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Thread: Turmoil in Ecuador

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Soviet y Sazón 🌺

    🛑 The U.S. opened its first FBI office in Ecuador today, in what officials claim is an effort to combat drug trafficking in partnership with President Noboa — who himself has been investigated for ties to drug trafficking. This comes five days after the U.S. bombed multiple indigenous Ecuadorian civilians’ homes while allegedly targeting a drug camp.

    The long and brutal history of FBI and DEA operations in Latin America suggests this development will bring nothing but bloodshed and further instability to a country already under a State of War Decree. Which is precisely why 60% of Ecuadorians voted against U.S. intervention in the region this past November.

    https://x.com/sovietwithsazon/status...17605057970493


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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Guillaume Long

    Ecuador bans the country's largest opposition party!

    Last week, a pro-Noboa electoral judge suspended the RC, the principal opposition force in Ecuador. The judge timed his decision to coincide with the registration of candidates for the upcoming local elections of February 2027. Given Noboa imprisoned the Mayor of Guayaquil on February 10, he's hoping no one from RC can replace him there or is elected anywhere else in Ecuador

    https://x.com/GuillaumeLong/status/2031698440795693184

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    CEPR

    🚨 Ecuador's main opposition party has been temporarily suspended & joint US military operations have begun under President Daniel Noboa's watch

    On this week's "From DC Across the Americas," senior research fellow
    @GuillaumeLong
    discusses #Ecuador's descent into authoritarianism

    https://x.com/ceprdc/status/2031734681108976033

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Ecuador prepares for attack on ‘criminal economy’ with Trump backing
    Interior Minister John Reimberg warned for residents in four provinces to obey a curfew to avoid ‘collateral damage’.
    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/11/ecuador-prepares-for-attack-on-criminal-economy-with-trump-backing


    US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem visits Ecuador's President Daniel Noboa on November 6, 2025

    The government of Ecuador has announced that, starting this weekend, it is prepared to launch a sweeping military offensive against criminal networks in the country, with the support of the United States.

    In an interview on Wednesday with Ecuador’s Radio Centro, Interior Minister John Reimberg framed the upcoming assault as a shift in tactic for the administration of President Daniel Noboa.

    “Last year, we dedicated ourselves to catching all the heads of the [criminal] structures, which led them to fight among themselves for the same criminal economy,” Reimberg said.

    “This year, we are going to attack the criminal economy.”

    Illegal mining and drug trafficking operations would be among the targets of the latest sweep, the minister added. No further details were provided about the scope of the operations.

    Ecuador imposes curfew

    Reimberg’s statements follow the announcement of a curfew for four Ecuadorian provinces: El Oro and Guayas along the Pacific coast, plus the eastern central areas of Santo Domingo de los Tsachilas and Los Rios.

    The curfew is expected to stretch for more than two weeks, from March 15 through March 30, requiring that residents stay indoors during designated hours.

    Should travel be necessary during curfew hours, officials warned that residents must be prepared to show documentation to justify their trip.

    In Wednesday’s remarks, Reimberg argued that such restrictions were necessary to avoid civilian casualties.

    “We don’t want collateral damage from the attacks we’re going to carry out,” he told the radio show.

    “We need the roads clear because there will be troop movements. We need to have the roads clear to be able to carry out the operations.”

    Reimberg added that the operation is expected to be of “greater magnitude” than previous crime busts.

    “What’s the difference? The force with which we’re going to act,” he said. “Basically and in summary, we are going to destroy.”

    Tightening relations with Trump

    The curfew was announced on March 2, as President Noboa addressed Ecuador’s national police force.

    He told the law enforcement officers to be prepared for increased operations to combat criminal networks in the country: “The next phase of the fight against organised crime begins now.”

    Within days of his speech, the US issued a statement confirming that it had launched joint military operations with Ecuador. So far, the US appears to be focused on offering support in the form of military logistics and intelligence.

    But the coalition comes as US President Donald Trump pressures Latin American leaders to take more aggressive action against local criminal networks, several of which he labelled “foreign terrorist organisations”.

    Trump and Noboa, in particular, have forged a tight bond, with Noboa appearing to echo the US leader’s hardline positions towards countries like Cuba and Colombia.

    Noboa recently expelled Cuba’s diplomats from Ecuador, amid a US fuel blockade on the Caribbean island. And as Trump called for Colombia to crack down on its illicit narcotics trade, Noboa imposed tariffs on the country for the same reason.

    Top US officials — including outgoing Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and the head of the US military’s Southern Command, General Francis Donovan — have also visited Noboa in recent months to discuss regional security.

    The Trump administration has said it would like the US to exert its “preeminence” throughout the Western Hemisphere.

    It has also attacked Venezuela and dozens of vessels in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean, on the grounds of combatting drug trafficking into the US. Those attacks, however, have been condemned by experts as illegal under international law.

    A spike in crime

    After coming to power in 2023 for an abbreviated term, Noboa was re-elected in 2025 on a platform based in large part on tackling the growth in Ecuador’s gang activity.

    Once considered an area with relatively little violent crime, Ecuador experienced a surge following the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Experts say the reasons are multipronged. Ecuador’s economy had been weakened by the pandemic, and youth unemployment was high.

    Then, there’s the country’s geography. Ecuador sits between Colombia and Peru, the two largest cocaine producers in the world, and its position on the Pacific Coast made it an attractive port for illicit exports.

    That, in turn, has resulted in criminal networks increasingly trying to assert control over Ecuadorian territory and trafficking routes.

    Last year, in 2025, Ecuador once again saw a spike in its homicide rate, with an estimated 9,216 murders reported — an increase of more than 30 percent over the preceding year.

    In an effort to bring down those numbers, Noboa has resorted to hardline tactics that critics compare to the “mano dura” or “iron-fisted” approach of countries like El Salvador.

    Noboa himself has likened Ecuador’s conflict with drug gangs to a “war”. Last year, he unsuccessfully championed a voter referendum to allow foreign military bases on Ecuadorian soil, arguing that such measures are key to stopping drug trafficking.

    Ecuador has banned foreign military bases since 2008, in part because of allegations of abuse. The referendum was ultimately defeated.

    But the Trump administration had backed the ballot initiative and praised Noboa as a key ally in the US’s ongoing “war on drugs”.

    Though no bases will be built, on Wednesday the Trump administration announced that it would be opening its first field office for the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in Ecuador.

    A statement called it a “strategic and operational milestone for security” in the region.

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Guillaume Long

    On US-Ecuador bombings. Three takeaways from this useful piece:

    1. The implication of the US military operation on Ecuadorian soil is that the US is now waging war in Ecuador.

    2. US has carried a unilateral attack, without any prior public discussion or deliberation in the US. This is a problem.

    3. US actions could trigger a War Powers Resolution in the US Congress, and Congress may vote to remove US troops from hostilities in Ecuador.

    https://justsecurity.org/133744/did-...-bomb-ecuador/

    More details here:

    "The implications of recent U.S. military operations in Ecuador may be significant. The Trump administration appears to have resorted to the use of military force in yet another country. Indeed, the United States may be involved in an entirely new armed conflict, if for example, (a) the group targeted in the March 6 strike was an “organized armed group” (an international law term for entities with sufficient military structure, hierarchy, and capabilities to engage in armed conflict); (b) an armed conflict already exists between Ecuador and that group; and (c) the United States has joined the conflict on Ecuador’s side. Indeed the Ecuadorian Government has announced that it will undertake a new offensive against criminal groups in that country with unspecified U.S. support—while warning of the potential for collateral damage.

    As is now typical for the Trump administration, decisions to use force and engage in a new armed conflict were undertaken unilaterally by the White House without prior congressional authorization and its accompanying public debate. That means no public deliberation regarding the goals, strategy, and costs of military action. The U.S. government has not even identified the enemy, let alone the objectives of this military action.

    As a legal matter, the submission of the March 9 report means that the War Powers Resolution’s 60-day clock is now ticking. In addition, Congress—which did not authorize these actions beforehand—can now force a vote under the War Powers Resolution to remove U.S. armed forces from hostilities in Ecuador if it has the votes to do so."

    https://x.com/GuillaumeLong/status/2032505151974425029



    https://www.justsecurity.org/133744/...-bomb-ecuador/

    Did the United States Just Bomb Ecuador?

    Brian FinucanePublished on March 13, 2026

    Amidst the Trump administration’s unauthorized war on Iran and the resulting hostilities from Cyprus to the waters off Sri Lanka, it is easy to overlook the fact that the administration also continues to wage unauthorized hostilities in the Western Hemisphere. The U.S. military is still conducting lethal maritime strikes against alleged drug smugglers, killing over 150 people to date. (See here for previous Just Security analysis of the maritime bombing campaign.)

    And the administration may have begun its long advertised “strikes on land” against supposed drug trafficking targets—in Ecuador, targeting a dissident faction of the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC).

    Clues from Social Media Bombast

    On March 3, U.S. Southern Command announced on social media that “Ecuadorian and U.S. military forces launched operations against Designated Terrorist Organizations in Ecuador” accompanied by the hashtag of Operation Southern Spear—the label also used for the boat strike campaign. On March 6, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth shared a video on an apparent airstrike in a jungle environ and stated:

    Yes — as @POTUS has said — we are bombing Narco Terrorists on land as well.

    Thank you to our partners in Ecuador. Much more to come from @Southcom…

    Notwithstanding the explosion in the video and accompanying dramatic music, Hegseth’s post did not explicitly state that the United States had conducted an airstrike and seemed to leave open the possibility that the U.S. military was supporting direct action by Ecuadorian partners.

    An unusual report from the White House to Congress under the 1973 War Powers Resolution suggests that yes, the U.S. military may indeed have conducted one or more airstrikes in Ecuador.

    War Powers Resolution Background

    Section 4(a) of the 1973 Resolution establishes reporting requirements to prevent the president from taking the country to war in secret. In the absence of a declaration of war or other statutory authorization, the executive branch is subject to multi-tiered obligations to report to Congress within 48 hours of certain activities by U.S. armed forces.

    First, under subsection 4(a)(1) the president must report when U.S. military forces are introduced into “hostilities” or introduced into “situations where imminent involvement in hostilities is clearly indicated by the circumstances.” Such hostilities reports are the focus of this essay.

    Second, even if U.S. forces are not engaging in hostilities, subsection 4(a)(2) requires the president to report the introduction of “combat equipped” forces into a country (the executive branch defines “combat-equipped” as forces equipped with crew-served weapons such as machine guns requiring more than one person to operate and mortars; Congress does not seem to have meaningfully differed in its understanding of the term).

    Third, pursuant to subsection 4(a)(3), the president must also report a substantial enlargement of combat equipped forces in a country where such forces are already present.

    Notably, under Section 5(b) of the 1973 Resolution, the submission of a report under the first of these scenarios — introduction of U.S. forces into hostilities or situations of imminent hostilities — also starts a 60-day clock for the withdrawal of U.S. armed forces from such hostilities unless Congress declares war or otherwise enacts specific statutory authorization for the use of force.

    Although Congress did not define “hostilities,” or “imminent involvement in hostilities,” in the text of the statute, the legislative history shows that Congress intended those terms to be construed broadly to establish a low threshold for both the reporting and withdrawal provisions of the War Powers Resolution. The House Foreign Affairs Committee’s report on the Resolution explains:

    The word hostilities was substituted for the phrase armed conflict during the subcommittee drafting process because it was considered to be somewhat broader in scope. In addition to a situation in which fighting actually has begun, hostilities also encompasses a state of confrontation in which no shots have been fired but where there is a clear and present danger of armed conflict. “Imminent hostilities” denotes a situation in which there is a clear potential either for such a state of confrontation or for actual armed conflict.

    Unsurprisingly, the executive branch has for decades espoused different, narrower interpretations of these terms that are less likely to constrain the president’s ability to use military force without congressional authorization.

    In the most-often-repeated formulation, the State Department’s Legal Adviser informed Congress in a 1975 letter that its working definition of “hostilities” meant “a situation in which units of the U.S. armed forces are actively engaged in exchanges of fire with opposing units of hostile forces.” “Imminent hostilities” means, according to the letter, “a situation in which there is a serious risk from hostile fire to the safety of United States forces.”

    In practice, administrations of both parties have routinely treated military actions such as airstrikes, in which U.S. forces were not in harm’s way, as “hostilities” for the purposes of the War Powers Resolution (see a catalog of dozens of such reports on U.S. airstrikes at the NYU Law Reiss Center’s War Powers Reporting Project). Indeed, the Trump administration reported the first maritime strike to Congress in September—presumably as hostilities–before it changed its mind on the characterization of the strikes as the 60-day deadline approached.

    Although the White House under administrations of both parties submits these reports to Congress stating it is doing so “consistent with the War Powers Resolution” (rather than “pursuant to” that law), in practice reports are submitted only when required by law—and sometimes not even then.

    In other words, the submission of a War Powers report does generally indicate that the White House has undertaken one of the triggering military actions. Another long-running practice of the executive branch is not to specify which prong of the War Powers Resolution the reports are being submitted under (hostilities, combat-equipped introduction, or a substantial enlargement). It is therefore necessary to assess what military action triggered the report based on the description of the action in the report, and often outside reporting is also needed given how sparse the reports tend to be in modern practice.

    March 9th War Powers Report

    Based on its contents, the March 9 report to Congress pertains to the introduction of U.S. armed forces into “hostilities,” rather than the deployment of combat equipped forces or their substantial enlargement. The report notifies Congress of “military action taken on March 6, 2026, against the facilities of narco-terrorists affiliated with a designated terrorist organization.”

    The report situates this military action in the broader context of “operations to protect the United States by combatting extraordinarily violent drug trafficking cartels designated as terrorist organizations”—a seeming reference to the maritime bombing campaign.

    The War Powers report provides only a vague description of the March 6 military action:

    United States Armed Forces partnered with Ecuadorian Armed Forces to strike on March 6, 2026, the facilities of narco-terrorists affiliated with a designated terrorist organization. United States Armed Forces planned and executed this mission in a manner designed to empower a partner nation, degrade narco-terrorist activities, and minimize civilian casualties. Although present for this partnered operation, United States ground forces did not come into contact with hostile forces. (emphases added)

    There are a few notable aspects to this description.

    First, the description of a particular “strike,” on a specific date, often indicates a “hostilities” trigger. Reports necessitated by either of the other two prongs rarely describe specific strikes, although there may be exceptions to the rule. Moreover, the notification not only refers to a specific military confrontation, it does not mention the deployment or augmentation of the U.S. armed forces in Ecuador, as would generally be the case for reports under the other two 48-hour reporting prongs.

    Second, the disclaimer that U.S. “ground forces did not come into contact with hostile forces” is oddly specific. The clear implication is that other U.S. forces did come into contact with hostile forces, such as for example through an airstrike. Indeed, presumably some such U.S. direct action was involved in this incident, because the executive would not report partnered military operations if they did not involve U.S. direct action (and in some cases fails to even when they did engage in direct action with partner forces). Nonetheless, the report implies, rather than explicitly states, that the U.S. conducted a strike (“partnered… to strike”). The Ecuadorian Ministry of Defense’s statement on this attack near the Colombian border refers to U.S. intelligence and support and the bombing of a camp belonging to drug traffickers, but does not explicitly specify who bombed the camp.

    Third, the War Powers report does not specify the target of this partnered military operation beyond describing them as the “facilities of narco-terrorists affiliated with a designated terrorist organization.” The “designated terrorist organization” is unidentified. In other words, the administration is suggesting the United States is engaged in hostilities in Ecuador, but won’t say with whom. Notably however, the Government of Ecuador did identify the target of the operation as Comandos de la Frontera—a dissident element of the Colombian rebel group the FARC.

    Making Sense of the Administration’s Messaging

    The messaging from the administration regarding military operations is a strange combination of bluster and ambiguity. On the one hand, the so-called “Secretary of War” is eager to boast on social media about “bombing Narco Terrorists on land.” On the other hand, the administration does not clearly state whether it is the United States doing the bombing, nor does it specify who is being bombed.

    This tension might be explained by competing interests. Military action for the sake of spectacle is a defining feature of this administration’s approach to the use of force with the President and Secretary of Defense regularly posting dramatic footage of airstrikes and special operations raids on social media. Indeed, the President recently boasted about the U.S. attack on Iran as a “performance” (“I hope you are impressed. How do you like the performance? I mean, Venezuela is obvious. This might be even better. How do you like the performance?”). There appears to be a strong urge within the administration to promote its performative military “wins.”

    At the same time, U.S. military operations in Ecuador are being conducted with the consent of and in partnership with the Ecuadorian government. And the administration may thus need to heed Ecuadorian sensitivities regarding public acknowledgment of direct U.S. military action on Ecuadorian territory. Even if the Ecuadorian government may be enthusiastic about partnered military operations with the United States, the Ecuadorian public may be more wary—having only recently voted in a referendum to reject foreign military bases in the country.

    Implications

    The implications of recent U.S. military operations in Ecuador may be significant. The Trump administration appears to have resorted to the use of military force in yet another country. Indeed, the United States may be involved in an entirely new armed conflict, if for example, (a) the group targeted in the March 6 strike was an “organized armed group” (an international law term for entities with sufficient military structure, hierarchy, and capabilities to engage in armed conflict); (b) an armed conflict already exists between Ecuador and that group; and (c) the United States has joined the conflict on Ecuador’s side. Indeed the Ecuadorian Government has announced that it will undertake a new offensive against criminal groups in that country with unspecified U.S. support—while warning of the potential for collateral damage.

    As is now typical for the Trump administration, decisions to use force and engage in a new armed conflict were undertaken unilaterally by the White House without prior congressional authorization and its accompanying public debate. That means no public deliberation regarding the goals, strategy, and costs of military action. The U.S. government has not even identified the enemy, let alone the objectives of this military action.

    As a legal matter, the submission of the March 9 report means that the War Powers Resolution’s 60-day clock is now ticking. In addition, Congress—which did not authorize these actions beforehand—can now force a vote under the War Powers Resolution to remove U.S. armed forces from hostilities in Ecuador if it has the votes to do so.

    The Legislature’s and the People’s Turns

    In an all too common pattern, the White House has used military force unilaterally and now it is up to Congress to respond. This repeated dynamic—particularly prominent under Trump 2.0—upends the framework of the U.S. Constitution. As described by James Wilson to the Pennsylvania ratifying convention in 1787:

    This system will not hurry us into war; it is calculated to guard against it. It will not be in the power of a single man, or a single body of men, to involve us in such distress; for the important power of declaring war is vested in the legislature at large.

    Contrary to this constitutional vision, one man is currently able to “hurry us into war.”

    The immediate question is whether Congress as an institution can muster the will to discharge its constitutional responsibilities with respect to the use of force—both with respect to U.S. military operations in Ecuador and elsewhere in the western hemisphere, but also more generally as Trump’s war rages in the Middle East.

    Recent history is not particularly encouraging. Despite strong bipartisan efforts to block many recent military adventures by the White House through resolutions of disapproval, partisan loyalty has triumphed over constitutional fealty.

    Ultimately, the American people will need to weigh in. The results of the 2026 midterms may improve the legislature’s ability to check executive military adventurism—including through the power of the purse. Over the longer term, a White House and Congress committed to the Constitution’s separation of war powers will need to create more robust legislative guardrails, including by reforming the War Powers Resolution to give it sharper teeth.
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Soviet y Sazón 🌺

    U.S.-backed dictatorship openly admits to more human rights violations.

    Ecuador’s Minister of Interior, John Reimberg, said that the power outages that citizens have been reporting this week are in fact intentionally engineered by the military in the regions where operations, one of which resulted in a young man being tortured to death, are taking place in collaboration with the U.S. SOUTHCOM. I remind this government, which is stupid enough to admit this on national TV, that denying a population access to electricity as collective punishment for the criminal activities of *some* is explicitly illegal under international law, especially during an armed conflict/state of war as this government has declared it. This occurs days after a UN investigation and 8 UN experts sounded the alarm on the torture and repression of this U.S. puppet regime

    https://x.com/sovietwithsazon/status...48715982860744

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Central News EC
    @CentralNewsEC
    ·
    4h
    Translated from Spanish
    🟣 The Minister of the Interior,
    @JohnReimberg
    , assures that several blackouts are "coordinated" during the curfew to facilitate security operations.
    🤔 Curious, because there are provinces without a curfew where the power also goes out… and in others, the outages happen in broad daylight.

    https://x.com/CentralNewsEC/status/2034731349496520937




    Ecuadorinmediato
    @ecuainm_oficial
    ·
    5h
    Translated from Spanish
    ‼️#URGENTE
    Interior Minister John Reimberg reported that the Government is coordinating power outages during the curfew. According to the official, this aims to facilitate security operations in Guayas, Los Ríos, Santo Domingo, and El Oro, the four provinces where the mobility restriction measure is in effect between 23:00 and 05:00.
    ▶️
    @EcuavisaInforma

    https://x.com/ecuainm_oficial/status...30356645957685

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Ecuadorinmediato

    50m
    Translated from Spanish
    ‼️#URGENTE
    CENACE has requested the private sector to activate their autonomous electric generation equipment due to an alert period for a deficit in hydroelectric generation. According to the March 17 document, it is requested to operate these systems from Monday to Friday, from 09:00 to 23:00, prioritizing hours of highest demand, and on weekends and holidays from 18:00 to 22:00.

    https://x.com/ecuainm_oficial/status...94746472804616

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Soviet y Sazón 🌺

    Mar 17
    🛑 The Ecuadorian military tortured a young man to death in the first 24 hours of its most recent military operation with the U.S. Southern Command. Forensic analysis seems to confirm what both the family of this victim of extrajudicial violence, Bryan Argenis Ledesma, and video reports suggest: he was beat and asphyxiated to death. The department responsible for investigating the use of excessive force at the prosecutor’s office announced an investigation into his state-sanctioned murder, adding it to a long list of existing cases, many of which are what triggered the UN investigation into Ecuador’s armed conflict, but which remain stalled at the judiciary stage. This atrocity comes less than five days after the FBI opened its first-ever office in Ecuador, commencing an intervention strategy that many Latin Americans —Colombians in specific— can tell you first hand only leads to further instability, death squads, and violent exploitation. Fascists are trying to justify this extrajudicial execution by raising his criminal record so I remind you, the state has a responsibility to afford its citizens a fair trial. Establishing precedence for military to just murder anyone with impunity will eventually kill us all, especially those of us who are brave enough to stand up to this dictatorship. We’ve seen this exact playbook in Colombia— everyone’s murders, including grandmothers, becomes justified by labeling them drug traffickers. Listen to the video with sound. Do not look away. They are trying to normalize this military repression. We cannot let them.

    https://x.com/sovietwithsazon/status...67734460190886

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Soviet y Sazón 🌺

    Mar 17
    Just in case it’s been hard to keep track, in the past few weeks the Noboa dictatorship has:

    • Bombed Colombia
    • Bombed the Amazon
    • Deployed 75,000 troops to round up children in a drug purge while he continues trafficking cocaine through his shipping enterprise
    •Prohibited journalists from recording military operations
    •Expanded the work day to 12 hours
    •Kidnapped the mayor of the largest city in Ecuador for publicly criticizing him
    •Banned his biggest political opposition party from participating in elections
    •Disregarded a democratic vote and pushed through mining reforms that 65% of the country voted against
    •Was accused by the head of the Los Lobos Cartel for ordering the assassination of his opponent in the presidential election
    •Had unmarked cars chase and intimidate journalists

    The list goes on but my thumbs hurt

    https://x.com/sovietwithsazon/status...05130173522039

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Jake Johnston

    Replying to
    @JakobJohnston
    Also, shout out to
    @AFP
    , who reported most of this last week: https://france24.com/en/live-news/20...nities-in-fear. And the full NYT report:

    https://x.com/JakobJohnston/status/2036526831843594251



    Maine

    ‼️‼️ BREAKING: Trump Admin & Ecuador claimed they bombed Narcoterrorist Compound in early March….

    Turns out, they torched & blasted a peaceful dairy farm in San Martín—cows, barns, livelihoods destroyed.

    Source: NY TIMES

    https://x.com/TheMaineWonk/status/2036534612571136199

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Occupy Democrats

    BREAKING: The NY Times just revealed that “drug camp” that Trump and Hegseth blew up in Ecuador was actually just a DAIRY FARM that had nothing to do with drug dealers!

    In early March, the Trump administration surprised the world when it announced that it had bombed a drug trafficking base in Ecuador as it lashed out in a violent killing spree all over the world.

    Like so many of the innocent fishermen who were murdered by Trump and Pete Hegseth’s boat bombings, the victims at this “drug camp” turned out to be dairy farmers, according to local residents.

    The New York Times discovered that the video released by the Trump administration to highlight their murderous prowess actually showed a dairy farm that had been bombed by the Ecuadorean military.

    The Times reports that “Ecuadorean soldiers arrived by helicopter on March 3, doused several shelters and sheds with gasoline and ignited them after interrogating workers and beating four of them with the butts of their guns. Three of the workers, who requested anonymity for fear of retaliation by the government, said the soldiers later choked and subjected them to electrical shocks before letting them go.”

    “Village residents said Ecuadorean helicopters returned to the farm three days later, on March 6, and appeared to drop explosives on the farm’s smoldering remains. It was at that point, they said, that Ecuadorean soldiers recorded the footage that U.S. and Ecuadorean officials said captured the bombing of a traffickers’ compound.”
    Hegseth’s Pentagon provided the Ecuadorean military with the false intelligence that this dairy farm was in fact a drug dealer camp.

    The dairy farm’s owner, Miguel, told the Times he bought the 350-acre farm about six years ago for $9,000 and had a herd of 50 cows he used for milk and meat.

    “He fought back tears as he explained what was there before: two wooden shelters, an outpost to make cheese, sheds for his equipment. The horse paddock was spared, but the chicken coop was gone,” reports the Times.

    “It’s an outrage,” Miguel said, stepping over his dead chickens. “It’s a lie that 50 people trained here. Where are they going to train? Out here in the open? There’s no logic.”

    Everywhere the Trump administration goes, needless death and violence follow, and the victims are almost always innocent people.

    This poor man’s life was ruined by a fat pedophile and an alcoholic TV host thousands of miles away just so that some skinhead White House intern could make a meme for social media of things blowing up.

    When this is all over, Trump and Hegseth need to be held accountable for every one of their crimes, and that list grows longer by the day. Poor Miguel definitely needs to file a lawsuit

    https://x.com/OccupyDemocrats/status...42703765213286

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Max Blumenthal

    If these US drone strikes had eliminated their targets, we would have never learned that they were fishermen - not drug traffickers - and how they were abused after being captured

    Trump's war on drugs is an excuse to prop up gangster vassals like Noboa and Bukele while brutalizing the poor

    https://x.com/MaxBlumenthal/status/2043041687484657927


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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    #EcuadorSiemprePrimero.

    Apr 9
    Replying to
    @armada_ecuador
    and
    @nimitz_cvn68
    Translated from Spanish

    An aircraft carrier to sink, speedboats and fishing boats, what sons of bitches. They've been doing this since the time they had the Manta base. Now they're doing it again in cahoots with this narco banana republic government

    https://x.com/FueraNoboaFuera/status...57507901444129


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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    RT en Español

    Apr 7
    Translated from Spanish
    🇪🇨 The testimony of Ecuadorian fishermen attacked with drones and detained by a U.S. ship.

    https://x.com/ActualidadRT/status/2041588065328669136


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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Soviet y Sazón 🌺
    @sovietwithsazon
    ·
    Apr 8
    Since then, more incidents of U.S. military attacks on Ecuadorian civilians have been recorded. Yesterday, a boat of 20 fisherman, who were missing for weeks, arrived declaring they’d been bombed and “tortured like animals”. Our country is under siege by a US-backed dictatorship. x.com/liberation_blk…

    https://x.com/sovietwithsazon/status...50774536671298


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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Let's hope it's true that the meek shall inherit the earth. Nearly all of us are afraid, disgusted and angry that, the scumbags are in almost full possession of it.

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