Brazil’s ‘Next President’ Drops BOMBSHELL Maduro Claim
At an international conference in Jerusalem aimed at combating antisemitism, Avi Yemini interviewed Flávio Bolsonaro, a Brazilian politician and the eldest son of former President Jair Bolsonaro, to discuss pressing issues facing his country.
Flávio did not mince words about the threats posed by foreign actors near Brazil’s borders.
“Brazil is impacted by the activities of terrorist groups along our borders, particularly near Venezuela and the tri-border area with Argentina and Paraguay,” he said.
“It’s where many weapons and drugs enter, and where money is leveraged for organised crime. Brazil needs to participate in international cooperation to combat these groups.”
Our Note: the area Flávio Bolsonaro mentions is a tri-country area occupied by Hezbollah - and is the financial machine for their terrorism through the production and selling of drugs globally. You can read more about this tri-border area by clicking the image or button below…
Hezbollah operates as a terrorist organization involved in illicit activities for funding - the leftists will say they are familiy businesses with commerce operations…
Hezbollah’s presence in the Tri-Border Area is a significant threat, with the group involved in financing terrorist activities through drug trafficking, counterfeiting, and contraband smuggling.
The group’s activities in Latin America are facilitated by high levels of corruption and the region’s vulnerabilities, which Iran exploits to establish influence.
Paraguay has designated Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as a terrorist organization to combat terrorism and disrupt financing for Iran-backed groups like Hezbollah.
Hezbollah has been implicated in past terrorist attacks in South America, including bombings targeting Israeli embassies in the 1990s.




Powerful reporting on a massively underreported issue. The tri-border area's role as a Hezbollah financing hub rarely gets mainstream attention despite being critical infrastructure for their operations. I remeber reading about the 1994 Buenos Aires bombing connections to this region and its wild how little has changed. Bolsonaro's framing of international cooperation makes sense when you realize these networks fund instability way beyond South America.