A Conversation with the US Ambassadors to the Andean Region
Despite continued tensions among the Andean countries, four U.S. ambassadors painted an encouraging picture of regional stability.
Unlike his predecessors, Ecuador’s president, Rafael Correa, has enjoyed consistently high approval ratings since coming into office in 2007. And while support for some other regional leaders, hit hard by economic slowdowns and corruption scandals, are nearing rock-bottom levels, Correa’s rule has also been relatively free of political turbulence. But over the past several weeks, that has changed.
Growing protests reveal that many Ecuadoreans are increasingly disaffected and no longer afraid to take to the streets and openly defy a self-assured president intent on carrying out his so-called citizens’ revolution. The biggest protests came late last week in the country’s largest city, Guayaquil, where thousands of Ecuadoreans marched in the streets and called for Correa’s resignation. Guayaquil’s long-time mayor, Jaime Nebot, one of Correa’s fiercest critics, led the demonstrations and warned that Correa was leading Ecuador down the path of nearby Venezuela.
Despite continued tensions among the Andean countries, four U.S. ambassadors painted an encouraging picture of regional stability.
At the Inter-American Dialogue, José Miguel Insulza described the events of September 30, in which Ecuadoran police brought the country to a standstill after they rioted and trapped President Rafael Correa in a Quito hospital for several hours.
How will diplomatic relations between Ecuador and the US be affected after the expulsion of US Ambassador Heather Hodges?