Operacion Dragon May 2026

The Civil Guard knew they couldn't beat the clans at sea, so they beat them on land. Using wiretaps and a paid informant inside the Charlines organization, agents learned the critical detail: the clans were moving away from heroin to cocaine, and they had bought a state-of-the-art freezer trawler.

On a foggy November morning in 2005, a commercial fishing trawler named Punta Candieira slipped into the port of Vigo, Spain. To the dockworkers, it was just another vessel returning from a long, fruitless haul in the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. The crew looked exhausted; the nets were clean. But the Spanish Civil Guard had been waiting for this ship for six months.

Prologue: The Hero’s Return

Operación Dragón was not a lucky break. It was a two-year infiltration.

The name was chosen deliberately. In Chinese and Western mythology, the dragon guards a great treasure. For the Galician clans, their treasure was the cocaine route. For the Civil Guard, the dragon was the clan itself—ancient, powerful, and breathing fire. The operation was the knight’s charge. Operacion Dragon

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.

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. The Civil Guard knew they couldn't beat the

This was the final strike of , the largest anti-narcotics operation in Spanish history up to that point.