Ecuador Begins U.S.-Backed Two‑Week Anti‑Drug Offensive Under Trump Cartel Alliance
Ecuador has launched a two‑week security operation against drug‑trafficking gangs with support from the United States, the first major deployment under a new 17‑country cartel‑fighting alliance announced by President Donald Trump at a summit earlier this month. Interior Minister John Reimberg said 'we're at war' as the government imposed nighttime curfews in the coastal provinces of Guayas, Los Rios, Santo Domingo de los Tsachilas and El Oro and began deploying about 35,000 soldiers with armored vehicles and helicopters to areas hardest hit by cocaine-fueled violence. The article notes that President Daniel Noboa, a close Trump ally, has spent two years targeting traffickers, but murders, disappearances and extortion have not declined, underscoring how Ecuador’s role as a corridor for an estimated 70% of Colombian and Peruvian cocaine keeps driving bloodshed. It also reports that U.S. and Ecuadorian forces recently conducted joint strikes inside Ecuador and that the FBI will open an office in the country to work with local police on organized crime, money laundering and corruption cases, signaling a deeper U.S. law‑enforcement and security footprint on the Andean corridor that feeds the U.S. cocaine market. The lack of clarity over whether U.S. troops will again operate on Ecuadorian soil highlights both the scale of Washington’s involvement and the political sensitivities around direct U.S. military roles in Latin America.
📌 Key Facts
- Ecuador began a two‑week anti‑drug operation Sunday with U.S. support, under a 17‑country cartel‑fighting alliance launched by President Donald Trump earlier in March 2026.
- Interior Minister John Reimberg announced nighttime curfews in the coastal provinces of Guayas, Los Rios, Santo Domingo de los Tsachilas and El Oro and the deployment of about 35,000 soldiers with armored cars and helicopters.
- The FBI will open an office in Ecuador to investigate organized crime, money laundering and corruption jointly with local police.
- Earlier this month U.S. and Ecuadorian forces conducted joint strikes against drug targets inside Ecuador, and the Ecuadorian military sank a 'narco sub' near the northern border.
- Roughly 70% of cocaine produced in Colombia and Peru is shipped through Ecuador, and despite Noboa’s past crackdowns, murders, disappearances and extortion have not fallen.
📊 Relevant Data
Ecuador's homicide rate rose 429 percent from the first half of 2019 to the first half of 2024, with 3,036 homicides recorded in the first half of 2024.
World Report 2025: Ecuador — Human Rights Watch
U.S. Customs and Border Protection encountered about 124,000 Ecuadorians at U.S. land borders in FY2024, a nearly 400% increase from FY2022, driven in part by escalating violence and organized crime in Ecuador.
Ecuador: Country Overview and U.S. Relations — Congressional Research Service
The surge in violence in Ecuador resulted from shifts in drug trafficking routes from Colombia, fragmentation of local gangs, and involvement of international mafias, turning Ecuador into a key transit hub for cocaine.
Paradise Lost? Ecuador's Battle with Organised Crime — International Crisis Group
More than 70% of Ecuador's 18 million inhabitants were exposed to organized crime violence in 2025, the highest rate in Latin America.
Pressure rises on Ecuador's government to rein in escalating gang violence — ACLED
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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