[News] El Tren de Aragua: the Defunct Venezuelan Band turned International Narrative Weapon
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Wed Mar 26 16:03:39 EDT 2025
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El Tren de Aragua: the Defunct Venezuelan Band turned International
Narrative Weapon
------------------------------
March 25, 2025
Until the designation as a “transnational criminal organization” by the US
in 2024, the course of the now-disbanded group was narrated by a network of
US think tanks, media and funds that constructed a discourse against the
Bolivarian Revolution. This construction currently serves to justify
sanctions, carry out mass deportations and feed the false idea of a failed
state in Venezuela.
In July 2024, when the US Treasury Department included Tren de Aragua on
its list of transnational criminal organizations, it equated it with
cartels such as Sinaloa or Jalisco Nueva Generación, which have a presence
in more than 100 countries and have more than 45,000 members, associates
and facilitators.
Among the arguments of the US office, this Venezuelan prison gang — already
dismantled — was described as the head of an international network.
However, these arguments were less related to the group’s criminal reality
than to a sophisticated narrative construction machine, financed from
Washington and amplified by international media.
El Tren de Aragua, which emerged in the 2010s as a criminal structure
within Tocorón prison in the Venezuelan state of Aragua, expanded its
radius of action. Described as a multi-criminal gang, this group was
involved in various crimes: extortion, internal control of the prison and
some drug trafficking.
In view of the existence and expansion of this criminal group, in 2019 the
Venezuelan authorities launched investigations into the Aragua Train, which
initially operated in Aragua state and then expanded to other regions of
the country.
Since then, the Venezuelan state has carried out a two-phase attack against
this gang: the first phase involved locating its leaders and dismantling
the organization, resulting in the arrest of 28 members and the issuance of
arrest warrants for another 46 individuals; and the second phase, triggered
after the capture of the Tocorón prison in the Cacique Guaicaipuro
Liberation Operation, focused on dismantling the gang’s financial network
and was repeated in other prisons such as Yaracuy and Trujillo, as well as
Tocuyito.
In the latter operation, raids were carried out, vehicles and property were
seized, and 16 people involved were arrested, with 14 in judicial
proceedings. In total, there are 44 detainees and 102 with arrest warrants
for their involvement with the Aragua Train.
However, by then the international narrative had already turned the Aragua
Train into an alleged transnational group, with operational cells in
different countries around the world in charge of an alleged trafficking
network that stretched from Chile to the United States, transforming it
into a “threat” to the great American power.
These claims, however, lack any real basis: they are mere speculations
turned into “facts” through a web of financing and narrative and media
development linked to the State Department.
Documents and traces of financing show how think tanks, NGOs and media
aligned with US foreign policy wove the legend of an organization capable
of controlling migratory routes from Chile to the US.
The National Endowment for Democracy (NED), an organization funded by the
US Congress, allocated some 2.3 million dollars between 2020 and 2024 to
projects on “organized crime in Venezuela,” according to its public
reports. Among the beneficiaries was the Victims Monitor, a media coalition
that includes El Pitazo, RunRun.es, and Tal Cual. This coalition drove much
of the initial coverage of the Aragua Train.
In this ecosystem, certain journalists became go-to sources. Ronna Rísquez,
author of the book Tren de Aragua (2023), trained at Columbia University
and a declared opponent, was awarded a grant by the Gabo Foundation —
associated with USAID — and her investigations were cited by the US
Treasury to justify sanctions.
Today, although she herself recognizes that there is no evidence that the
group operates in the US, her work continues to be referenced in the
international media. Similar cases are those of César Batiz and Joseph
Poliszuk, Venezuelan journalists in Miami whose reports — funded by the NED
— are amplified by CNN Español and El Nuevo Herald.
For its part, USAID financed InSight Crime, a specialized media outlet that
published at least 17 articles in 2023 linking the group to the government
of Nicolás Maduro, without presenting conclusive evidence. This version was
denied even by US intelligence agencies such as the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) and the National Security Agency (NSA), which agreed that the
Aragua Train operates independently, with no links to the Venezuelan
government. Only the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) partially
disagreed, based on information considered unreliable by other agencies.
Open Society Foundations, meanwhile, supported workshops for journalists in
Colombia and Peru where the idea of a “regional expansion” of the Aragua
Train was promoted.
The modus operandi of this machinery follows a recognizable pattern: think
tanks produce reports with alarmist language (“The Aragua Train is the new
MS-13”); local media financed by the same NGOs disseminate them and win
awards from related foundations; major international media outlets
republish the content without independent verification; and finally, US
officials use it to justify policy measures.
A specific example occurred in October 2023, when InSight Crime claimed
that the Aragua Train “controlled the smuggling of migrants across the
southern US border.” Days later, Republican senators used the report to
call for additional sanctions against Venezuela. The connection between
media production and political action is direct: one only has to recognize
the mechanism to see its causal relationship.
This operation was denounced by the Venezuelan president, who even pointed
out that the very creation and deployment of criminal gangs such as the now
defunct Tren de Aragua are promoted and organized by the US Federal Bureau
of Investigation (FBI) and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) from
Colombia, to carry out terrorist activities in Venezuela.
Today, the narrative of the “Aragua Train” feeds the kidnapping and
deportation — to maximum security prisons suspected of being torture
centers — of hundreds of Venezuelan migrants in the US.
While in 2024 the US deported 1,200 people on the grounds of “links to
organized crime,” so far this year there have been mass deportations to
Guantanamo and the Salvadoran CECOT, without due process and, in most
cases, against Venezuelans with no criminal record.
In turn, in countries such as Chile, Peru and Ecuador, governments passed
more restrictive immigration laws citing the “threat of the Aragua Train”.
The national media insists on blaming this group – now defunct – for the
growing crime rate, triggered by the levels of inequality typical of
neoliberal regimes. Thus, in addition to criminalization, there is a
stigmatization of the Venezuelan population, which is exposed to
discriminatory acts.
The unanswered question is why an already defunct gang is being treated as
an internationally deployed structure, as if it were one of the few global
criminal organizations. The answer seems to lie less in regional security
and more in the need to justify sanctions and interventions and to
perpetuate the false image of Venezuela as a failed state.
The real winners are the think tanks that secure funding, the media that
harvest clicks and the politicians — Republicans and Democrats — who feed
their anti-migrant rhetoric. The losers: Venezuelan migrants, doubly
victimized: first by sanctions against their country, then by a narrative
that criminalizes them.
Source: Cuba en Resumen
<https://cubaenresumen.org/2025/03/25/el-tren-de-aragua-la-banda-venezolana-extinta-convertida-en-arma-narrativa-internacional/>
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