It was because such a threat requires deep international cooperation to defeat, they are more organized than the government itself and even the police themselves, and the fact that they are more rewarded than the police themselves, international organized crime can be eliminated.
Thus, the fight against organized crime is disorganized, but not bureaucratic, but hierarchical, and what makes police and laws bureaucratic and unrewarded is highlighted on the global agenda, along with issues of the environment, poverty, human rights and the energy matrix. .
The argument outlined above is intuitive and not entirely wrong, but it is certainly insufficient for understanding, classifying and formulating policy in relation to organized crime, especially at the international level.