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Colombia's Military Says 2025 Hit Armed Groups Hard - Here's What That Really Means
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Colombia ended 2025 with a security balance to project momentum. The Armed Forces said they focused on the ELN, the Clan del Golfo, and FARC dissident factions, aiming to weaken commanders and the income streams that keep them operating.
The headline figure was 13,971“neutralizations,” a bundled category. The official breakdown reported 12,415 captures, 763 people who“submitted to justice,” 278 deaths in operations, 85 surrenders, and 430 minors recovered from forced recruitment.
Read plainly, the campaign relied more on arrests than lethal force. The year's showcase cases were meant to show reach. In Antioquia, an area boss known as“Pablo” was captured in Andes after clashes, with weapons seized.
Another action in the Nariño municipality of Antioquia killed five alleged Clan del Golfo members, including“Rigo” or“Farley,” linked to a reward of up to 500 million pesos.
Colombia's operations disrupt cocaine routes but risks persist
In Guaviare, an operation in Calamar was reported as 25 neutralizations: 19 killed, one captured, two submissions, and three minors recovered; heavy weapons and ammunition were seized.
Financial disruption carried the same weight as manhunts. Authorities cited a Tumaco processing complex tied to about three tons of cocaine and a Caribbean fast-boat seizure above 2.6 tons.
They also pointed to hundreds of tons of cocaine seized across 2025 and an explosives cache in Tumaco with more than 100 anti-personnel mines and other devices. A newer layer is the spread of groups like Tren de Aragua into border areas, adding a crime dimension to the conflict.
Why this matters abroad is simple: Colombia 's routes feed markets across the Americas and Europe. When pressure shifts corridors, violence patterns and prices can shift too.
Supporters argue firmer enforcement is long overdue. Critics counter that seizures do not automatically equal restored governance, pointing to continuing displacement and coercion in some hotspots.
The Armed Forces said 2025 produced 13,971“neutralizations,” mostly arrests.
The strategy mixed leadership hunts with strikes on cocaine logistics, explosives, and illegal mining finance.
The question is whether the gains translate into safer territory before 2026 elections.
Colombia ended 2025 with a security balance to project momentum. The Armed Forces said they focused on the ELN, the Clan del Golfo, and FARC dissident factions, aiming to weaken commanders and the income streams that keep them operating.
The headline figure was 13,971“neutralizations,” a bundled category. The official breakdown reported 12,415 captures, 763 people who“submitted to justice,” 278 deaths in operations, 85 surrenders, and 430 minors recovered from forced recruitment.
Read plainly, the campaign relied more on arrests than lethal force. The year's showcase cases were meant to show reach. In Antioquia, an area boss known as“Pablo” was captured in Andes after clashes, with weapons seized.
Another action in the Nariño municipality of Antioquia killed five alleged Clan del Golfo members, including“Rigo” or“Farley,” linked to a reward of up to 500 million pesos.
Colombia's operations disrupt cocaine routes but risks persist
In Guaviare, an operation in Calamar was reported as 25 neutralizations: 19 killed, one captured, two submissions, and three minors recovered; heavy weapons and ammunition were seized.
Financial disruption carried the same weight as manhunts. Authorities cited a Tumaco processing complex tied to about three tons of cocaine and a Caribbean fast-boat seizure above 2.6 tons.
They also pointed to hundreds of tons of cocaine seized across 2025 and an explosives cache in Tumaco with more than 100 anti-personnel mines and other devices. A newer layer is the spread of groups like Tren de Aragua into border areas, adding a crime dimension to the conflict.
Why this matters abroad is simple: Colombia 's routes feed markets across the Americas and Europe. When pressure shifts corridors, violence patterns and prices can shift too.
Supporters argue firmer enforcement is long overdue. Critics counter that seizures do not automatically equal restored governance, pointing to continuing displacement and coercion in some hotspots.
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