U.S. forces just carried out their first ground operation in Ecuador against drug traffickers, and the details are still unclear

Image by Yamil Salinas Martínez, CC BY-SA 2.0.
The U.S. military has carried out its first ground operation in Ecuador targeting what officials described as a “narco-terrorist” supply complex. The action marks a notable escalation in the Trump administration’s efforts to dismantle drug trafficking networks across the Western Hemisphere.
As detailed by The Hill, the targeted operation took place Friday and was conducted by a U.S. military joint force at the request of Ecuador’s government. Officials have not released many details about the strike, including whether there were casualties or which specific trafficking organization was targeted.
Pentagon chief spokesperson Sean Parnell confirmed the mission and praised the coordination between the two countries. In a statement posted to social media, Parnell thanked Ecuador’s leadership and military forces for their role in the operation.
The operation marks a new step in U.S. involvement
“We commend President Noboa, the Government of Ecuador, and the brave troops of Ecuador’s defense and security forces for their partnership in the successful operation against a narco-terrorist supply complex today, disrupting their operations and logistics,” Parnell wrote. The operation comes shortly after the Trump administration approved a policy allowing U.S. troops to carry out ground missions alongside Ecuadorian forces against groups labeled as terrorist organizations within Ecuador’s borders, a shift that follows broader military escalation in the Iran conflict.
Marine Gen. Francis L. Donovan, commander of U.S. Southern Command, also praised the operation and described it as a strategic success for the region. “I congratulate our joint forces and the Ecuadorian armed forces for the successful operation against narcoterrorists in Ecuador,” Donovan said in a statement. He added that the joint mission demonstrates the commitment of countries across the Western Hemisphere to disrupting narcotics networks.
Before this shift, U.S. military actions targeting drug traffickers in the region had largely been limited to maritime and aerial operations. American forces have previously carried out lethal strikes against suspected drug-smuggling boats in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific.
According to officials, those operations have included at least 44 strikes that resulted in the deaths of more than 150 people described as “narco-terrorists.” The strikes were intended to disrupt the movement of illegal drugs moving through regional shipping routes.
The Trump administration has defended the operations as necessary to reduce the flow of narcotics into the United States. At the same time, critics have raised legal concerns about whether some of the attacks comply with international law, particularly when lethal force is used in international waters, as scrutiny also grows around expanding U.S. overseas prosecutions.





Published: Mar 7, 2026 02:45 pm