serpent_cartel

Serpent Cartel

  • Core Identity: A ruthless, technologically advanced international criminal syndicate and HYDRA-splinter group that functions like a modern multinational corporation, specializing in arms dealing, corporate espionage, and large-scale terrorism.
  • Key Takeaways:
  • Role in the Universe: The Serpent Cartel represents a modernized evolution of hydra's ideology, replacing arcane occultism and fascist dogma with cold, calculating corporate greed and the pursuit of power through technological supremacy. They are primary antagonists for Captain America (Sam Wilson).
  • Primary Impact: Their debut storyline involved a plan for global genocide, immediately establishing them as a top-tier threat. They have consistently served as the primary antagonistic force challenging Sam Wilson's tenure as Captain America, testing his capabilities and ideology in a world threatened by corporate malfeasance as much as by super-powered despots.
  • Key Incarnations: The Serpent Cartel is an organization exclusive to the Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe). It has no direct counterpart or mention in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), though its themes of black-market advanced technology and corporate villainy are echoed in MCU entities like Hammer Industries and the criminal network of the power_broker.

The Serpent Cartel first stormed onto the pages of Marvel Comics in All-New Captain America #1, published in November 2014 (with a January 2015 cover date). The organization was co-created by the celebrated writer Rick Remender and artist Stuart Immonen. Their creation was a deliberate and strategic move within the broader “All-New, All-Different Marvel” publishing initiative. This era was defined by legacy characters passing their mantles to new heroes. With Steve Rogers aged and depowered, Sam Wilson, formerly the Falcon, had taken up the shield and wings as the new Captain America. To cement Sam's legitimacy in the role, he required his own rogues' gallery and a defining arch-nemesis. The Serpent Cartel was designed to be precisely that. Remender envisioned a threat that was ideologically distinct from the classic Captain America villains. While red_skull represented the horrors of Nazism and fascism, the Serpent Cartel was conceived as a reflection of more contemporary anxieties: unchecked corporate power, the military-industrial complex, and the amorality of global capitalism. They were not driven by a specific political dogma but by profit and control, making them a perfect foil for Sam Wilson's more socially-conscious and grounded Captain America. Stuart Immonen's sleek, modern, and menacing designs for the Cartel's agents and technology visually distinguished them from the more traditional, uniform-heavy look of organizations like HYDRA and A.I.M., establishing them as a fresh and formidable force in the Marvel Universe.

In-Universe Origin Story

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The Serpent Cartel was forged from the ashes of hydra's numerous defeats. In the wake of several leadership vacuums and internal power struggles, many high-ranking HYDRA agents and scientists grew disillusioned with the organization's fixation on archaic, occult-driven goals and its history of spectacular failures. They saw the old HYDRA as an inefficient, dogmatic relic. One such operative was the ambitious and cunning tactician known as Viper (Lucas Stephenson). Stephenson, a brilliant strategist who had risen through HYDRA's ranks, believed the organization's core principle—that humanity needed to be controlled for its own good—was sound, but its methods were outdated. He envisioned a new kind of organization, one that would shed HYDRA's quasi-religious trappings and operate with the ruthless efficiency of a Fortune 500 company. Viper began to secretly consolidate power, recruiting disillusioned HYDRA members, disenfranchised A.I.M. scientists, and elite mercenaries who were drawn to his vision of power through profit. He absorbed splinter cells and remnants of other failed organizations, offering them a clear, modern objective: control the world not through overt conquest, but through the control of its technology, its economy, and its weapons. This new organization was christened the Serpent Cartel. The Cartel established its primary base of operations in the sovereign criminal nation of bagalia, a lawless state governed by a council of super-criminals. From this safe haven, they began to operate on a global scale. Their business model was brutally effective: steal cutting-edge technology from entities like stark_industries and shield, reverse-engineer and weaponize it, and then sell it to the highest bidder—be they rogue nations, terrorist cells, or corporate competitors. Key to their early rise was the recruitment of iconic villains who provided immediate credibility and tactical strength. Baron Helmut Zemo, with his own complex history with HYDRA and Captain America, joined as a senior strategist, though his own aristocratic and ideological goals often put him at odds with the Cartel's purely materialistic motives. The brutal mercenary Crossbones (Brock Rumlow) became their chief enforcer, and Sin (Sinthea Schmidt), daughter of the Red Skull, brought a terrifying legacy and a contingent of loyal followers. The Serpent Cartel was, in essence, HYDRA 2.0: leaner, smarter, and motivated by the universally understood language of money and power.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

It is crucial to state unequivocally: The Serpent Cartel does not exist and has never been mentioned in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). It is purely a creation of the comics, designed specifically as an adversary for Sam Wilson's Captain America. However, while the organization itself is absent, the thematic concepts it represents are prevalent throughout the MCU. The Serpent Cartel's core business—the trafficking of advanced and illicit super-technology—is a recurring plot element. This theme can be seen in:

  • Justin Hammer and Hammer Industries (Iron Man 2): Hammer's attempts to replicate Tony Stark's technology and his willingness to deal with terrorists like Ivan Vanko mirror the Cartel's corporate amorality and theft of intellectual property.
  • Adrian Toomes' Salvage Crew (Spider-Man: Homecoming): Toomes' operation, which salvaged Chitauri technology from the Battle of New York and repurposed it into advanced weaponry for the black market, is a smaller-scale, blue-collar version of the Serpent Cartel's business model.
  • Sonny Burch (Ant-Man and the Wasp): Burch is a black-market technology dealer and restaurateur, demonstrating the existence of a sophisticated criminal underworld focused on acquiring and selling advanced tech, a niche the Cartel would dominate.
  • The Power Broker (The Falcon and the Winter Soldier): Sharon Carter, operating as the Power Broker from the criminal haven of Madripoor, runs a global network dealing in secrets, weapons, and even super-soldiers. Her operation is the closest thematic parallel to the Serpent Cartel in the MCU, showcasing a powerful, well-connected individual controlling a vast criminal enterprise from a lawless city-state, much like the Cartel operates from bagalia.

Should the MCU decide to introduce a major antagonistic organization for future Captain America films starring Sam Wilson, the Serpent Cartel provides a perfect template. Adapting them would offer a threat that is ideologically distinct from the MCU's version of HYDRA and allows for the reintroduction of characters like Baron Zemo in a leadership role within a more structured and modern criminal empire.

The Serpent Cartel is defined by its modern, corporate structure, which prioritizes efficiency, profit, and plausible deniability over the blind fanaticism of its predecessors.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The core mandate of the Serpent Cartel is the acquisition and control of global power through technological and economic dominance. Their ideology can be summarized by the following principles:

  • Profit Over Dogma: Unlike HYDRA, the Cartel is not bound by fascist or Nazi ideologies. Their primary motivation is wealth. World domination is a means to secure infinite market share, not an end in itself.
  • Technological Supremacy: They believe that the nation, army, or corporation with the most advanced technology will inevitably rule. A significant portion of their resources is dedicated to R&D, corporate espionage, and technology theft.
  • Weaponization of Everything: The Cartel sees everything as a potential weapon—biology, information, economics, and energy. Their most infamous plot involved weaponizing the Inhuman Terrigenesis process.
  • Corporate Structure: They emulate the ruthless efficiency of a multinational corporation. They have departments, project managers, and a clear hierarchy, but also encourage internal competition and “hostile takeovers” of rival criminal enterprises.

The Cartel is organized into a clear but flexible hierarchy, allowing for rapid adaptation to changing market conditions and threats.

Leadership & Key Personnel
The Viper (Lucas Stephenson) The de facto CEO and founder. A master strategist and tactician, Stephenson provides the overarching vision for the Cartel. He is rarely seen on the front lines, preferring to direct operations from a secure command center.
Baron Zemo (Helmut Zemo) Serves as a high-level strategist and field commander. Zemo's brilliance and experience are invaluable, but his personal vendettas and aristocratic sense of purpose often clash with the Cartel's mercenary nature. He is a powerful but volatile asset.
Crossbones (Brock Rumlow) Head of Enforcement. Crossbones is the Cartel's lead field operative and enforcer, responsible for high-stakes missions, assassinations, and training the organization's elite troops.
Sin (Sinthea Schmidt) Leader of a significant faction within the Cartel. As the Red Skull's daughter, she commands the loyalty of many former HYDRA purists. She brings a fanatical zeal and a penchant for extreme violence that both strengthens and destabilizes the organization.

Beyond the leadership, the Serpent Cartel's strength lies in its diverse roster of skilled operatives and vast resources.

  • Serpent Squads: Elite teams of mercenaries and soldiers equipped with state-of-the-art “Serpent-themed” armor and weaponry. These are the primary ground troops of the organization.
  • Scientific Division: Comprised of captured or willingly recruited scientists from organizations like A.I.M. and Roxxon. They are responsible for the Cartel's advanced technology, from advanced energy weapons to biological agents.
  • Armadillo (Antonio Rodriguez): A super-powered villain often hired as muscle for specific operations.
  • Baron Blood (John Falsworth): The Cartel captured and weaponized the vampiric nature of Baron Blood for their genocidal “Tomorrow Soldier” plot, demonstrating their ability to harness supernatural assets for scientific ends.
  • The Mind-Control Worm: A parasitic organism used by the Cartel to ensure the loyalty of its members and to control key targets.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

As the Serpent Cartel does not exist in the MCU, there is no established structure or membership. However, if it were to be adapted, one could speculate on its potential form based on existing MCU elements:

  • Potential Leadership: Baron Zemo is the most logical candidate for a leadership or foundational role. His intelligence, resources, and established base of operations in Sokovia would make him a natural fit to create a more organized, global criminal network.
  • Potential Members: A hypothetical MCU Serpent Cartel could absorb remnants of other organizations. This could include:
  • Former HYDRA agents who escaped justice after the events of Captain America: The Winter Soldier.
  • Former agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. who became disillusioned or were radicalized after its collapse.
  • Black-market tech dealers and mercenaries connected to the Power Broker's network.
  • Characters like Crossbones (Brock Rumlow), had he survived the events of Captain America: Civil War, would have been a perfect chief of security. His role could be filled by a similar ruthless mercenary character.

An MCU version would likely focus on the illicit trade of Vibranium, Pym Particles, Stark-tech, and Super-Soldier Serum, making them a direct and formidable threat to the new Captain America and the global order.

The Serpent Cartel does not have “allies” in the traditional sense; they have business partners and temporary assets. Their relationships are purely transactional.

  • A.I.M. (Advanced Idea Mechanics): The Cartel has both competed with and collaborated with A.I.M. They often raid A.I.M. facilities for technology but have also been known to purchase their weapons or hire their scientists for specific projects, seeing them as a useful, if unstable, resource pool.
  • The Criminal Nation of bagalia: By operating out of Bagalia, the Cartel is a key member of the nation's ruling council of criminals. This provides them with a sovereign sanctuary, free from international law, and access to a vast network of other villains, mercenaries, and resources.
  • Roxxon Energy Corporation: While often competitors, the Cartel has engaged in corporate espionage on behalf of (and against) corrupt executives within Roxxon, one of the most powerful and morally bankrupt corporations on Earth-616.
  • Captain America (Sam Wilson): The Serpent Cartel is, without question, the definitive arch-enemy of Sam Wilson's Captain America. Their conflict is deeply ideological. The Cartel represents cynical, profit-driven oppression and a belief that power is the only thing that matters. Sam, having grown up in Harlem and worked as a social worker, fights for the common person and believes in hope and collective action. Their battles are not just physical; they are a war for the soul of the 21st century. The Cartel constantly seeks to undermine not just Captain America, but the symbol he represents.
  • S.H.I.E.L.D.: As a global terrorist organization dealing in weapons of mass destruction, the Serpent Cartel is a priority target for S.H.I.E.L.D. and its successor organizations. Their advanced technology and counter-intelligence capabilities make them an incredibly difficult foe for any law enforcement agency to combat.
  • Iron Man (Tony Stark): Stark Industries is a primary target for the Cartel's technology raids. They see Tony Stark not just as a hero, but as their chief competitor in the field of advanced technology. They despise him for using his genius for heroic purposes rather than for personal gain and power, which they view as a waste.
  • hydra: The Cartel's most significant affiliation is with its parent organization, HYDRA. It is a splinter group, a direct evolution that views itself as the future of HYDRA's dream. While they have rejected the old iconography and dogma, many of their members are ex-HYDRA, and they still share the ultimate goal of world domination, albeit through different means. This creates a complex dynamic of rivalry and occasional, uneasy cooperation with remaining HYDRA traditionalist factions.

"The Tomorrow Soldier" (//All-New Captain America// #1-6, 2015)

This storyline serves as the Serpent Cartel's explosive debut and remains their most defining moment.

  • Premise: The Cartel, under the joint leadership of Viper and Baron Zemo, enacts a horrifying plan for global ethnic cleansing. Their goal is to render the majority of the human population sterile, leaving only a chosen elite to repopulate the Earth according to their design. Their weapon of choice is a bomb containing a deadly cocktail: the DNA of the vampire Baron Blood, designed to be spread globally via the transformative Inhuman Terrigen Mists.
  • The Cartel's Arc: The story showcases the full extent of the Cartel's ruthlessness and scientific capability. They capture a young, undocumented Inhuman boy named Lucas, whose blood is key to detonating their Inhuman Bomb. They demonstrate their global reach, activating sleeper cells and fighting the new Captain America on multiple fronts, from their labs to the streets of New York. The plan is masterminded by Zemo, whose eugenicist philosophies are given a modern, terrifying application by the Cartel's resources. Crossbones acts as the primary physical threat, engaging Sam Wilson in a brutal aerial battle.
  • Aftermath: Sam Wilson, with critical assistance from Misty Knight and Ian Rogers (Nomad, Steve Rogers' adopted son), manages to thwart the plot. Sam is forced to make a terrible choice, absorbing the bomb's energy into his own body to prevent its detonation, though he is saved by Lucas. The event cements the Serpent Cartel as a Grade-A global threat and establishes the deeply personal enmity between them and the new Captain America.

"Secret Empire" (2017)

While the Serpent Cartel was not the central focus of this event, its key members and operational base were pivotal to HYDRA's takeover of the United States.

  • Premise: A cosmically-altered Steve Rogers, now a secret HYDRA agent, masterminds a complete takeover of the United States, establishing a new HYDRA empire.
  • The Cartel's Arc: Baron Zemo, a senior member of the Cartel, was a key figure in HYDRA's new High Council, ruling over the criminal nation of Bagalia which swore allegiance to the new regime. The resources, technology, and personnel of the Serpent Cartel were folded into HYDRA's war machine. This storyline reinforced the deep connection between the two organizations, showing that when HYDRA finally succeeded, the Cartel was a willing and crucial component of its new world order.
  • Aftermath: Following the fall of the Secret Empire, the criminal infrastructure was shattered. While this was a blow, it also allowed the Serpent Cartel to re-emerge from the wreckage, absorbing even more of HYDRA's now-leaderless assets and returning to their more profit-focused, independent operations.

"Captain America: Sam Wilson" (2015-2017)

Throughout this series, the Serpent Cartel remained a persistent background threat, their influence felt even when they weren't the main antagonists of an arc.

  • Premise: Sam Wilson's tenure as Captain America is marked by public controversy and political division, which the Cartel frequently exploits.
  • The Cartel's Arc: They continued their operations as elite arms dealers, selling advanced weaponry that would frequently turn up in the hands of other villains fighting Captain America. Members like Crossbones would appear for specific missions, acting as hired muscle or pursuing personal vendettas against Sam. Their presence served as a constant reminder of the powerful, shadowy forces that Sam was up against, representing the systemic corruption he fought against both in and out of costume.

As a relatively recent addition to the Marvel Universe, the Serpent Cartel has not had as many appearances in alternate realities as more established organizations.

  • Distinction from other Serpent Groups: It is vital to distinguish the Serpent Cartel from other, older “serpent-themed” villain groups.
  • The Serpent Society: This is a collective of snake-themed super-criminals who operate as a guild or union for villains. Their goals are almost exclusively financial gain through organized crime. They lack the global political ambitions and high-tech focus of the Cartel.
  • Sons of the Serpent: This is a white-supremacist, anti-immigrant hate group that uses snake iconography. They are a domestic terrorist organization driven by racist ideology, completely distinct from the Cartel's multinational, profit-driven model.
  • Potential Future Adaptations: The Serpent Cartel's structure and key members make them prime candidates for adaptation in other media. In video games like Marvel's Avengers or a future Captain America game, they could serve as the primary enemy faction, providing a variety of tech-based enemy types (Serpent Soldiers, mechs, etc.) and compelling boss fights against characters like Zemo and Crossbones. Their modern, corporate-villain aesthetic would also translate well to animated series aimed at a teen or adult audience.

1)
The Serpent Cartel's name is a deliberate modernization of older group names like the “Serpent Squad” and “Serpent Society,” reflecting their evolution from a themed “gang” into a modern criminal enterprise, or cartel.
2)
To avoid confusion, it is important to note that the Viper who leads the Serpent Cartel, Lucas Stephenson, is a distinct character from other villains who have used the “Viper” codename. The most famous is Ophelia Sarkissian, also known as Madame Hydra, a major figure in HYDRA and the criminal underworld. Another was Jordan Stryke, a member of the original Serpent Squad. Lucas Stephenson is a newer character introduced specifically for the All-New Captain America series.
3)
The Cartel's debut storyline in All-New Captain America was heavily praised by critics for immediately establishing Sam Wilson as a capable and compelling Captain America by pitting him against a threat that felt both immense in scale and personally tailored to challenge his specific worldview.
4)
The concept of Bagalia, the Serpent Cartel's base of operations, was created by writer Jason Aaron in Wolverine and the X-Men #4 (2012). It has since become a major fixture in the Marvel Universe, serving as a neutral ground and safe haven for the world's super-criminal community.
5)
First Appearance: All-New Captain America Vol. 1 #1 (January 2015).
6)
Creators: Rick Remender (Writer) and Stuart Immonen (Artist).