This book moves beyond traditional narratives of crime and violence to explore how narcotrafficking has evolved from an illicit economic activity into a geopolitical force capable of reshaping governance, undermining institutions, and destabilizing entire regions.
Drawing from decades of field experience, intelligence analysis, and geopolitical research, Johan Obdola maps the transformation of criminal networks into transnational power actors - and explains how these networks now intersect with extremist movements, corrupt elites, and global financial systems.
Rather than treating terrorism, organized crime, and political corruption as separate phenomena, Narcoterrorism 3.0 shows how they function as a single, integrated system - a hybrid architecture of power that operates across borders, institutions, and legal frameworks.
The book addresses critical questions such as:
. How do criminal networks evolve into political and strategic actors?
. Why do fragile states become platforms for transnational power?
. How do illicit financial flows undermine governance and accountability?
. Why are traditional institutions struggling to respond to these threats?
Narcoterrorism 3.0 is written for policymakers, security professionals, analysts, journalists, and institutional leaders seeking to understand one of the most consequential and least understood transformations of the modern world.
This is not a book about crime.
It is a book about power.
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