Home Latin America U.S., Ecuador Launch First-Ever Joint Ground Operation Against Drug Cartels

U.S., Ecuador Launch First-Ever Joint Ground Operation Against Drug Cartels

The United States and Ecuador carried out joint military operations against what U.S. Southern Command described as “designated terrorist organizations operating inside Ecuador,” the command announced Tuesday, March 3, 2026.

The United States just crossed a line it’s tiptoed around for decades.

On Tuesday, U.S. Southern Command confirmed that American forces joined Ecuador’s military in operations against what it called “designated terrorist organizations” operating inside Ecuador.

Let’s translate that out of Pentagon language.

American troops went after drug cartels on South American soil.

That has never happened before.

For years, Washington treated cartels as a law-enforcement problem—something for the DEA, not the U.S. military. But the cartels evolved. They built armies, bought drones, corrupted governments, and carved out territory like warlords.

Now the U.S. is calling them what many soldiers and cops have quietly said for years: terrorists.

The joint operation with Ecuador signals a major shift in strategy. Instead of chasing traffickers after the drugs cross borders, the fight is moving closer to the source—where the cartels train, move weapons, and run their operations.

It’s also a message to the rest of the hemisphere.

If cartels act like insurgents, Washington may start treating them like insurgents.

And that changes the rules of the game.

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Isaac Cubillos is a seasoned military journalist and the visionary founder of The Military Report. With a career spanning over three decades, Isaac has witnessed the trials and triumphs of our armed forces, from the decks of Navy ships to covering conflict zones. Isaac's journalistic prowess has earned him numerous accolades, including awards for his comprehensive coverage of military affairs, investigative reporting of the military and civilian issues. Isaac Cubillos writes with the blunt realism of the service members who fight —and zero patience for political fairy tales.
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