Narcoterrorism 3.0 examines the convergence between organized crime, terrorism, cartels, corruption, illicit networks, and criminalized state power.
This section of The Strategic Witness explores how criminal and terrorist ecosystems are reshaping sovereignty, borders, governance, migration, financial systems, public security, and global risk.
Narcoterrorism is no longer a marginal security problem. It has evolved into a hybrid architecture of power, where illicit economies, political corruption, armed groups, radical networks, and state weakness interact across regions and borders.
Here, readers will find strategic essays, long-form analysis, and intelligence-style reflections on the transformation of criminal power in the twenty-first century.
Core themes include:
Organized crime and cartel expansion
Terrorist-criminal convergence
Illicit networks and corruption
Criminalized state structures
Hybrid threats and territorial control
Venezuela, Mexico, Latin America, North America, and global risk corridors
The evolution of Narcoterrorism 3.0 as a strategic threat
This section is part of the broader architecture of The Strategic Witness: warning, intelligence, prevention, and human responsibility in dangerous times.
By Johan Obdola
The Strategic Witness
The Architecture of Warning