Colombia's National Liberation Army (ELN) has announced a three-day lockdown on civilian areas under its control, instructing residents to stay indoors as fighters conduct military drills in response to what it describes as "imperialist intervention" by the US. The announcement comes after President Donald Trump warned that nations manufacturing and exporting cocaine to the US could face military strikes or land attacks.
The ELN has told civilians to keep off major routes and rivers from Sunday morning, as the fighters prepare for a potential attack on what they perceive as Colombian territory being used by the rebels to transport drugs. The group maintains control over significant drug-producing areas along the Venezuelan frontier.
Colombia's Defence Minister Pedro Sanchez has rejected the rebel directive as "nothing more than criminal coercion", pledging that government troops would maintain their presence in every mountain, jungle, and river. This move underscores a deepening confrontation between Washington and Bogota, with Trump escalating his rhetoric against President Gustavo Petro over cocaine production.
Earlier this week, Trump warned Petro to "wise up" or face the consequences, citing cocaine production as justification for potential action and referencing the US military build-up near Venezuela amid threats to remove President Nicolas Maduro. The Trump administration has also imposed new sanctions on Venezuela, targeting three nephews of Maduro's wife, Cilia Flores.
Petro has responded with equal defiance, warning Trump against "waking the jaguar" and insisting any assault on Colombian territory would be a declaration of war. He has invited his US counterpart to witness laboratory demolitions firsthand, claiming that his administration destroys drug facilities every 40 minutes.
The ELN's left-wing ideology is at odds with the group's substantial income from narcotics trafficking, which competes with former FARC fighters who refused to disarm under a 2016 peace settlement for control of coca cultivation zones and smuggling corridors. Relations between Colombia and the US have deteriorated sharply since Trump returned to office, with Washington imposing personal sanctions on Petro, cancelling his visa after he joined a pro-Palestinian demonstration in New York.
Meanwhile, Trump has deployed the nation's largest aircraft carrier and nearly 15,000 troops to the Caribbean and ordered over 20 military strikes in recent months against alleged drug trafficking vessels in the Caribbean and off Latin America's Pacific coast, killing more than 80 people.
The ELN has told civilians to keep off major routes and rivers from Sunday morning, as the fighters prepare for a potential attack on what they perceive as Colombian territory being used by the rebels to transport drugs. The group maintains control over significant drug-producing areas along the Venezuelan frontier.
Colombia's Defence Minister Pedro Sanchez has rejected the rebel directive as "nothing more than criminal coercion", pledging that government troops would maintain their presence in every mountain, jungle, and river. This move underscores a deepening confrontation between Washington and Bogota, with Trump escalating his rhetoric against President Gustavo Petro over cocaine production.
Earlier this week, Trump warned Petro to "wise up" or face the consequences, citing cocaine production as justification for potential action and referencing the US military build-up near Venezuela amid threats to remove President Nicolas Maduro. The Trump administration has also imposed new sanctions on Venezuela, targeting three nephews of Maduro's wife, Cilia Flores.
Petro has responded with equal defiance, warning Trump against "waking the jaguar" and insisting any assault on Colombian territory would be a declaration of war. He has invited his US counterpart to witness laboratory demolitions firsthand, claiming that his administration destroys drug facilities every 40 minutes.
The ELN's left-wing ideology is at odds with the group's substantial income from narcotics trafficking, which competes with former FARC fighters who refused to disarm under a 2016 peace settlement for control of coca cultivation zones and smuggling corridors. Relations between Colombia and the US have deteriorated sharply since Trump returned to office, with Washington imposing personal sanctions on Petro, cancelling his visa after he joined a pro-Palestinian demonstration in New York.
Meanwhile, Trump has deployed the nation's largest aircraft carrier and nearly 15,000 troops to the Caribbean and ordered over 20 military strikes in recent months against alleged drug trafficking vessels in the Caribbean and off Latin America's Pacific coast, killing more than 80 people.