Brazil Under Lula: From Emerging Power to Narco-State in Record Time
By Hotspotnews
On November 22, 2025, the Portuguese Navy, acting on intelligence from the Maritime Analysis and Operations Centre-Narcotics in Lisbon, intercepted two Brazilian-flagged fishing vessels approximately 500 nautical miles southwest of the Azores. The ships, both registered in the southern state of Santa Catarina, were carrying more than seven tons of high-purity cocaine destined for European ports, primarily Belgium and Spain. Ten Brazilian crew members were arrested on the spot. Each had reportedly been promised €5,000 for the voyage, a paltry sum compared to the street value of the cargo, estimated at over €300 million.
This single seizure is not an isolated incident; it is the latest and most spectacular confirmation that Brazil, under the third Lula da Silva administration, has consolidated its position as the world’s primary transshipment hub for cocaine heading to Europe and Africa.
While the international press has treated the bust as just another large drug interdiction, the details paint a far darker picture of state failure, or worse, state complicity.
1. The Route Is Institutionalized
South American cocaine historically moved north toward the United States and Mexico. Since 2021, however, European authorities have watched an explosion of the so-called “Southern Route”: cocaine departs from Brazilian ports (Santos, Paranaguá, Itajaí, Suape, and Natal), hides among legal cargo or on small fishing fleets, crosses the South Atlantic, and lands in West Africa (Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde, Ghana) or directly into Antwerp, Rotterdam, and Valencia. Brazilian federal police themselves admit that between 70 % and 80 % of the cocaine reaching Europe now passes through Brazil. That is not a statistic compatible with mere negligence; it is the signature of a country whose institutions have been hollowed out.
2. The Ports Are Wide Open
Every major Brazilian port is controlled by the Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC), the country’s most powerful criminal organization, or by allied factions. Dock workers, crane operators, customs agents, and federal police officers are either bought off or intimidated. In October 2025 alone, authorities found 1.2 tons hidden in a fertilizer shipment in Santos and another 800 kg inside frozen fish containers in Paranaguá. Those are the ones they caught. Experts estimate that for every seizure, five to ten loads get through.
3. The Political Protection Racket
Lula’s Workers’ Party (PT) has spent two decades cultivating alliances with regimes and movements that either tolerate or actively participate in narco-trafficking: the Maduro dictatorship in Venezuela, the Morales/Añez-era remnants in Bolivia, and above all the FARC dissidents in Colombia who never accepted the 2016 peace deal. Venezuela’s “Cartel of the Suns,” run by high-ranking military officers loyal to Maduro, works hand-in-glove with Brazilian gangs to move product across the porous Amazon border. Brazilian army units stationed in the region complain they are forbidden from conducting serious operations without prior political approval from Brasília.
4. The Judiciary Turns a Blind Eye
The same Supreme Court justices who spent years weaponizing the legal system against Jair Bolsonaro and his supporters have shown remarkable leniency toward figures linked to organized crime. Convicted traffickers routinely receive house arrest or early release under the pretext of prison overcrowding, while the court dedicates endless sessions to censoring conservative journalists and social-media accounts that dare mention the narco-issue.
5. The Numbers Speak for Themselves
– Homicides in Brazil remain above 60,000 per year, higher than many war zones.
– Coca cultivation in neighboring Peru, Bolivia, and Colombia hit record highs in 2024–2025, and almost none of it heads north anymore.
– Seizures in European ports originating from Brazil increased 400 % between 2020 and 2025.
– The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime now lists Brazil as the number-one transit country in the world, ahead of Mexico.
When a fishing boat from Santa Catarina can sail into the middle of the Atlantic carrying seven tons of cocaine without any effective intervention by the Brazilian Navy or Coast Guard, something far beyond ordinary corruption has taken root. Countries do not become narco-states overnight. They arrive there when political power, criminal wealth, and ideological blindness converge, exactly the cocktail served daily in Lula’s Brazil.
Venezuela took fifteen years to complete its descent. Brazil, with a much larger economy and more sophisticated criminal organizations, has managed the same transformation in less than three.
The Portuguese Navy did its job. The question the Brazilian people must now ask is simple: why didn’t their own government do its?


