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Emerging MarketsBlogsShadow Partners: China’s Collaboration with Terrorist Groups to Plunder Venezuela’s Strategic Minerals (Dialogo Americas – February 24, 2026)
Shadow Partners: China’s Collaboration with Terrorist Groups to Plunder Venezuela’s Strategic Minerals (Dialogo Americas – February 24, 2026)
MiningGlobal EconomyEmerging MarketsSupply Chain

Shadow Partners: China’s Collaboration with Terrorist Groups to Plunder Venezuela’s Strategic Minerals (Dialogo Americas – February 24, 2026)

•February 26, 2026
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Republic of Mining
Republic of Mining•Feb 26, 2026

Why It Matters

The trade fuels China’s high‑tech material needs while financing armed groups, destabilizing the Venezuela‑Colombia border and compromising global mineral supply chain integrity.

Key Takeaways

  • •Chinese firms profit from Venezuelan black sand minerals
  • •Minerals smuggled to Colombia, re‑labeled as legal exports
  • •ELN and other armed groups facilitate extraction and transport
  • •Illicit trade undermines regional security and global supply chains

Pulse Analysis

Venezuela’s southern Bolívar State sits atop vast deposits of so‑called black sands – mineral concentrates rich in coltan, niobium and tin that are essential for smartphones, electric‑vehicle batteries and advanced weaponry. As domestic mining collapses under economic strain, Chinese state‑linked enterprises have turned to illicit channels to secure these resources, exploiting the country’s weak regulatory environment. The allure of cheap, strategic inputs drives Beijing’s willingness to engage with non‑state actors, embedding China deeper into a shadow economy that operates beyond conventional trade agreements.

The extraction pipeline is a complex, cross‑border operation. Miners in Cedeño hand off ore to armed groups, notably the ELN, which provide protection and logistical support. The material is then loaded onto river barges and trucks, crossing into Colombia where it undergoes a laundering process: falsified certificates, re‑classification as Colombian commodities, and integration into formal export channels. This “legalization” masks the origin, allowing the minerals to enter global markets under the veneer of compliance, while profits flow back to Chinese buyers and the armed groups that facilitate the trade.

The ramifications extend far beyond the immediate profit margins. By financing insurgent groups, the scheme erodes regional stability and creates a feedback loop that incentivizes further illegal mining. For multinational manufacturers, the hidden supply chain raises compliance risks and potential reputational damage. Policymakers in the United States, Europe and Latin America face a dual challenge: curbing illicit mineral flows and addressing the geopolitical leverage China gains from such covert resource acquisition. Strengthening traceability standards, enhancing border enforcement, and fostering transparent mining initiatives are critical steps to break this cycle and protect both security and supply‑chain integrity.

Shadow Partners: China’s Collaboration with Terrorist Groups to Plunder Venezuela’s Strategic Minerals (Dialogo Americas – February 24, 2026)

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