There are ministers who take office to change reality. There are others who take office to explain it. To translate it into theory, to give academic names to the deterioration, and to convince people, with great eloquence, that what is wrong is actually what should be expected.
Carlos Negro did not arrive at the Ministry of the Interior with a plan. He arrived with a verdict.
While he still had the position in his pocket, before he had even set foot in his office, he publicly declared that the war against drug trafficking "is lost." It was not an outburst. It was not a phrase taken out of context. It was an ideological definition stated with total conviction. When the country reacted, he did not correct himself: he doubled down. He said that "the fantasy of defeating drug trafficking has failed with total success, here and everywhere in the world."
It is difficult to fight something that one has already decided is invincible
One year later, the balance sheet is on the table: 369 homicides in 2025, according to the ministry he leads. A rate of 10.3 per 100,000 inhabitants that more than doubles that of Argentina and Chile. The most revealing thing is not the number itself, but the series: 383, 381, 382, 369. Four consecutive years that are practically identical.
A plateau of blood that this government presents as a "positive trend" and that any society with healthy reflexes would call by its name: normalization of the unacceptable.
Thirteen fewer deaths are not a victory. They are the margin of error of the tragedy.
But the numbers are only the surface. What lies beneath is more disturbing.
In December, eight people were murdered in less than 72 hours. Negro appeared before the cameras with a chilling calm and explained that this violence "is one more manifestation of the violent times we live in" and that "we are in dates that traditionally concentrate this type of episodes."
Christmas and New Year, basically. Organized crime's discount season. As if killing were seasonal and the Minister of the Interior were a meteorologist announcing that it is hot in summer.
In November, the police seized 400 kilos (882 pounds) of cocaine base paste. A real operation, a concrete blow. What did the minister say to celebrate it? That it would generate "shortages at drug dealing points" and that this was "good news for public health."









