The leaders of Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia maintain normal diplomatic relations with Nicolás Maduro and his regime; they have explicitly and implicitly recognized him and protect him by buying time and seeking negotiations to sustain him. Lula da Silva offered to act as a mediator between the United States and Venezuela, and the proposal itself seeks to recognize the Cartel of the Suns as a subject of international law, granting the criminal group the status of a counterpart and equality with democracy. As part of their subordination to the Cuban dictatorship, the presidents and governments of Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia have become servile to transnational organized crime by sustaining the "Cartel of the Suns" that usurps Venezuela. "A government for dictatorships is one led by a president elected in a democratic country that serves dictatorial regimes, contributing to their sustenance through actions of legitimization and support, violating international legal obligations and to the detriment of their own national interests." This is the case of Lula da Silva in Brazil, López Obrador and Sheinbaum in Mexico, and Petro in Colombia, who are servile to the dictatorial system that, under Cuba's command, has allowed organized crime to wield power in Venezuela with Chávez and Maduro, in Nicaragua with Ortega and Murillo, in Bolivia with Morales and Arce, and in Ecuador with Correa. The support of Lula, Sheinbaum, and Petro for the dictatorships of Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua, and Bolivia violates mandatory norms of the American Convention on Human Rights or the San José Pact, the Inter-American Democratic Charter, the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime or the Palermo Convention, and more, while they attempt to provide ideological justification and a political image for the commission of crimes such as drug trafficking, terrorism, transnational crime, forced migration, human trafficking, and multiple expressions of hybrid war that harm their own peoples. The actions of Lula da Silva, Sheinbaum, and Petro, which they try to present as acts of sovereignty, solidarity, or anti-imperialism, are crimes in the jurisdiction of each of their countries. Within the same strategy, Lula attempted to protect Maduro and his cartel by "reiterating Mexico's position to respect the self-determination of peoples, non-intervention, and the peaceful settlement of disputes." Petro gave military support to Maduro when on August 10, 2025, he wrote: "I publicly transmit my order, given as commander of the armed forces of Colombia." Under the pretext of maintaining peace in South America, Lula, founder and head of the São Paulo Forum, the only living leader of 21st-century socialism, which he founded with Castro and Chávez, also organized the "Lava Jato" scandal, is betting on narcoterrorists who are the basis of insecurity in Brazil, as the "Comando Vermelho" recently proved in Rio de Janeiro. On behalf of Mexico, Sheinbaum recognized the Maduro government, using "the self-determination of peoples" as a pretext. The former Undersecretary of the Treasury for Terrorism Financing, Marshall Billingslea, affirms that Nicolás Maduro financed election campaigns in several Latin American countries: "corrupt money from Venezuela in Petro's campaign... money has been found in Mexico, in Brazil...". The most recent efforts of Lula da Silva, Sheinbaum, and Petro are focused on defending the criminal group that has usurped sovereignty and wields power in Venezuela, the "Cartel of the Suns," which includes fugitives wanted by U.S. justice. By: Carlos Sánchez Berzaín. Democracies at the service of the organized crime of 21st-century socialism dictatorships that subjugate the freedom and sovereignty of peoples with narco-states, terrorism, and crimes. He then stated that "Mexico has no evidence linking Maduro to drug trafficking," defending the Cartel of the Suns before the U.S. Attorney General. Then, while defending drug traffickers, he accused the U.S. of murder and was labeled by Trump as "a leader of drug trafficking," leading to severe sanctions against Colombia. Presidents who serve dictatorships cannot be impunity defenders of transnational organized crime. When a citizen in Brazil, Mexico, or Colombia apologizes for a crime, they are committing a crime, just as when they protect drug traffickers and terrorists, or cover for them, or use state resources to sustain individuals who violate human rights, torture, murder, and traffic. Any military operation that does not have the approval of sister nations is an aggression against Latin America and the Caribbean...". In the case of rulers, it is treason to their national interests. Aggravated crimes by the evidence that they are "retaliations" motivated by electoral campaign financing and the receipt of money, as sworn by the former head of Hugo Chávez's intelligence, "pollo Carvajal," pointing to Lula, Petro, and others. Colombia and Venezuela are the same people, the same flag, the same history.
Leaders of Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia Serve Organized Crime
An article accuses the presidents of Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia of supporting the Maduro regime and its associated "Cartel of the Suns." The author argues that their actions undermine democratic principles in the region and contribute to the spread of organized crime and narco-terrorism.