Ecuador’s Cocaine Corridor: US and Ecuador Target Global Drug Networks
BBC correspondents Vanessa Buschschlüter and Chris Graham report in their article, “US and Ecuador forces launch operation to fight drug trafficking,” that Ecuadorian and U.S. authorities have started joint operations to target major trafficking networks operating through the country. According to the report, investigators working with Ecuadorian police, the U.S. military’s Southern Command, and Europol have dismantled a large drug-trafficking network linked to the Los Lobos gang. The operation resulted in 16 arrests, including a “high-value target,” while seizures tied to the investigation included 3.7 tons of cocaine in the Netherlands, more than three tons in Belgium, and over half a ton in Ecuador, along with more than $810,000 in cash.
“Sandwiched between Colombia and Peru, the world’s two largest producers of cocaine,” Ecuador has become a key trafficking hub, with President Daniel Noboa stating that “around 70% of the world’s cocaine now flows through Ecuador’s huge ports.” Investigators also found that the Los Lobos network worked with Albanian trafficking networks to distribute cocaine across Europe after shipments arrived in port, highlighting the global nature of Ecuador’s narco networks.
CNN’s video report below also provides a ground-level look at how this trafficking system operates along Ecuador’s Pacific coast. In areas such as the port city of Manta, reporters describe what authorities call a “narco superhighway,” where cocaine shipments move out toward the United States and Europe. The investigation shows how local fishermen—often driven by poverty and the promise of fast money—become the lowest tier of the trafficking chain, transporting fuel or drugs for smugglers operating offshore.
The current situation in Ecuador reveals that international criminal networks, local gangs, and vulnerable coastal communities are now intertwined in a system that extends from Andean coca fields to ports in Europe and North America. The result is a security crisis that has drawn in international law enforcement cooperation, leaving many ordinary Ecuadorians caught in the middle of a rapidly expanding narcotics economy.
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