Marxist terror groups turned Christmas Day into a nightmare for over 250 Colombian families, forcing them from their homes as FARC dissidents and ELN guerrillas battled for territorial control. This reported clash exposed the fundamental failure of Colombian President Gustavo Petro’s “total peace” strategy, serving as a cruel reminder that leftist extremism never takes a holiday.
Story Highlights
- Over 250 Colombians were displaced on Christmas Day by clashes between FARC and ELN, Marxist terror groups
- Violence exposes the failure of Colombia’s leftist President Petro’s “total peace” negotiations
- Guerrilla warfare stems from decades of Marxist insurgency rooted in Cuban and Soviet-inspired ideology
- Incident undermines post-2016 peace accord stability and threatens regional security
Christmas Day Terror Forces Families to Flee
More than 250 innocent Colombians were forced to abandon their homes on December 25, 2025, as violent clashes erupted between two notorious Marxist terror organizations. The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) dissidents and the National Liberation Army (ELN) engaged in combat that turned the holiest day of the Christian calendar into a humanitarian crisis. The timing appears deliberate, maximizing psychological impact on vulnerable rural communities already struggling under decades of leftist insurgent violence.
Colombia: Marxist Terror Group Clashes Displace over 250 on Christmas Day https://t.co/FtZ2J0ceOX
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Marxist Ideology Fuels Decades of Violence
The ELN formed in 1964 under Cuban-trained students following Che Guevara’s revolutionary strategies, while FARC emerged in 1966 from Soviet-influenced communist resistance committees. Both groups represent the toxic legacy of Marxist extremism that has plagued Colombia since the 1960s. These organizations evolved from rural militias into sophisticated terror networks sustained by kidnapping, extortion, and drug trafficking. Their ideological commitment to overthrowing democratic institutions has cost hundreds of thousands of Colombian lives over six decades.
Despite FARC’s 2016 peace accord with the government, dissident factions rejected demobilization and continue operating as criminal enterprises. The ELN never fully participated in peace negotiations, maintaining its commitment to revolutionary warfare. These groups now compete violently for control over coca production, extortion networks, and strategic rural territories where state presence remains weak.
Petro’s Failed Peace Strategy Emboldens Terrorists
Colombia’s leftist President Gustavo Petro campaigned on a “total peace” policy that would negotiate with all remaining guerrilla groups. The Christmas Day violence exposes the fundamental flaw in appeasing terrorists through dialogue rather than decisive military action. Petro’s administration declared an economic emergency in December 2024, citing fiscal strain partly attributed to ongoing conflict costs. This approach rewards violence with negotiation opportunities, encouraging further terror attacks against innocent civilians.
The displacement crisis reveals how weak government response emboldens Marxist extremists to expand their territorial control. Rural indigenous and Afro-Colombian communities bear the brunt of this violence, caught between competing terror factions while the central government pursues failed diplomatic solutions. The strategy mirrors historical patterns where leftist governments’ reluctance to confront communist insurgencies prolongs civilian suffering.
Colombia: Marxist Terror Group Clashes Displace over 250 on Christmas Day :
Regional Security Implications Threaten Stability
The resurgence of FARC-ELN violence threatens to destabilize Colombia’s fragile post-2016 peace process and potentially spread chaos across regional borders. These Marxist groups maintain connections with Venezuelan criminal networks and other leftist extremist organizations throughout Latin America. The Christmas Day attacks demonstrate their ability to conduct coordinated operations that disrupt civilian life and challenge state authority in strategic rural areas.
Forced displacement in the Colombian region of Catatumbo – video Dailymotion
Sources:
Colombia: Marxist Terror Group Clashes Displace over 250 on Christmas Day
FDD Overnight Brief: December 24, 2025
Colombia: La Violencia, dictatorship, and democratic restoration
“Colombia: Marxist Terror Group Clashes Displace over 250 on Christmas Day” – Engaging.com
















