Minister Diosdado Cabello led a closed-door session in Caracas with state security chiefs and the armed forces to update prevention plans, coordinate operations, and strengthen institutions responsible for citizen safety.
Alongside that rollout, the government accused“extremist sectors of the local right” of plotting an explosive attack at the U.S. Embassy compound in Caracas-a claim officials described as a false-flag tactic.
Authorities said protection has been reinforced at the compound and other embassies. The United States has not publicly confirmed the warning.
The messaging matters as much as the measures. While officials present the plan as a crackdown on organized crime, the public narrative centers on alleged threats from opposition-linked actors.
In practice, that signals a security posture geared toward political adversaries as much as, or more than, traditional criminal networks.
Notably absent from official statements is any explicit campaign to dismantle the so-called“Cartel de los Soles,” a label used abroad for alleged trafficking networks tied to Venezuelan security figures-allegations the government rejects.
The timing is also sensitive. U.S. forces have stepped up maritime activity in nearby Caribbean waters, framed as counter-narcotics operations. Caracas dismisses that rationale and sees the patrols as coercive pressure that increases the risk of confrontation.
In this climate, an alleged bomb plot-whether ultimately substantiated or not-heightens the stakes around diplomatic sites and gives the government grounds to broaden internal security powers.
Why this story matters beyond Venezuela is straightforward. A security campaign that blurs the line between crime control and political control can narrow space for dissent at home while raising the odds of miscalculation abroad.
Heightened alerts around embassies, tighter policing in urban neighborhoods, and busier patrols at sea touch everything from diplomatic engagement and press access to insurance costs on regional shipping routes.
What to watch next: whether authorities present verifiable arrests or evidence linked to the alleged plot, any on-record response from Washington, and concrete indicators-raids, prosecutions, asset seizures-showing whether Caracas is targeting criminal groups or primarily its political rivals.
This week, Interior and Justice Minister Diosdado Cabello led a closed-door session in Caracas with state security chiefs and the armed forces to update prevention plans, coordinate operations, and strengthen institutions responsible for citizen safety.
Alongside that rollout, the government accused“extremist sectors of the local right” of plotting an explosive attack at the U.S. Embassy compound in Caracas-a claim officials described as a false-flag tactic.
Authorities said protection has been reinforced at the compound and other embassies. The United States has not publicly confirmed the warning.
The messaging matters as much as the measures. While officials present the plan as a crackdown on organized crime, the public narrative centers on alleged threats from opposition-linked actors.
In practice, that signals a security posture geared toward political adversaries as much as, or more than, traditional criminal networks.
Notably absent from official statements is any explicit campaign to dismantle the so-called“Cartel de los Soles,” a label used abroad for alleged trafficking networks tied to Venezuelan security figures-allegations the government rejects.
The timing is also sensitive. U.S. forces have stepped up maritime activity in nearby Caribbean waters, framed as counter-narcotics operations. Caracas dismisses that rationale and sees the patrols as coercive pressure that increases the risk of confrontation.
In this climate, an alleged bomb plot-whether ultimately substantiated or not-heightens the stakes around diplomatic sites and gives the government grounds to broaden internal security powers.
Why this story matters beyond Venezuela is straightforward. A security campaign that blurs the line between crime control and political control can narrow space for dissent at home while raising the odds of miscalculation abroad.
Heightened alerts around embassies, tighter policing in urban neighborhoods, and busier patrols at sea touch everything from diplomatic engagement and press access to insurance costs on regional shipping routes.
What to watch next: whether authorities present verifiable arrests or evidence linked to the alleged plot, any on-record response from Washington, and concrete indicators-raids, prosecutions, asset seizures-showing whether Caracas is targeting criminal groups or primarily its political rivals.

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.
Most popular stories
Market Research

- Pepeto Presale Exceeds $6.93 Million Staking And Exchange Demo Released
- Citadel Launches Suiball, The First Sui-Native Hardware Wallet
- Luminadata Unveils GAAP & SOX-Trained AI Agents Achieving 99.8% Reconciliation Accuracy
- Tradesta Becomes The First Perpetuals Exchange To Launch Equities On Avalanche
- Thinkmarkets Adds Synthetic Indices To Its Product Offering
- Edgen Launches Multi‐Agent Intelligence Upgrade To Unify Crypto And Equity Analysis
Comments
No comment