U.S. deploys troops to Ecuador for anti-drugs operation
Noboa is attempting to roll back a wave of drug cartel violence.

(FILE) Donald Trump
Noboa is attempting to roll back a wave of drug cartel violence.

(FILE) Donald Trump

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QUITO (AFP) — The United States announced Wednesday a temporary deployment of Air Force personnel to Ecuador to combat drug trafficking in one of Latin America’s biggest narcotics smuggling hubs.
The deployment comes amid a deepening standoff between the US and Latin American oil producer Venezuela, whose leader Washington accuses of drug trafficking.
The US personnel will be deployed at Ecuador’s Manta air force base, which served as a US base for a decade until 2009.
Ecuadoran voters in November overwhelmingly rejected a bid by President Daniel Noboa to lift the country’s ban on foreign military bases.
According to the US embassy in Quito, the deployment is a “temporary operation with the Ecuadorian Air Force in Manta.”
The “short-term joint effort” will “enhance the capacity of the Ecuadorian military forces to combat narco-terrorists, including strengthening intelligence gathering and anti-drug trafficking capabilities, and is designed to protect the US and Ecuador from the threats we share,” the embassy said.
Noboa, one of Trump’s closest allies in Latin America, said the operation “will allow us to identify and dismantle drug trafficking routes, and subdue those who thought they could take over the country.”
Noboa is attempting to roll back a wave of drug cartel violence that has turned what was once one of South America’s safest countries into one of its deadliest.
The ports of Guayaquil and Manta have become key exit points for cocaine produced in neighboring Colombia and Peru.
The right-wing Noboa has argued that Ecuador needs outside help to fight the gangs vying for control of trafficking routes.