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Ecuador's Border War Goes Big: 53,000 Operations, And A State Betting On Control
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Ecuador's government delivered a stark update on Thursday: the armed forces have carried out close to 53,000 operations this year across land borders, the coastline, and air approaches.
The headline number is meant to convey momentum. The subtext is darker: Ecuador is trying to reassert control over routes that criminals use like highways.
The Defense Ministry says the operations caused an estimated $243.4 million economic blow to illicit groups. This is not money recovered. It is the official valuation of what authorities say they seized or dismantled.
The list sketches the mechanics of crime more than the drama of arrests: firearms and ammunition, controlled substances, coca plantings, and cocaine-processing equipment, including crystallizers.
It also includes what keeps illegal economies running in remote zones-excavators,“bocaminas” (illegal mine shafts), and clandestine fittings used to build hidden logistics.
Ecuador Hardens Borders Amid Internal Conflict
Behind the figures sits a plan: the Border Protection Plan, which sets rules for how military power is used to defend national limits. The ministry says more than 5,000 personnel are deployed every day in surveillance and territorial control at critical points.
It describes heavier patrols, advanced observation posts, and a technology layer-drones, sensors, and surveillance systems-designed to spot suspicious movement early.
Specialized units trained for irregular combat and jungle operations are tasked with reconnaissance, tracking, and strikes on clandestine camps and routes.
The story behind the story is that Ecuador's border is no longer just a line on a map. It is a pressure valve for a wider security crisis that exploded into the open in 2023 and 2024, when gangs expanded, prisons imploded, and violence surged.
In January 2024, President Daniel Noboa declared an“internal armed conflict,” labeling major gangs as terrorist groups and giving the military a central role. Cooperation is part of the gamble.
Ecuador cites joint work with the National Police and COMBIFRON coordination with Colombia and Peru to share intelligence and run simultaneous operations. For outsiders, the takeaway is simple: a country once seen as a quiet corridor is now fighting to stop being one.
Ecuador's Defense Ministry says the military ran close to 53,000 border operations in 2025, aiming to choke off cross-border crime.
Officials estimate a $243.4 million hit to criminal networks, counting seizures and the destruction of illegal mining and trafficking infrastructure.
The campaign is part of the country's“internal armed conflict” posture since January 2024, with 5,000+ troops deployed daily and joint work with Colombia and Peru.
Ecuador's government delivered a stark update on Thursday: the armed forces have carried out close to 53,000 operations this year across land borders, the coastline, and air approaches.
The headline number is meant to convey momentum. The subtext is darker: Ecuador is trying to reassert control over routes that criminals use like highways.
The Defense Ministry says the operations caused an estimated $243.4 million economic blow to illicit groups. This is not money recovered. It is the official valuation of what authorities say they seized or dismantled.
The list sketches the mechanics of crime more than the drama of arrests: firearms and ammunition, controlled substances, coca plantings, and cocaine-processing equipment, including crystallizers.
It also includes what keeps illegal economies running in remote zones-excavators,“bocaminas” (illegal mine shafts), and clandestine fittings used to build hidden logistics.
Ecuador Hardens Borders Amid Internal Conflict
Behind the figures sits a plan: the Border Protection Plan, which sets rules for how military power is used to defend national limits. The ministry says more than 5,000 personnel are deployed every day in surveillance and territorial control at critical points.
It describes heavier patrols, advanced observation posts, and a technology layer-drones, sensors, and surveillance systems-designed to spot suspicious movement early.
Specialized units trained for irregular combat and jungle operations are tasked with reconnaissance, tracking, and strikes on clandestine camps and routes.
The story behind the story is that Ecuador's border is no longer just a line on a map. It is a pressure valve for a wider security crisis that exploded into the open in 2023 and 2024, when gangs expanded, prisons imploded, and violence surged.
In January 2024, President Daniel Noboa declared an“internal armed conflict,” labeling major gangs as terrorist groups and giving the military a central role. Cooperation is part of the gamble.
Ecuador cites joint work with the National Police and COMBIFRON coordination with Colombia and Peru to share intelligence and run simultaneous operations. For outsiders, the takeaway is simple: a country once seen as a quiet corridor is now fighting to stop being one.
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