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Chapter 205: Anti-drug operation


Since Gargas was elected president of Colombia, the anti-drug situation in Colombia has become more and more serious.

Gargas fired a large number of corrupt police officers, and selected clean nets from among the young graduates to add to the Colombian police force.

A thorough clean-up of the police force was carried out.

After cleaning up the Colombian police force of the scum, Gargas began to confront the guerrilla forces and drug trafficking organizations active in Colombia.

These two cancers are the root cause of Colombia's ongoing turmoil, especially the Medellín and Cali monopolies the drug distribution channels in the United States and Europe, respectively, and the two major drug trafficking organizations have sufficient financial resources to form an armed force no less than that of the Colombian government army.

Over the years, every Colombian government has resorted to various approaches to the fight against drug cartels, but the drug factories of the Medellín and Cali cartels are hidden in the vast jungle around the cities of Medellín and Cali.

As long as these factories are not identified for a day, it is impossible to destroy the Medellín and Cali groups.

As the previous Colombian government was anxious to combat the rebels, a coalition of guerrilla forces and drug cartels in Colombia began.

The unity of the enemy made the Colombian government forces even more passive.

Gargas understood that this would not be possible, so he tried to divide the relationship between the anti-government guerrillas and the drug cartel.

Gargas began to send people to secretly contact the armed forces of the "419" movement, which had single-handedly caused the hijacking of the judicial building, hoping to negotiate that 199 lay down its arms and become a political party in Colombia in a legal way.

After the envoy sent by Gargas offered favorable conditions, the leadership of 19 gradually moved to the heart.

They also began to drift away from the Medellín and Cali groups. 19 A temporary ceasefire agreement was reached with armed factions such as the Colombian Liberation Army, in which the Colombian government army promised not to take rash military action against them, but to resolve the issue through negotiations.

Colombia's six largest guerrilla forces have agreed to this condition.

This move suddenly gave Colombia's political situation a glimmer of light.

Having stabilized the guerrillas, Gargas turned his guns on the Medellín and Cali groups.

A larger-scale counterattack was launched against them.

Gargas is not soft on drug dealers.

He knows very well that Colombia's prisons can't hold the drug dealers of the Medellín group at all, and the drug dealers who are caught in prison today can run away the next day without realizing it.

In the final analysis, the guerrillas are still a bit politically motivated, while the drug dealers are only for money, and the two groups of people can't pee in the same pot in the final analysis.

Gargas has resorted to one of the most frightening tactics for drug traffickers.

That is extradition, all key drug dealers caught by the Colombian government army will not be tried by the court at all, and will be sent directly to the United States in a US military helicopter to stand trial.

Gargas did this because Colombia now has few judges who dare to try members of the Medellín and Cali groups, many of whom have tried similar cases in the past, and whose families are relentlessly reprisaled by drug traffickers.

It was on the basis of this situation that Gargas gave up the right to hear them and handed them over directly to the Americans.

Under the brutal interrogation of the CIA, the whereabouts of some important leaders of the Medellín group gradually leaked out, and some information about Escobar's henchmen, the Argentine Martinez Merrome, and the Mexican Gonzalo Rodriguez Gacha, began to be grasped by the CIA.

Escobar didn't care at first, and as usual, he contacted the guerrillas to fend off the government attack, but this time Escobar hit a big nail.

The leaders of these guerrillas refused to come to the aid of the Medellín group at this time, and Escobar finally understood that something was wrong.

The advance of the anti-drug units of the government army was fast, as the US military helicopters sent them directly to Medellín.

At this very moment, Escobar's armed forces in Medellín have just been assembled.

That's when an unprepared war against drugs began.

Government tanks and armoured units quickly entered the streets of downtown Medellín. and blocked the main traffic arteries of Medellín.

Many of Escobar's armed men and drug dealers live in Medellín.

Before they could reach the assembly site, they were cordoned off at home by Colombian government forces.

Escobar's reaction was too slow, and she regretted why she had agreed to let these people live in the city instead of in the jungle.

Groups of heavily armed Colombian government troops began knocking on the doors of Medellín residents' homes, conducting house-to-house searches, and when guns and drugs were found, the families were taken downstairs and transported by truck to the prison in the rear.

But government soldiers soon discovered that 90 percent of the residents were suspected of being involved in drugs.

By the time they had cleaned up a dilapidated slum, there were few inhabitants left.

The drug dealers who were trapped in their homes were quickly searched, and some of them chose to fight with the government forces, using the weapons at hand, and ran back into the jungle outside the city.

Suddenly there was a burst of gunfire and explosions in the city.

It has to be said that the government army's step-by-step tactics are indeed effective.

It's inefficient, but it's rewarding.

But on the first day, thousands of drug dealers were taken away.

The seizure of all kinds of weapons, drugs, and dollars is innumerable.

Many drug dealers have had their lives confiscated by government forces for years of money.

Drug dealers in Medellín have suffered a lot today.

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As martial law and gambling operations escalated, Escobar consulted with his accomplices in the city.

It is intended to organize a counterattack to break the blockade of the Colombian government forces.

At 10 p.m., Escobar's forces began to attack the city of Medellín.

Now desperate to regain control of Medellín, Escobar sent helicopter gunships and began a night strike against Colombian government forces. t1706231537: