There is an incredible war being waged against the United States, and it isnât being fought with tanks rolling across borders or missiles lighting up the sky. Itâs being fought with narcotics, with logistics networks, with corruption, and with foreign actors who know exactly what theyâre doing. And theyâre winning far more often than most Americans want to admit.

The narco-sub that carried half a billion dollars
On February 9th and 10th, U.S. and Colombian forces intercepted a semi-submersible ânarco-subâ in the Pacific, just off Colombia. If youâve never seen one of these things, picture a low-slung, barely-above-the-waterline boat designed for one job: move massive loads of cocaine and disappear. They are built to be disposable, and thereâs so much money involved that cartels can afford to lose a few and still keep the machine running.
This particular one was carrying 10 tons of cocaineâabout 22,000 poundsâwith an estimated street value around $441 million.
That is one boat.
And yes, itâs good news that it got pulled off the board. Four people were arrested, and the drugs were destroyed. But donât let a headline like that lull you into thinking the problem is being solved, because what youâre looking at is a snapshot of a much larger industrial pipelineâone that exists because there is a market here at home, and because there are enemies abroad who see our addiction as a weapon.
A joint operationâand a quiet geopolitical shift
What made this interdiction particularly notable wasnât just the amount, but the cooperation. It was a joint U.S.-Colombian operation, and that matters because it shows how fast geopolitics can shift when the right leverage gets applied.
At the beginning of the year, the U.S. and Colombia were not exactly sharing warm hugs and handwritten valentines. I was in BogotĂĄ. I was up near CĂșcuta. I heard plenty of âYankee go home.â President Trump and Colombiaâs President Gustavo Petro were at odds, and tensions were real.
Then, like Trump often does, he blew it up publicly, forced the conversation, and later smoothed it over behind closed doors. Petro came to the White House on February 3rd, they talked immigration and drugs, and apparently they left as friends.
Iâll be the first to tell you: itâs not classy. Itâs not tactful. Itâs not how diplomats would do it. But it can be effectiveâbecause suddenly youâve got more Latin American countries looking at the United States and thinking, âHeâs serious. Weâd better get on the right side of this.â

The scale is what should scare you
Hereâs the part that should make your stomach drop.
In the last year, U.S. agencies have seized almost $20 billion in street value of drugs. Hundreds of metric tons. A mind-boggling amount of narcotics stopped before they hit American neighborhoods.




