ANALYSIS

Ecuador Becomes Washington’s New Front in Latin America’s Drug War

U.S. operations in Ecuador open a new chapter in the region’s drug war, but the secrecy around targets, tactics, and purpose points to something larger: a remapped Latin American alliance where security, ideology, and sovereignty are colliding in plain sight.

A War Announced in Fragments

The scene is oddly revealing. At a security forum in Quito on March 4, Gen. Henry Delgado said the first operation had begun a day earlier, just after President Daniel Noboa Azín met with Gen. Francis L. Donovan. Delgado’s words were defiant and clean. “We won’t be frightened, nor is anyone going to intimidate us,” he said. “Because we are certain that what we’re doing is precisely to benefit our beloved Ecuador.” The certainty was public. The details were not.

That contrast runs through the whole affair. U.S. Southern Command said on March 3 that Ecuadorian and American military forces had launched operations in Ecuador against “designated terrorist organizations.” Ecuadorian officials confirmed the joint operations on March 4. But both governments have declined to say who exactly is being targeted, where the operations are taking place, or how far the military actions go. A spokesperson for Southern Command said, “For operational security reasons, we will not provide specific details regarding the ongoing support for this operation.”

That leaves a familiar feeling across Latin America. The language is urgent, moral, martial. The facts arrive more slowly. Donovan framed the mission as a response to “the violence and corrosive consequences of narco-terrorism,” telling partners in the hemisphere that Southern Command “has their back.” Noboa, for his part, had already announced a new phase against “narcoterrorism and illegal mining,” with information sharing and operational coordination at airports and ports.

This is how old regional scripts tend to return. Not with full disclosure, but with a vocabulary people in the hemisphere have heard before: security, scourge, decisive action, partnership. The trouble is that Latin America also remembers what usually follows when Washington and local allies reopen the war on drugs through military channels. More uniforms. More secrecy. And often, after the first burst of force, the same networks adapting, moving, mutating.

Daniel Noboa, meeting with the commander of the U.S. Southern Command, Gen. Francis L. Donovan. EFE/@Southcom.

The River Beneath the Violence

Ecuador’s crisis is real enough that hardline responses can sound, at first, almost inevitable. The country has become central to international cocaine trafficking while crime has surged. According to the United Nations and the U.S. Coast Guard, cocaine seizures have reached record highs globally and specifically on routes to the United States. Ecuador sits between Colombia and Peru, described in the notes as the world’s largest cocaine producers, and now ships about 70% of cocaine globally, including to the United States.

Adam Isacson of the Washington Office on Latin America put it bluntly: “Ecuador sits on basically a river of cocaine.” That image matters because it explains why the crisis in Ecuador is never just Ecuadorian. The country is a corridor, a hinge, a transit space where Pacific routes, prison-grown gangs, foreign cartels, illegal mining, illicit logging, and state weakness meet each other. Once that convergence takes hold, violence becomes territorial. Douglas Farah said control of territory between criminal groups has driven spikes in violence, helping turn Ecuador in a decade from one of the safest countries in Latin America into one of the most dangerous.

And yet geography alone does not explain the collapse. Isacson said rampant corruption has allowed organized crime to flourish. Farah added a harder truth still. Militarized approaches can produce short-term gains, but traffickers often prefer influencing government to fighting it outright, which can entrench corruption inside military ranks. That is the part Latin America knows too well. The cartel is not always outside the state, banging at the door. Sometimes it is inside the room, learning the habits of power.

Noboa’s hardline turn fits a broader regional pattern. The notes compare his approach to Nayib Bukele’s in El Salvador, another right-wing ally of President Trump who has won praise for falling crime while drawing accusations that democratic and judicial norms were suspended. In Ecuador, however, the notes say crime has continued to rise even as Noboa has faced accusations of human rights abuses. That matters because it suggests force alone may be politically dramatic without being structurally effective.

American operations on Ecuadorian land also signal an escalation. At sea, U.S. forces have already struck boats accused of smuggling drugs in the Caribbean and Pacific, with at least 150 people killed in 44 known strikes since September, according to a New York Times tally. The U.N. human rights chief has said those tactics violate international law. Now the theater appears to be widening.

Potential targets are not hard to infer from the notes, even if officials refuse to specify. The Choneros and Lobos were designated foreign terrorist organizations in September. InSight Crime considers them Ecuador’s two largest criminal groups, both strengthened inside prisons. The Sinaloa Cartel and the Cartel Jalisco New Generation have reportedly deepened their presence in Ecuador as they fight for trafficking routes, while Albanian criminal groups have used the country to move drugs to Europe. It is a crowded criminal ecosystem. Which is precisely why a narrow military frame may miss the wider system it claims to disrupt.

Ecuadorian Armed Forces, with U.S. support, destroyed a training camp of the Comandos de la Frontera, a dissident group of the former FARC. EFE/ Ecuador’s Ministry of Defense.

A Hemisphere Split by Security

What makes this story geopolitically important is not only the operation itself, but the coalition forming around it. Under Noboa, Ecuador has emerged as an ally to Trump as Washington seeks greater influence in Latin America. On March 4, the White House said it would host a weekend summit in Miami with about a dozen Latin American countries, including Ecuador, to address drug trafficking and immigration. Nearly all are led by conservatives or right-wing figures aligned with Trump.

The absences say as much as the invitations. The White House did not list Brazil, Mexico, or Colombia, the region’s three largest countries, all of them governed by the left and all of them confronting organized crime in different forms. That omission gives the moment its sharper edge. This is not just a hemispheric security push. It is a selective one. A geopolitical map is being drawn through ideology as much as through policy.

For Latin America, that raises an old and unsettled question. Is the region being asked to coordinate against transnational crime, or to sort itself politically under the banner of security cooperation? The wager here is that the two are becoming harder to separate. Ecuador’s embrace of U.S. support may bring resources, intelligence, and immediate political backing. But it also places the country inside a familiar architecture in which Washington chooses favored partners, military language expands, and the broader social machinery of crime, corruption, extraction, and institutional weakness risks being reduced to a battlefield problem.

That reduction has a cost. Past U.S. counternarcotics efforts in Colombia and Peru did not stop the drug trade, the notes say, and experts argue Ecuador risks the same fate. Farah said the strategy reflects how little has been learned about what works and what does not. Isacson was even more direct: “I don’t see how this is going to keep other armed groups from just filling the vacuum.”

That may be the most important line in the whole story. Because in Latin America, vacuums do not stay empty. They fill with new factions, new routes, new uniforms, new bargains. And once that happens, what looked like a national security operation starts to look like something else entirely: a struggle over who gets to define order in the hemisphere, and on whose terms.

In that sense, Ecuador is not only a battlefield in the drug war, but a test case for how power, alignment, and intervention may be reorganized across Latin America.

Also Read: Latin America Hears Washington’s Old Drug War Drums Beating Again

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