This week, we analyze the United States' counter-drug strategy in South America, a Sinaloa cartel leader's guilty plea, and a former Honduran president's pardon for his cocaine conviction.
Transcription
Welcome to On The Radar, where we examine how this week's major developments show the contradictions in American politics, with the Trump administration waging the war on drugs with one hand and cutting deals with traffickers with the other.
In the United States, Joaquín Guzmán López, leader of one of Mexico's most notorious drug trafficking groups, the Chapitos, and son of “El Chapo”, pleaded guilty in a US court. He admitted to kidnapping an unnamed figure – widely believed to be Sinaloa cartel leader “El Mayo” Zambada – and turning him over to US authorities.
But Guzmán's plea failed to clarify exactly what the U.S. role was in Mayo's kidnapping, and was also a clear sign that Chapito had struck a deal to cooperate with U.S. prosecutors.
The unexpected release of former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández is another sign that conversations were happening behind the scenes between traffickers and the U.S. government. President Trump pardoned his 45-year sentence in 2024 after prosecutors proved he had a hand in the move hundreds of tons of cocaine in the United States during his term in office.
Further south, Trump's threats of military action against drug traffickers continued, with the US president now warning his forces could strike drug targets in Colombia. The statement comes after months of bombings on suspected drug-trafficking boats off the coasts of Venezuela and Colombia, and with the looming potential invasion aimed at overthrowing Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
Threatening the presidents of Colombia and Venezuela for their role in drug trafficking while pardoning the former president of Honduras whom the US government itself convicted of trafficking is contradictory to say the least. What might happen next is anyone's guess.
That's all for this week, head over to InSightCrime.org for our in-depth reporting on the Juan Orlando Hernandez trafficking case, as well as the narco story in Venezuela and Colombia. We'll be back next week with more.

