TY - JOUR
T1 - The denying threat to national security and defense
T2 - Hezbollah’s presence in Colombia
AU - Londoño-Bedoya, David Andres
AU - Padilla-Bueno, Maritza
AU - Areiza-Padilla, Jose Andres
AU - Veas-González, Ivan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2025/6/19
Y1 - 2025/6/19
N2 - This article critically examines Hezbollah’s presence in Colombia and evaluates whether it constitutes a strategic threat to the nation’s security and defense. Through qualitative documentary analysis, the study explores the convergence of international terrorism and transnational organized crime and its impact on Colombia’s internal conflict. It focuses on Hezbollah’s involvement in drug trafficking, money laundering, and arms smuggling, highlighting the group’s integration into local criminal networks and its potential to destabilize regional security. Drawing on open-source intelligence, official documents, and peer-reviewed literature, the research reveals that Colombian defense policies have largely failed to recognize Hezbollah as a significant threat. This institutional blind spot endangers both national and regional stability, especially given Hezbollah’s ties to Venezuelan political actors and Colombian insurgent groups. The central research question asks to what extent Hezbollah’s presence has influenced Colombia’s national security and defense policy since 2001, and how the state has acknowledged—or neglected—this influence. The study hypothesizes that Hezbollah’s role has been consistently underestimated due to a narrow view of terrorism as an external threat. As a result, Colombia’s security strategies have remained inward-focused and insufficient to address the hybrid, transnational nature of contemporary non-state actors.
AB - This article critically examines Hezbollah’s presence in Colombia and evaluates whether it constitutes a strategic threat to the nation’s security and defense. Through qualitative documentary analysis, the study explores the convergence of international terrorism and transnational organized crime and its impact on Colombia’s internal conflict. It focuses on Hezbollah’s involvement in drug trafficking, money laundering, and arms smuggling, highlighting the group’s integration into local criminal networks and its potential to destabilize regional security. Drawing on open-source intelligence, official documents, and peer-reviewed literature, the research reveals that Colombian defense policies have largely failed to recognize Hezbollah as a significant threat. This institutional blind spot endangers both national and regional stability, especially given Hezbollah’s ties to Venezuelan political actors and Colombian insurgent groups. The central research question asks to what extent Hezbollah’s presence has influenced Colombia’s national security and defense policy since 2001, and how the state has acknowledged—or neglected—this influence. The study hypothesizes that Hezbollah’s role has been consistently underestimated due to a narrow view of terrorism as an external threat. As a result, Colombia’s security strategies have remained inward-focused and insufficient to address the hybrid, transnational nature of contemporary non-state actors.
KW - Colombia
KW - Hezbollah
KW - International politics
KW - International relations
KW - Introductory politics
KW - Latin America
KW - Military and strategic studies
KW - Security studies–pol and intl relns
KW - terrorism
KW - transnational crime
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105008561609
U2 - 10.1080/23311886.2025.2500653
DO - 10.1080/23311886.2025.2500653
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105008561609
SN - 2331-1886
VL - 11
SP - 1
EP - 18
JO - Cogent Social Sciences
JF - Cogent Social Sciences
IS - 1
M1 - 2500653
ER -