Quick Facts
Quick Facts
Escobar ordered the assassination of three presidential candidates.
He bombed the DAS building (Colombian intelligence) in 1989, killing 52 people.
He killed over 200 police officers in the first year of his war on the state.
He offered $2,000 for every dead police officer.
The Avianca bombing was intended to kill a presidential candidate who was not on the plane.
Visual answer
The Escobar Terror Campaign
The violence that led to his death.
1984
Escobar begins assassinating police officers. The war on the state begins.
1989
He bombs Avianca Flight 203, killing 107 people. He bombs the DAS building, killing 52.
1989
He orders the assassination of presidential candidate Luis Carlos Galan.
1990-1993
The manhunt intensifies. Escobar is hunted by Colombian police and US intelligence.
1993
He is killed on a rooftop in Medellin.
Story in brief
Story in Brief
1984
Escobar declares war on the Colombian government. He orders the killing of police officers.
The drug lord becomes a terrorist. The government cannot ignore him.
1989
Escobar bombs Avianca Flight 203, killing 107 innocent people.
The attack shocks the nation. The US gets involved. The hunt becomes international.
1989
He orders the assassination of presidential candidate Luis Carlos Galan.
The government declares total war on Escobar. There is no negotiation. Only elimination.
1992
Escobar escapes from La Catedral. He becomes a fugitive.
The manhunt intensifies. He is hunted like an animal.
1993
He is killed on a rooftop in Medellin.
The war is over. The violence continues, but the leader is dead.
The Story
Why the Drugs Were Not the Issue
Pablo Escobar was not killed because he sold cocaine. The Colombian government tolerated drug lords for years. They looked the other way. They took bribes. They made deals.
What they could not tolerate was the violence. Escobar declared war on the state. He killed police officers. He assassinated judges. He murdered journalists. He blew up an airplane. He bombed a shopping mall. He turned Medellin into a war zone.
The turning point was 1989. Escobar bombed Avianca Flight 203, killing 107 people. He was trying to kill a presidential candidate who was not on the plane. He killed 107 innocent people instead. Then he ordered the assassination of the candidate, Luis Carlos Galan, who was murdered a week later.
That was the end. Colombia declared total war on Escobar. The US joined. The hunt began. It took four years. But the result was inevitable. Escobar had made war on a nation. The nation fought back. The nation won.
From Luis Carlos Galan
"We will not kneel. We will not negotiate. We will defeat them."
, Luis Carlos Galan, assassinated 1989
He said this before he was killed. His words became a rallying cry. Colombia did not kneel. Colombia did not negotiate. Colombia defeated Escobar.
Evidence
Why He Was Killed
He declared war on the Colombian government.
StrongHe killed thousands of people, including civilians.
StrongHe bombed Avianca Flight 203, killing 107 innocents.
StrongHe assassinated a presidential candidate, Luis Carlos Galan.
StrongHis drug trafficking was secondary to his terrorism.
StrongKey Points
Key Points So Far
Escobar was killed because of his violence, not his drug trafficking.
He declared war on the Colombian government and killed thousands.
He bombed an airplane, killing 107 civilians.
He assassinated a presidential candidate, Luis Carlos Galan.
The government declared total war and hunted him down.
Analogy
Like Crossing a Line You Cannot Uncros
The familiar part
Imagine a prisoner on work release. He can leave the prison during the day. He must return at night. One day, he does not return. He kills a guard. He escapes.
How it applies
Colombia had a line. Drug trafficking was bad. But bombing civilians was worse. Escobar crossed that line. He could not uncross it. He signed his own death warrant.
Where the analogy breaks
Prisoners are caught. Escobar was hunted. The analogy works.
Curiosity Notes
Details Most People Miss
Why this still matters
Why This Still Matters
Pablo Escobar was killed because he was a terrorist. That is the uncomfortable truth. He was not a Robin Hood. He was not a folk hero. He was a man who bombed an airplane full of civilians. He was a man who killed a presidential candidate. He was a man who declared war on his own country. His country fought back. His country won. That is justice. That is why he died.
Key Findings
- ✓Core findingEscobar was killed because of his violence, not his drug trafficking.
- ✓Strong evidenceHe declared war on the Colombian government and killed thousands.
- ⚠Main consequenceHe bombed an airplane, killing 107 civilians.
- ✓Wider legacyHe assassinated a presidential candidate, Luis Carlos Galan.
- ★Bottom lineThe government declared total war and hunted him down.
Final insight
A Last Thought
Pablo Escobar was killed because he thought he was above the law. He thought he could bomb civilians and assassinate politicians and still survive. He was wrong. The law caught up to him. The law was a bullet. The bullet was Colombian. Escobar died. The law did not. That is why he died. Not because of the drugs. Because of the arrogance.
Quick answers
Common questions
Did the US want Escobar dead? +
Yes. The US had been trying to extradite him for years. But the final decision to kill him, not capture him, was Colombian. He was too dangerous to take alive.
Could Escobar have survived if he surrendered? +
Possibly. He was offered a plea deal. He refused. He thought he was untouchable. He was wrong.


