Colombian Army Locates Large IED Factory in Cauca, Targeting Carlos Patiño Structure

The Colombian Army's Third Division has located one of the largest improvised explosive device factories linked to the Carlos Patiño armed group, in the municipality of El Tambo, Cauca. The discovery represents a significant counter-operations success in a department that has long been among the most violent in the country.
The Carlos Patiño structure is a faction of former Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia guerrillas who rejected the 2016 peace agreement and continued armed operations. Along with other dissident groups, the ELN guerrillas, and criminal paramilitary networks, it controls territory in parts of the southwestern Colombian countryside where state presence remains thin and illegal economies—primarily narcotics trafficking—fund ongoing conflict.
IEDs have been a persistent feature of the conflict in Cauca. Armed groups use them to target military patrols, police convoys, and, on occasion, civilian infrastructure. The factory discovered in El Tambo, according to the Army's Third Division, was capable of producing devices at scale. Its dismantling removes a portion of the group's bomb-making capacity, though security analysts caution that such networks are often re-established within months of disruption.
Rural conflict and the limits of military presence
Cauca has been a centre of armed-group activity for decades. The department sits along trafficking corridors that move cocaine from Andean cultivation zones toward Pacific coastal exit points. Control of these routes determines the revenue and territorial reach of each armed actor. The result is a patchwork of zones where governance is contested, civilian communities are caught between competing demands, and state security forces operate under persistent threat.
The Petro government has pursued what it calls a "total peace" strategy—negotiating simultaneously with multiple armed groups—while maintaining military operations. The discovery of the El Tambo factory is consistent with the operational side of that approach: continued pressure on armed-group infrastructure even as diplomatic channels remain open.
The factory's scale, described by the Army as among the largest attributed to the Carlos Patiño structure, suggests months of preparation and a supply chain for raw materials—ammonium nitrate, detonators, shrapnel—that itself implies logistical networks worth disrupting. Whether the Third Division's engineers were able to fully neutralise the site, or whether materiel was moved before the discovery, is not specified in the Army's statement.
Why this matters outside Colombia
International media attention on Colombia has fluctuated over the years, shadowing political cycles in Washington and the preferences of wire editors in European capitals. The El Tambo discovery received minimal coverage in English-language outlets at the time of the Army's announcement. This is not unusual: the conflict in rural Colombia rarely competes with crises in Eastern Europe or the Middle East for column-inches. The result is that significant military operations in one of the hemisphere's most durable armed conflicts are reported inconsistently, if at all.
Coca cultivation in Colombia fell marginally in the most recent UN Office on Drugs and Crime survey, but the trafficking economy that sustains the Carlos Patiño structure and its competitors remains robust. Eradicating the economic logic of armed groups in Cauca would require a degree of state presence and rural development that no Colombian government has yet managed to fund or sustain. Military operations like the El Tambo raid deal with the symptom; the structural conditions that produce armed groups persist.
For the communities living under this pressure, the discovery of a bomb factory is one data point among many. Local mayors and civic groups in Cauca have for years called for more consistent security provision, faster infrastructure investment, and protection for community leaders who face targeted violence. Whether the El Tambo operation leads to any of those outcomes depends on follow-through that the Army statement does not address.
Stakes and the absence of corroboration
The sources available for this story are limited to the Colombian Army's own announcement via the Third Division's Telegram channel. No independent verification of the factory's scale, the material recovered, or any follow-up military operations has been reported in available wire coverage. What the statement does establish is that the Third Division believes it found a significant IED production site in El Tambo and attributes it to the Carlos Patiño structure.
That attribution places the discovery within a known pattern. The Carlos Patiño group is among the armed factions operating in southern Cauca and northern Cauca that have been engaged in clashes with each other and with state forces. IED use is documented across these groups; a production facility, if confirmed, would be notable. Whether it was as large as described, and whether its disruption will meaningfully affect armed-group capabilities in the medium term, remains to be tested.
The broader pattern—drug-trafficking revenues sustaining armed groups, those groups using violence to control territory, IEDs serving as tools of asymmetric warfare against state forces—has not shifted because of a single operation. What changes incrementally is the capacity of armed groups to project force, and the exposure of civilian populations in contested zones to continuing instability. The El Tambo discovery is evidence that Colombian security forces are still finding and hitting those networks. Whether the pace is sufficient relative to the pace at which groups rebuild is a question the available sources do not answer.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/wfwitness