Secretary of State Marco Rubio, in another move against cartels and drug traffickers, on Thursday said the Trump administration is designating two Ecuadorean gangs as foreign terrorist organizations.
The declaration, Rubio said in the notice, was based on a review of administration records and in consultation with the Treasury Department and Justice Department.
"I have concluded that there is a sufficient factual basis to find that the relevant circumstances exist" to declare the groups as terrorist organizations, he said, although other details were not provided in the notice. Los Choneros is also known as The Choneros, Aguilas, and Fatales, according to the notice, while Los Lobos is also known as The Lobos, and Los Lobos Drug Trafficking Organization.
Designating the gangs as terrorist organizations allows the federal government to use official means to limit the two groups' access to financial resources and block their travel.
Since taking office in January, the Trump administration has labeled a handful of criminal gangs and cartels as foreign terrorist organizations, including Venezuela's Tren de Aragua, MS-13, and the major Mexican drug cartels.
Two Haitian gangs and the Houthis group that controls much of Yemen were also designated as global terrorist organizations by the Trump administration.
The announcement comes as Rubio visited Ecuador on Thursday, following a trip to Mexico a day prior. The secretary said that the U.S. strike on the boat was needed because merely intercepting the vessel hadn't deterred drug trafficking into the United States.
"What will stop them is when you blow them up, when you get rid of them. So they were designated as what they are—they are narcoterrorist organizations," he said.
As for the possibility of another U.S. strike, Rubio said that "it'll happen again."
Trump is "going to wage war on narco-terrorist organizations," he said. "This one was operating in international waters, headed towards the United States to flood our country with poison, and under President Trump, those days are over."