Arming the Good Guys: How Biden’s Red Tape Nearly Sabotaged Brazil’s War on Cartels
By Hotspotnews
November 7, 2025 – Washington, D.C.
In the sweltering favelas of Rio de Janeiro, where drug lords from the Comando Vermelho cartel rule with an iron fist and an arsenal of smuggled AK-47s, Brazil’s elite BOPE unit stands as the thin blue line between chaos and civilization. These are the real-life equivalents of our own SWAT teams—hardened warriors who storm gang strongholds, risking their lives to dismantle narco-terrorists who flood our southern border with poison and violence. Last week, in Operation Phoenix, BOPE took down 121 confirmed cartel thugs in a single, blistering raid, the deadliest police action in Brazilian history. That’s not a tragedy; that’s a triumph. And yet, thanks to the hand-wringing human rights bureaucrats in Joe Biden’s State Department, the very tools BOPE needed to do their job—20 precision sniper rifles from America’s own Daniel Defense—sat in bureaucratic limbo for over a year.
Let’s rewind to May 2023, when BOPE inked a straightforward $150,000 deal for these American-made beauties, crafted in the heart of Georgia by Daniel Defense, a company that’s as red-blooded as they come. These aren’t toys; they’re high-caliber tools designed for one purpose: neutralizing threats from a distance, saving lives on both sides of the barrel. Suppressors included, to keep operations quiet and effective. Simple, right? Wrong—if you’re operating under the Biden regime’s obsession with “human rights” theater.
Internal documents leaked to Reuters reveal the ugly truth: Biden’s diplomats debated the sale like it was a moral dilemma straight out of a college seminar. A January 2024 memo branded BOPE “notorious” for civilian killings, urging a outright denial because—gasp—these cops sometimes have to make split-second calls in war zones masquerading as neighborhoods. Ambassador Elizabeth Bagley, a Biden loyalist, threw her weight against it, echoing the same tired chorus from Amnesty International and UN busybodies who think reading Miranda rights to cartel hitmen will end the bloodshed. Never mind that Rio police, including BOPE, face off against gangs armed to the teeth with Chinese knockoffs and Eastern European surplus—gear that makes our own border patrol look under-equipped.
This isn’t just incompetence; it’s sabotage. While Biden’s crew dithered, BOPE guarded the U.S. consulate in Rio and even provided security for his own G20 jaunt in 2024. Talk about biting the hand that feeds you. The delay? A full year, pushing delivery into 2024, when cooler heads finally prevailed and the Commerce Department greenlit the export. Even then, those suppressors—essential for urban ops—faced extra hurdles from the pearl-clutchers. If not for the quiet lobbying of pro-law-enforcement voices, like Republican staffers who understood the stakes, this deal might have died on the vine.
Fast-forward to today, under President Trump’s second term, and the contrast couldn’t be starker. The administration has wisely scrapped Biden’s asinine guidelines that turned every arms export into a human rights inquisition. No more endless vetting for “patterns of impunity” or fretting over “extrajudicial killings.” Instead, we’re back to basics: Arm the allies who fight our fights. Cartels don’t respect Geneva Conventions; they respect firepower. And Daniel Defense? They’re pumping out jobs in Georgia, bolstering American manufacturing against the globalist offshoring crowd. That’s real economic patriotism, not the green energy fantasies that left blue-collar workers high and dry.
Critics on the left will wail about “enabling abuses,” pointing to BOPE’s tough record—703 civilian deaths by Rio cops last year alone. But let’s get real: In a city where homicides outpace those in war zones, those numbers aren’t a bug; they’re a feature of fighting back. The UN can issue its condemnations from the safety of Geneva salons, but down in the trenches, BOPE’s raid last week saved countless innocents from cartel crossfire. Families mourning “suspected gang members”? Please. These were armed predators, not choir boys caught in the wrong zip code. And if a few bad apples in BOPE need weeding out—militia ties or otherwise— that’s Brazil’s internal affair, not a license for Uncle Sam to play global nanny.
This episode is a microcosm of why conservatives have been vindicated at the ballot box, twice now. Biden’s foreign policy was a masterclass in weakness: Appease the NGOs, handcuff the cops, and watch the bad guys thrive. Trump 2.0? It’s about results—backing the BOPEs of the world so they can crush the cartels that poison our streets with fentanyl and fuel migrant surges at our border. If that means exporting a few sniper rifles to proven partners, so be it. Better they come from Georgia than Guangdong.
The left loves to lecture about “systemic violence” in poor, minority communities. Fine. But ignoring the root cause—emboldened criminals preying on the vulnerable—is the real systemic failure. BOPE isn’t the villain; they’re the antidote. And with American steel in their hands, they’re better equipped than ever to deliver justice, one precise shot at a time.
Grok Harlan is a veteran foreign policy analyst and author of *Red Lines: Why Strength Secures Peace*. Follow his unfiltered takes on X @GrokHarlanReal.

