War on drugs in Ecuador
{{Short description|Internal conflict in Ecuador}}
{{Rough translation|es|date=July 2024}}
{{Infobox military conflict
| width = 315px
| partof = the war on drugs
| image = Militares ecuatorianos durante el conflicto armado interno.jpg
| image_size = 300px
| alt =
| caption = Ecuadorian military in January 2024
| date = 27 January 2018 – present
({{Age in years, months, weeks and days|month1=1|day1=27|year1=2018}})
| place = Ecuador
| coordinates =
| territory =
| result =
| status = Ongoing
| combatants_header =
| combatant1 = {{flagicon|Ecuador}} Government of Ecuador
- {{flagicon image|Escudo Policia Nacional Ecuador.jpg}} National Police of Ecuador
- {{flagicon image|National Standard of Ecuador.svg}} Armed Forces of Ecuador
- {{flagicon image|Coat of Arms of Ecuador Army.svg}} Ecuadorian Army
- {{flagicon image|Ecuadorian_Navy_Seal.svg}} Ecuadorian Navy
- {{flagicon image|Comando Conjunto FFAA Ecuador.jpg}} Ecuadorian Air Force
Armed civilians
Counter-terrorist PMCs
Supported by:
- {{flag|United States}}
- {{flagicon image|Flag of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.svg}} CIA
- {{flag|Canada}}
- {{flag|Colombia}}
- {{flag|Mexico}} (until 2024)
- {{flag|Peru}}
| combatant2 = Organized crime groups
- {{flagicon image|Cartel De Sinaloa.png}} Sinaloa Cartel
- Los Choneros
- {{flagicon image|Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación logo 3.png}} CJNG
- Los Lobos
- Chone Killers
- Los Tiguerones
- Los Lagartos
- {{flagicon image|Flag_of_Latin_Kings.svg}} Latin Kings
- {{flagicon image|Flag_of_Albania.svg}} Albanian mafia
- NETA Association
- {{flagicon image|PCE-SR-flag.svg}} PCE-SR
- {{flagicon image|Flag_of_the_FARC-EP.svg}} FARC–EP
- FARC dissidents
- {{flagicon image|Flag_of_ELN.svg}} ELN
- La Empresa
Other groups
| combatant3 =
| commander1 = {{Unbulleted list|{{Flagicon|Ecuador}} Daniel Noboa|{{Flagicon|Ecuador}} Jaime Vela Erazo}}
| commander2 = {{Unbulleted list|José Adolfo Macías|Fabricio Colón Pico|Jorge Luis Zambrano{{Executed|Murder}}|Antonio Camacho|Terry Israel Camacho|}}
| units1 = 159,250 military
46,727 police
| units2 = Unknown
| strength1 =
| strength2 =
| casualties1 =
| casualties2 =
| casualties3 = 14,218 fatalities
| notes =
| campaignbox =
| conflict = Ecuadorian Drug War
}}
The Ecuadorian Drug War ({{langx|es|Guerra contra el narcotráfico en Ecuador{{noitalic|,}}}} {{translation|'War against drug trafficking in Ecuador'}}) is an internal conflict in Ecuador waged by the Ecuadorian security forces against criminal groups since the beginning of 2018. The conflict is divided into two parts, the first is the Ecuadorian government against satellite groups of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel and Sinaloa Cartel, and the second is the confrontation between said satellite groups for dominance and hegemony.{{Cite web |date=11 October 2021 |title=Cómo Ecuador pasó de ser país de tránsito a un centro de distribución de la droga en América Latina (y qué papel tienen los carteles mexicanos) |url=https://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-america-latina-58829554 |access-date=12 November 2022 |website=BBC |language=es}}
The geographic location of Ecuador as a strategic transit route for drugs from Colombia and Peru into Mexico and later the United States and Europe was always a concern, but it was with the evolution of the Colombian internal armed conflict and the remainders of the guerrilla forces of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia that Ecuador became more involved. The first major incident was an attack against law enforcement in San Lorenzo, which unleashed a wave of violence on the northern coast of the country. The main suspect in the attack was a FARC-EP dissident led by Ecuadorian drug traffickers.
At the end of 2019 the presence of European mafias in Ecuador was first documented, the main one being the Albanian mafia. In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, the crisis became latent with the entry of illegal weapons from Peru, one of the main sources of arms to armed gangs in Ecuador. Earlier in 2019, a {{Ill|Prison crisis in Guayaquil|lt=prison crisis broke out in Guayaquil|es|Crisis carcelaria en Guayaquil}} due to the city's prisons becoming important links of communication and confrontations between the armed groups. Later that same year the crisis spread to other prisons nationwide and violence reached the streets again in 2022.{{Cite web |date=16 August 2022 |title=El narcoterrorismo en Ecuador ha crecido en silencio desde 2018 |url=https://www.primicias.ec/noticias/en-exclusiva/crece-narcoterrorismo-ecuador/ |access-date=12 November 2022 |website=Primicias.ec. |language=es}}
In January 2024 the conflict reached a critical point when armed conflict broke out in Ecuador between the armed forces and several organized crime groups.{{Cite news |last=Phillips |first=Tom |date=2024-01-11 |title=Ecuador's biggest city 'a desert' as state tries to restore order after gang violence |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/11/ecuador-gang-violence-guayaquil-state-of-war-update |access-date=12 January 2024 |work=The Guardian |language=en-GB |issn=0261-3077}}
Background
= Migration of the drug business =
Since 2000 Colombia has fought a war on drugs with policy focused on the eradication of drug cultivation in the south of the country, specifically the departments of Putumayo and Nariño, which border Ecuador.{{Cite web |date= 17 May 2018|title=Un Ecuador incierto en una guerra heredada |url=https://nuso.org/articulo/un-ecuador-incierto-en-una-guerra-heredada/ |access-date=12 November 2022 |website=Nueva Sociedad |language=es}} Before then, illegal Colombian merchandise would pass through Ecuador using the coastline and jungle routes. When the drug traffickers were pressured by the Colombian government, they decided to migrate to other territories in neighbouring countries where they already had a sporadic presence, their main destinations were Ecuador and Peru.
By 2017 the United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia warned that the core of illicit crops in Colombia was increasingly approaching Ecuadorian territory, with 35% being located just ten kilometres from the Colombian-Ecuadorian border that year.
In 2021 BBC News described this migration as the "balloon effect" affecting the provinces of Esmeraldas and Sucumbíos, as well as neighbouring Colombia.
= Closure of the US Manta base and politicization of the intelligence service =
According to InSight Crime, the closure of the base serving the United States Armed Forces in Manta during the Rafael Correa government in 2009 was a key factor in the increase in criminal actions by armed groups since the American presence reportedly served as a deterrent so foreign gangs were expected to have increased influence in the drug business in Ecuador. The United States Air Force had also helped in the tracking and surveillance of the corridors used to transport merchandise. Likewise, InSight Crime reported that since 2013, violent crimes and seizures related to drug trafficking had skyrocketed from the previous year.{{Cite web |title=Crímenes Violentos en Quito son Consecuencia del Auge del Narcotráfico |url=https://es.insightcrime.org/noticias/noticias-del-dia/crimenes-violentos-en-quito-son-consecuencia-de-auge-del-narcotrafico/ |access-date=2023-04-21 |website=InSight Crime|date=27 March 2017 }}
That same year the National Intelligence Directorate was closed in favour of the National Intelligence Secretariat, which, according to analysts, caused Ecuadorian intelligence to be politicized and become an instrument of the government in power to monitor its opponents at the expense of national security, since the Armed Forces of Ecuador saw their specialized intelligence capabilities limited, followed by a reduction in investment in the sector. That, together with the eviction of the Americans was said to cause the impoverishment of Ecuadorian military capabilities which followed.
= Demobilization of the FARC-EP =
The demobilization of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia – People's Army (FARC-EP) did not end all its military actions as its dissidents went from being an ideologized guerrilla into criminal gangs with heterogeneous objectives, entering Ecuador in alliances with local groups, Mexican Mafias and cartels.
The FARC-EP dissidents in Ecuador were the first to have links with criminal groups from Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro and Serbia. The Sinaloa Cartel arrived in 2003 in a discreet manner and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel in 2016, but both were limited to covert operations and forging local alliances.
Belligerents
= Gangs and armed groups =
It has been reported that Los Choneros, who are allies and representatives of the Sinaloa Cartel, participate in the insurgency; while Los Lobos, Los Lagartos, Los Chone Killers and Los Tiguerones are from the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG). The FARC-EP dissidents are concentrated mostly in north-eastern Ecuador, with the Oliver Sinisterra Front having its own interests and the Urías Rondón Mobile Column being affiliated with the CJNG.
Many of those arrested and imprisoned for the 2018 San Lorenzo attack expanded their knowledge to make weapons and homemade bombs in the Esmeraldas prisons.
The Foundation for Peace and Reconciliation–Pares of Colombia notified that the National Liberation Army (ELN) also operates in Ecuadorian territory, including the following gangs of diverse origin: La Empresa, Gente del Orden, Guerrillas Unidas del Pacífico, Los Negritos, Los Mexicanos, Nuevo Grupo, Peasant Resistance, Steven Gonzáles Front and illegal mining.
= Response from Ecuadorian authorities =
The conflict itself broke out during the Lenín Moreno government, the Ecuadorian president defined the 2018 San Lorenzo attack as "The first terrorist attack in Ecuador", declaring a state of exception in the Province of Esmeraldas.{{Cite web |date=28 January 2018 |title="El primer atentado terrorista en Ecuador": el presidente Lenín Moreno decreta estado de excepción por explosión que dejó 14 policías heridos |url=https://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-america-latina-42851034 |access-date=12 November 2022 |website=BBC |language=es}} Moreno in the context of the prison massacres openly said that these events were related to drug trafficking.{{Cite web |date=24 November 2022 |title=Lenín Moreno relaciona matanzas en cárceles con narcotráfico |url=https://www.dw.com/es/len%C3%ADn-moreno-relaciona-matanzas-en-c%C3%A1rceles-con-narcotr%C3%A1fico/a-56682473 |access-date=24 November 2022 |website=BBC |language=es}}
In the Government of Guillermo Lasso, the president also declared a state of emergency for the attacks in Guayaquil in August 2022 and offered a reward of $10,000 for anyone who collaborates with the search for the material and intellectual authors of the attack. For the attacks in November of the same year, Lasso suggested that human rights organizations defend the attackers.{{Cite web |date=7 November 2022 |title=Lasso no está para excusas: Ecuador está en llamas |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/es/post-opinion/2022/11/07/guillermo-lasso-estado-de-excepcion-violencia-ecuador/ |access-date=7 November 2022 |website=France24 |language=es}}
Armed confrontations
= Attacks on the northern border of Ecuador in 2018 =
{{Empty section|date=February 2024}}
{{Main|2018 attacks on the northern border of Ecuador}}
= Ecuador security crisis of 2021–2024 =
{{Empty section|date=February 2024}}{{Main|Ecuadorian security crisis}}
= Ecuador's internal armed conflict of 2024 =
{{Main|2024 conflict in Ecuador}}{{Expand section|date=February 2024}}
The internal armed conflict in Ecuador broke out on January 9, 2024.
See also
References
{{Reflist|2}}
External links
- [https://journal.espe.edu.ec/ojs/index.php/revista-seguridad-defensa/article/view/2183/1961 El Narcotráfico y Terrorismo en Ecuador.]
- [https://www.oas.org/es/ssm/ddot/publicaciones/LIBRO%20OEA%20LAVADO%20ACTIVOS%202018_4%20DIGITAL.pdf Lavado de activos en Ecuador de 2018.]
{{Ecuador topics}}
Category:Illegal drug trade in Ecuador
Category:Military history of Ecuador
Category:Organized crime in Ecuador
Category:Law enforcement operations against drug trafficking