Operacion Dragon May 2026
Operación Dragón was not a lucky break. It was a two-year infiltration.
For decades, the rugged Rías Baixas (lower estuaries) of Galicia in northwestern Spain were the heroin gateway to Europe. Unlike the flashy cartels of Colombia or Mexico, the Galician clans were insular, secretive, and fiercely loyal. They were fishermen who simply changed their cargo from sardines to cocaine. Operacion Dragon
By the early 2000s, a loose federation of three families—the Charlines, the Míguez, and the Padín—controlled the route. They would meet Colombian "go-fast" boats (known as planeadoras ) 200 miles off the Portuguese coast, transfer the drugs, and then blend into the thousands of legitimate fishing vessels returning to port. They were ghosts. Operación Dragón was not a lucky break
The dragon was slain, but the lesson remains: along the coast of Galicia, when the fog rolls in and a fishing boat runs without lights, old habits die hard. Unlike the flashy cartels of Colombia or Mexico,
The operation dismantled the "Galician connection." The heads of the Charlines clan were sentenced to over 18 years in prison. The Punta Candieira was seized and later used by the Spanish government as a training ship for anti-drug officers.
The operation’s masterstroke was electronic. Spanish agents, with help from the US DEA and the UK’s SOCA, managed to jam the clan’s satellite phone system. For 48 hours before the Punta Candieira docked, the bosses in their luxury villas in A Illa de Arousa heard only static. They couldn’t warn the crew that the port was surrounded.