There’s a moment in every great crime thriller where the detective looks around the city he swore to protect and realizes — quietly, grimly — that the bad guys already won. The streets look the same. The coffee shops are open. Kids are riding bikes. But underneath it all, something rotted out a long time ago.
That moment is happening right now in Belgium. And it’s not fiction.
Bart Willocx, the President of the Antwerp Court of Appeal — a judge, not some fringe commentator — just looked the world in the eye and said the quiet part loud: Belgium is sliding toward becoming a narco-state. Not metaphorically. Not “kind of.” Sliding. As in the ground is already moving under their feet and most people are still debating what to have for dinner.
Here’s what that actually looks like on the ground. Drug cartels — real ones, the kind with South American supply chains and zero patience for people who say no — have embedded themselves into Belgian society like a tick on a golden retriever. They’re not hiding in back alleys. They’re bribing judges. They’re paying port workers a quarter-million euros to move a single container. They’re showing up at the homes of people who refused to cooperate — with photos of their children.
Let that land for a second. Photos. Of their children.
The port of Antwerp — Europe’s cocaine superhighway — funneled more than 70 percent of the continent’s cocaine supply in 2024. Seventy percent. The cartels didn’t sneak in through the back door. They walked in through the front, bought the doorman a house, and started redecorating.
And here’s where it gets truly stunning: the judges are living in safe houses now. Some under permanent protection. The people whose entire job is to enforce the law are hiding from the people who break it. That’s not a justice system anymore. That’s a hostage situation with better paperwork.
The gangs, being the industrious little entrepreneurs they are, also figured out the workforce pipeline. They groom teenagers. Get them jobs at the port. Then squeeze. Kids as young as thirteen are being paid pocket change to break into the port and steal cocaine. Thirteen. The cartel’s HR department makes LinkedIn recruiters look lazy.
Now — and pay attention here, because this is the part the European press will tiptoe around forever — none of this happened in a vacuum. Antwerp is one of the most “diverse” cities in Western Europe. Brussels, the supposed capital of the free world’s greatest bureaucratic achievement, had to deploy the military to deal with drug gang violence last year. The military. In Belgium. Not Medellín. Belgium.
The open borders crowd spent two decades telling anyone who’d listen that more immigration meant more culture, more vibrancy, more economic dynamism. What Antwerp got was more cocaine, more corruption, and more judges sleeping in government safehouses. The globalist experiment delivered — just not quite what was advertised on the brochure.
Meanwhile, across the Atlantic, Trump has been screaming from the rooftops about exactly this playbook — cartels using ports, corrupting institutions, targeting the young, and metastasizing inside nations that were too polite or too naïve to stop them early. He got called a xenophobe for it. He got impeached. Twice. The media called him hysterical.
Antwerp says hi.
The difference between America and Belgium right now isn’t geography. It’s that America — barely, messily, imperfectly — has a leader who actually named the enemy. Trump didn’t tiptoe around the cartel problem. He brought a bulldozer, slapped tariffs on Colombia when they played games, and made it clear the United States wasn’t going to be the world’s most welcoming transit hub for South American cocaine operations.
Belgium? Belgium published an anonymous open letter from a judge too scared to sign his own name. That’s the institutional courage of a country watching itself get eaten alive and choosing to file a complaint in triplicate.
Prosecutor General Guido Vermeiren put it plainly: “We are becoming a state with a lot of corruption, with a lot of threats.” That sentence deserves to be read slowly, because a chief prosecutor just admitted his country is corroding from the inside — and the European Union, headquartered right there in Brussels, is too busy regulating the curvature of bananas to notice the cartels running the port next door.
Where does this go? History’s pretty clear on that. When the money gets big enough, the corruption gets deep enough, and the violence gets normalized enough — you don’t get a sudden national awakening. You get a slow acceptance. You get politicians who stop asking hard questions because asking hard questions becomes dangerous. You get a press corps that covers the symptoms and never touches the cause. You get a country that technically still holds elections but where the real decisions get made in warehouses at 2 a.m.
Belgium isn’t Colombia — yet. But Colombia wasn’t Colombia either, once upon a time. It was just a country with a busy port and a corruption problem that nobody wanted to take seriously until Pablo Escobar was blowing up airplanes.
The judge warned them. The prosecutor warned them. The anonymous letter warned them. The military boots on Brussels streets warned them.
At some point, a warning stops being a warning and starts being a eulogy.
