Calm. Methodical. Evidence-Based.

Norms Impact

U.S. Takes Military Action in Ecuador Against ‘Terrorist Organizations’

U.S. Special Forces are now advising raids inside Ecuador under a “terrorist” label, expanding military action with scant public detail and widening executive war-making discretion.

Executive

Mar 4, 2026

Sources

Summary

The Pentagon said the United States and Ecuador have launched joint military operations in Ecuador against “designated terrorist organizations.”
The action extends the Trump administration’s military campaign beyond prior unilateral strikes targeting boats in the Caribbean Sea and Eastern Pacific that the administration has tied to alleged drug trafficking.
U.S. Special Forces are providing advisory, intelligence, and logistics support for raids inside Ecuador, creating a new operational footprint with limited public detail and unclear mission outcomes.

Reality Check

When the executive branch expands overseas military operations while withholding clear objectives, outcomes, and constraints, we normalize a model of force that outpaces public accountability. Embedding U.S. advisers, intelligence, and logistics into partner raids deepens U.S. operational responsibility while blurring the line between “support” and direct action. Over time, this precedent erodes congressional and public oversight of when, where, and why the nation uses military power, weakening the separation-of-powers guardrails that are meant to restrain war-making by inertia.

Media

Detail

<p>The Pentagon said Tuesday night that the United States and Ecuador began joint military operations in Ecuador targeting “designated terrorist organizations.” A U.S. official, speaking anonymously about operational matters, said U.S. Special Forces soldiers are advising and supporting Ecuadorian commandos on raids across the country against suspected drug shipment facilities and other drug-related sites.</p><p>According to the official, the Americans are not believed to be participating in the raids, but are helping plan operations and providing intelligence and logistics support. U.S. Southern Command released a 30-second video showing a helicopter taking off, flying over an area, and picking up soldiers; the official said it depicted the first of a series of expected raids. The official said some raids were expected to involve U.S. advisers assisting nearby, while others would be conducted by Ecuadorian forces only. In the raid shown, the official said it was unclear what the objective was or whether it was successful.</p><p>Southern Command said the operations demonstrate a regional commitment to combat “narco-terrorism,” without providing further details.</p>