Cross-border drug trafficking (CBDT) networks tend to be fluid in
nature; and their sophisticated modus operandi (MO), from preparation
to the later stages of activity, enables criminal networks/syndicates
to achieve their goals. Practices show similar patterns to those found in
Latin America, but transnational organized crime (TOC) in the Asian
region is a distinctive category. CBDT entities spanning the Vietnam–
Lao PDR (hereafter Laos) border are different again from the Yakuza
and Triad gangs that have traditionally characterized so-called “Asian
crime”. Local criminal gangs in Vietnam are usually formed around
bonds of kinship, locality, and upbringing, as well as language and ethnic
identity, which not only ensures cooperation but also has a major
bearing upon the organizational structure, internal relationships, and
MO of CBDT entities.