U.S. Ambassador Shuts DEA Office in Dominican Republic Over Suspected Embassy Corruption
Feb 12
Developing
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U.S. Ambassador Leah F. Campos has closed the Drug Enforcement Administrationâs office at the U.S. Embassy in the Dominican Republic "until further notice," saying on X that she will not tolerate even the perception of corruption inside the mission and calling abuse of public office for personal gain a "disgusting and disgraceful" breach of trust. Dominican Foreign Affairs Minister Roberto Ălvarez said he spoke with Campos and stressed the shutdown stems from an internal U.S. embassy investigation and "categorically has no relationship" to the Dominican government or its officials. The move comes just months after Dominican President Luis Abinader, standing with U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, authorized U.S. personnel to operate inside restricted areas at San Isidro Air Base and Las AmĂŠricas International Airport to target drug trafficking, underscoring how closely the two countriesâ security apparatuses have been intertwined. It remains unclear what specific conduct is under investigation, whether DEA or other U.S. personnel are implicated, or how the closure will affect ongoing joint counterânarcotics cases in a key Caribbean transit hub for cocaine and other drugs bound for the United States. For Washington, the episode raises hard questions about oversight and integrity inside its own lawâenforcement footprint abroad even as it publicly leans on Caribbean partners to crack down on corruption.
U.S. Foreign Policy and DEA Operations
Corruption and Government Oversight
Caribbean Drug Trafficking