Ecuador & Mexico's Diplomatic Standoff Explained
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- Опубликовано: 6 июн 2024
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Welcome to the TLDR News Daily Briefing
In today’s episode, we run through diplomatic relations between Mexico and Ecuador. Also, we discuss why Brazil’s Supreme Court is investigating Elon Musk; the drone strike at Zaporizhzhia; and will the UK Decriminalise abortion?
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TLDR is all about getting you up to date with the news of today, without bias and without filter. We aim to give you the information you need, quickly and simply so that you can make your own decision.
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Music by Epidemic Sound: epidemicsound.com/creator
//////////////////////////////
Further reading:
✍️ Mexico & Ecuador Relations Worsen
www.ft.com/content/8afdf9d2-f...
www.theguardian.com/world/202...
✍️ Has Elon Musk Obstructed Justice?
www.independent.co.uk/tech/el...
www.reuters.com/technology/mu...
www.bloomberg.com/news/articl...
✍️ Drone Strike at Zaporizhzhia
www.theguardian.com/world/202...
www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-euro...
✍️ UK Abortion Decriminalisation
www.theguardian.com/world/202....
✍️ TLDR Good News
www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england...
//////////////////////////////
00:00 Intro
00:21 Mexico & Ecuador Relations Worsen
02:51 Daily Briefing Announcement
04:10 Has Elon Musk Obstructed Justice?
05:16 Drone Strike at Zaporizhzhia
06:39 UK Abortion Decriminalisation
08:14 TLDR Good News
I don't think people are realizing the true weight of the embassy raid and the damage this may do for international diplomacy.
If countries don’t want their embassies raided they shouldn’t protect fugitives of the host country inside them. Doing that is an obvious abuse of the protections and privileges given to foreign embassies and they should honestly have those rights forfeited when this happens.
@@perturabo7825 agreed
@@perturabo7825okay, i completely disagree. The embrace is the county’s soil in a land where they have diplomatic relations with.
@@advakart4208you should disagree you doofus
@@perturabo7825 That doesn't work. All political prisoners are legally fugitive, and there's also such a thing called procedural justice. Law enforcement cannot break the law to achieve their end simply because someone else is.
There are also so many legal ways to retaliate against Mexico and they chose absolutely none of those options. They didn't even send a diplomatic note (the Mexican ambassador was expelled before asylum was granted so that was technically unrelated).
By your logic, any country could just storm any of their accredited embassy simply by accusing anyone within their grounds of any crime. That really doesn't work.
There is a big difference between a country electing a new government that withdraws diplomatic protection and a country invading another country's embassy. The rules surrounding diplomacy are arcane and sacrosanct for a reason, they help to prevent wars. Casually dismissing them because of short term political concerns is not only stupid, but extremely dangerous.
No doubt. The question is what is going to happen to this new Ecuadorian President.
@@TheBooban Latin America should intervine. Not gonna happen. Now Ecuador is a satellite Narco state of the US just like Mexico, Colombia and half of central America.
These are not short policial terms, Correa who was the president of this vice president has been in Belgium under the same pretenses of “political asylum” for the last 9 years doing nothing more than fueling a narco state to Ecuador. By the way, Correa has been requested for extradition and all have been ignored. Furthermore, this is not the first or second time Mexico has decided to defy a foreign government judicial system and granting asylum to political convicts. They did it with Evo Morales in Bolivia, tried to do it with Castillo in Peru and now Glas in Ecuador. Unsurprisingly, Maduro from Venezuela and Ortega from a Nicarágua are the only ones who support Mexico. Makes me wonder why these corrupt politicians don’t ask for political asylum in the US.
You guys don’t know nothing about the whole context but You have a point.
Yeah, it was a weird comment. "There are some parallels", of course, but you could say that about completely different and irrelevant things. Like, there are some parallels between Apollo 11 and the V-1 and V-2 programs, but they're generally completely separate subjects, and if you're mentioning that, you have an agenda.
That's actually the very first instance of a HOST country invading an ACCREDITED embassy. Historic first. There's no parallel to it. Similar instances in the past all had unofficial "groups" or "protesters" doing the regime's dirty work, never before had the head of state and government of any country officially orders the raiding of any of its accredited diplomatic missions from any jurisdiction.
If they disagreed with Mexico's assessment of their former vice-president's sentencing and truly believed Mexico had illegally granted asylum, they could have:
sued Mexico internationally;
sued Mexico domestically;
sued the former vice-president in Mexico;
blockaded the Embassy;
ordered the closure of the Embassy and expelled every accredited diplomat and arrested everyone who isn't one on their way out;
broke off diplomatic relations;
declared the Mexican president or anyone a persona non grata.
All of these would be legal even though some might already be quite an overreaction. But they somehow chose the absolutely unbelievable option. They could even have "protesters" storming it or just send some secret forces to extract the guy while denying any involvement. I honestly wasn't sure about Mexico's decision to grant asylum at first, but with the Ecuadoran regime's actions, now I believe perhaps Mexico got it right. Ecuador has become a rough state with an insane president.
What happened with Assange was not comparable but rather an irony. The fact that it was Ecuador themselves who granted asylum to someone accused of a non-political crime and kept him in their embassy in another country for literally years, yet somehow they did this within like 2 days of the asylum being granted is utterly ironic. The world showed them the way how it could have ended diplomatically and they decided that they were just superior to earthlings' laws and rules.
Israel just a few days ago shot at the Iranian Embassy in Syria killing several generals... Those dictators and fascists don't care about international law anymore...
What about Havana Syndrome? That's another example of an attack on an embassy.
@@catdogmousecheeseYou mean the thing that has been proven not exist several times?
@catdogmousecheese hahahahaa man you believe everything and you prob think the Russians are propagandised 😂
Ecuador isn’t a regime, and it’s funny how this event made you switch sides with Mexico. Mexico deserves it for its history of granting asylum to left wing corrupt politicians.
What Ecuador did does not clear Mexico and Glas at all. It’s actually more suspicious how every left leaning politician is quickly given asylum by Mexico
You know when you messed up when Chile and Venezuela are upset at you.
Russia and the US are also standing together condemning Ecuador on this.
Chile: yes sure. Venezuela: nah, they get mad at ppl for not being communist. Anyone who is to the right of Bernie Sanders is "extremist right wing"
@@hilaryhongkong okay,now that's when you know you fucked up
@@hilaryhongkongthat’s what you believe 😂
Because they both in on the drug trade Ecuador is fighting.
"for our uplifting news: an old man has died"
🙂🙂💔
Kissinger died again?
"the pension payers can finally breathe a sigh of relief."
@@brancaleone8895 if only
being the oldest somebody must be one of the most depressing titles to earn because you only earn it when somebody dies
I dont see the parallel to Assange at all. His status was revoked, whereas the VP's wasn't.
I feel for Antonio Guterres. All joking about the UN's lack of effectiveness aside, being the secretary general must be a stressful job at the best of times, and we have been very far from "the best of times" for pretty much his entire tenure.
agree about their ineffectiveness, but the various aid agencies under do good work
Ecuador just ended decades of geopolitical precedent in Latin America and broke one of the most fundamental tenants of modern international law. I hope Mexico, the OAS, and every other international organization holds them accountable.
Well, Israel did it first, and nobody cared. So I think you can consider that "Fundamental Tenant" gone if your country doesn't have the muscle to enforce it by their own means.
@@jiiaga5017Israel weren't the first either. This isn't unique.
@@jiiaga5017 No, what Israel did is attack a diplomatic building in another country's territory, which is not good. But Ecuador raided a country's embassy in THEIR own territory. How can other countries ever trust the Ecuadorians to not raid the other embassies? They simply can't
@@jiiaga5017are you intentionally ignorant or just really don't like Israel?Israel attacked a building next to the embassy and the building housed many Iranian officers so it worked like a military outpost not an embassy
@@jiiaga5017 Not remotely comparable. Israel does not have any Vienna Convention-related legal obligation to protect another country's embassy in another country. It is the HOST country's responsibility to do that.
Julian assange having his status revoked, is not on a parallel to this situation 😂
What the UK did to assange wasn't fair, but at least they respected international law
Didnt he get kicked out?
@@profbbfab6211 Assange diddled a 16 year old girl. What about holding him to account wasn't fair?
The thing is. Ecuador is a hypocrite. Ecuador is harboring a wanted man for years in their embassy in London but when Mexico does the same thing Ecuador does, Ecuador is angry. 😂
@@ThePumpkinRot what is unfair is that no one wants to prosecute him for that crime, and still now he's waiting to be extradite to the US not Sweden, who dropped charges in 2019
Forcing your entry into an embassy is a violation of territorial integrity of the country who embassy it is, and is equivalent to an invasion of their territory
Well, its like with UN. What exactly happens if somebody doesnt respect it?
@@DaweSMF
Well first off, this can if the conditions allowed it, it could lead to armed escalation, in this case due to distance and a lack of expeditionary capability, it won't come to that, but on the other hand it will lead to political isolation for Ecuador as countries will likely denounce their action and likely take actions to sanction those involved in giving the orders.
Given that it was the Ecuadorian President that ordered the storming of the embassy, Mexico could make an appeal to the ICJ to issue a warrant for his arrest, in essence banning him from travelling abroad at all as with an ICJ warrant a country which is a member of the ICJ is obligated to arrest those who have warrants and then to send them to the ICJ for trial.
As this is very much so a crime in the eyes of the international community, this could even more so than anything else lead to a economic and political isolation of Ecuador which is a landlocked country, on top of that there is likely to be a ban on selling Mexican goods to Ecuador, which includes anything manufactured in Mexico as well as agricultural products.
@@DaweSMF Unlike the UN, countries have a military and the ability to put economic and diplomatic pressure
Look we saw in last few weeks Embassy being blown up so at this point anything is fair game unfortunately 🤷🏽♂️
@@Munthasir123 I was expecting more people to point this out. Some countries can bomb an embassy and kill a dozen people . . . but other countries get so much shite for raiding one to sieze a high level political criminal. No-one murdered, no foreign diplomats or materials siezed. Simply a statement that embassy rights have limits, and those limits are hosting wanted criminals. Of all the fucked up stuff happening in politics, raiding an embassy for a wanted criminal politician shouldn't be that much of a flash point.
Makes me wonder if the real issue is that every corrupt politician already has an escape route planned for when the people rise up against them, and one of those escape routes is a friendly embassy.
I think that is it a false comparison between Julian Assange and what just happened. With Julian Assange while it was bad it was entirely legal and all governments agreed on it. With this it is a blazon violation of diplomacy
He survived 2 pandemics, don't forget about the Spanish Flu.
There's actually been a bunch more in the twentieth century but yes, the Spanish Flu and Covid-19 are the two big ones he survived.
There is no parallel to what happened in Ecuador, the host country invaded by force and no permit whatsoever the embassy of another nation. All other instances of violence happening within an embassy were either with the consent of the invited country or done by non governmental actors usually as an act of protesting both the host and the invited country something the USA embassies are used to receiving. Had this happened to a rich country or if we are honest a white majority country it would’ve been prime time news for days. This is a historic first and signals the erosion of international law but since the implicated have tans and are slightly brown the world is not realizing how dangerous this is.
what is the danger? Mexico invading Ecuador?
@@igoralmeida9136 There are real political refugees that need embassies to avoid being murdered by states the most famous example was Assange, the UK seriously considered invading Ecuador’s embassy but decided not to to avoid setting a precedent. Ecuador has now set that precedent if nothing happens another country will do the same and actual whistleblowers, political leaders, activists and reporters will no longer have embassies as safe spaces. The only reason Evo Morales was not assassinated by the Bolivian government was because he entered the Mexican embassy, they had orders to execute him he managed to covertly enter the embassy and his life was spared. The same for Snowden. Thousands of jewish people escaped Germany by embassies during world war ll when not even the nazis raided embassies fully aware there were 100s of jewish refugees taking political safe haven in different embassies. Spain during its civil war the republicans used embassies of Latin America to avoid being executed by Franco. Not even Franco raided any embassy either.
You know you fucked up when even the Nazis refrained from doing what you did.@@ericktellez7632
@@igoralmeida9136 Sometimes I wonder how people like you manage to tie their shoes..
There seems to be a lot of rising tension in south America. Any chance of a broader perspective video TLDR?
Happy to join. You all do a wonderful job summarizing the top news for the day in a neutral non dramatized manner. Thank you.
Thank you! We really appreciate it!
I will help support my favorit newscast
Thank you so much! We're excited to continue building the TLDR Community with you all! - Jack
Hard to understand how Musk feels he's the paladin of free speech given how he fired a journalist almost on the spot because he didn't like the interview questions.
The interviewer was anti free speech who was trying to push that agenda on Musk, so Musk, as a supporter of free speech, took his power away by firing him. Lemon is still fully able to voice his opinions, but should not hold any position of influence as he is pro censorship.
I'm pro free speech, and I would let a racist voice their opinion, but would I ever accept them in a position of power/influence if I was their boss? No, not in a million years. Being pro free speech does mean protecting it.
Correction Ben: the world's oldest Brit has survived two World Wars, and TWO pandemics ;)
Huge difference between, "You're no longer welcome here and we're letting the police come and take you away" and the police smashing the door in.
Daniel Noa is literally the son of an oligarch. He is the most privileged person ever, he literally just graduated his masters a year ago. Not surprised he got elected through some shady means.
Better than the leftextremist criminal in Mexico
2:35 it's not a parallel. Regardless of the accusations against Assange, UK police only entered with the request of the Ecuadorians.
We ecuadorians have been cursed with incompetent governments for the last 20 years. It is quite impressive the shortsightedness of this decision.
Makes one think is actually part of a premeditated theater
Except that Ecuador currently has a very young and very ignorant president.
Nah screw that, the precedent is broken
No surprise there. Ecuador invaded Peru due to a land dispute twice in 1941 and 1995 and lost in both counts...
It's sad seeing Latin America constantly holding itself back and being trapped in a perpetual loop of incompetence, corruption and stagnation with occasional glimmers of hope.
I don't know if this a "controversial take" but if we're truly heading to a multipolar future then Europe and Latin America need to strengthen ties, I mean language barriers aren't going to be an issue.
How hypocritical of Ecuador to cry about an "abuse of diplomatic immunities" when they've been doing the same thing against the UK by sheltering Julian Assange in their London embassy for nearly a decade.
The people who did this are the ones who were trying to flee to Mexico tho.
@@comfy8250 Eh, seems pretty typical that people who would attempt to take sanctuary in an embassy would have had plans to flee before that, but conditions deteriorated to point expected more normal exit would fail.
Didn't he survive two pandemics if he was born in 1914?
Yep
That old man didn't live through a pandemic - he's lived through 2 of them.
(for those wondering: it was the Spanish flu)
Of course as pointed out the Ecuadorians *allowed* British police to come in and take Assange.
What Ecuador did with the Mexican embassy is more akin of the Iranian students raiding the US embassy in Tehran and the Iranian government's after the fact endorsement led to the 1979-1981 Hostage crisis.
I don't like to be pedantic, but you said Honduras when you meant Ecuador.
@@theTeleforce
Not pedantic at all since it is a completely different country. I will correct it right now.
The Iranian embassy, however, was stormed and occupied by a nongovernment student movement that wasn't sanctioned or endorsed by the new Islamic Republic until it was discovered that the embassy was the CIA station for the entire Middle East. Meanwhile, the Ecuadorian government ordered the embassy raid to apprehend a political opponent so if anything it's worse.
I second the call for a long, in-depth TLDR on South America right now. Milei seems to be succeeding in Argentina by going wildly against their history, Brazil have been a mess for a while now, Venezuela thinks they own Guyana but not until oil was discovered do they care, Colombia and Venezuela are bickering with Argentina, and the list goes on. France seem to be the only South American country without any drama right now.
France with out drama? thats front line news
There is absolutely a lot of drama in France’s territory in south america going on, google it.
What are you talking about, Argentina inflation is higher then ever, the povertry rate reached 50%of the population what is he suceding at ?
@@varimatra2088 read news from post December 2023. The economy is miles better than last year by any objective measure.
@@varimatra2088 Inflation has literally reduced every single month since Milei took office. It was at down to 13% in February which is really not much more than some European countries after Russia's invasion of Ukraine and analysts say it will go down again in March.
2:30 How did this have any parallel with the Julian Assange case? The Assange case was the Ecuadorian embassy ended his asylum and allowed police to arrest him. Where this totally outrageous case of force raiding an embassy is literally an act of war.
What a pathetic breach of international law!
Oh hell yea, news
The only thing darker than my coffee
My reaction when news
Waaah Ben is a tempting offer, and this is probably my favourite tldr channel, as someone who has been watching since before the EU or US channels even existed. Surprisingly, it turns out I'm not even subscribed because RUclips keeps feeding these videos to me regardless.
We're very happy to have you on board, both as a member and as a new subscriber! - Jack
Ecuador crossed the line and should be considered a pariah state. It was no less than an act of war.
Mexico has conducted hybrid war and terrorism on Ecuador, via drug cartels. We are in the midst of a developing cold civil war of continental scale.
I was expecting him to say ''two world wars and one world cup'' lol
7:00 6 month abortions? That's fking murder
Thank you!
1972?! He was retired for longer than I was alive.
What about the big announcement you announced for Monday on Nebula?
What % of the join fee do you end up taking home after YT takes its cut?
The irony of ecuador raiding an embassy to arrest someone.
Seems like an obvious difference is Ecuador revoked his immunity, rather than being raided without knowledge
It’s crazy that a judge in any country can order someone’s account to be banned without a larger crime that it falls under. That’s like telling a restaurant they aren’t allowed to let certain specific people inside, but without anything further legally. Ie they aren’t under arrest etc
I found calling it parallel to the Asange case misleading. It is more akin to Israel bombing an Iranian embassy compound.
I cant find the join button mate. Love this channel.
It seems pretty clear that Ecuador had a myriad of alternative options available to them without completely obliterating their own diplomatic standing, yet they chose the nuclear option.
It seems that they went with the most reckless option available to them, and now everyone will consider them as hostile. At the very least, the other countries with an embassy in Ecuador will be considering the threat of Ecuador's government to them and their embassy a lot more seriously. Nice going, Ecuador, you've screwed yourselves.
The plant isn't entirely shut down. One reactor is operating at minimal levels to provide electricity to the other plants. The bigger issue is water, now that the dam is gone. They were forced to drill wells nearby to supply fresh water to the cooling systems. If those are damaged, then things might get very ugly.
The Ben emojis hurt my soul
gonna be honest I was never one to support a creator financially just for the sake of support. But having watched tldr news from almost the beginning I gotta say it's almost essential for my news intake. Independacy, facts based and being able to summarize the whole picture news is hard and rare to come by nowadays. But if the crew or anyone else knows does it matter which channel I join? thinking YT algo good boy points or does it not matter? Would joining tldr US be of more benefit?
Cheers team
missed an opportunity to use "Mexican Standoff" in the title
This is the most dangerous thing i have ever seen.
Technically, the embassy is the people working there, and the building is called a chancery. So it would be the building that was violated not the embassy.
Great!
I'm glad this comments section understands just how serious the official ordering of an invaison of an embassy is. It's practically a declaration of war, as it's the sovreign territory of the foreign nation. This is a historic first, and risks destabilizing fundamnetal foreign relations globally. This needs to be heavily condemned and punished.
There is no parallel to Assange
A lot of central and south american nations denouncing the embassy issue, but I wonder what the El Salvador government thinks on the matter after El Salvador's recent 'needs must' operation to fight gang crime.
Georgina laughing was pretty great.
"A pandemic"? ... try "multiple pandemics"
Anyone born in 1912 has survived two pandemics & two world wars.
when the spanish flu is forgotten ;__;
if he survived 2 world wars he also survived 2 pandemics (1920 & 2020)
Thankx for talking about our tyranical supreme court.
Clearly a completely different situation to Assange.
That dude's been retired longer than he was working.
Wait did I just hear that properly? There's parts of the UK where abortion still isn't legal? I must've misunderstood beacuse that sounds actually mad
I hoped that Noboa wouldn't leap into full fascism, but it looks like there's where he is heading...
It's one thing to crack down on gangs and drug cartels, it's another thing entirely to go after someone like Jorge Glas, who has been smeared with very questionable and shaky charges of white-collar crime, with extreme violence and brutality, that includes attacking a foreign embassy in flagrant violation of international conventions. This seems much more like an attempt to eliminate people ideologically aligned with the opposition Citizen Revolution Movement/Union for Hope, and probably hoping to smear the opposition along the way.
Here's what I have gleaned in a couple internet searches. Please correct me if I got any of this wrong, Ecuador.
Ecuador had a center left wing government from 2007 to 2017 that fought crime by raising everyone's boats, and it totally worked. Criminal gangs were allowed to put down their weapons and become youth organizations and fraternal service orders. Crime was down, GDP was up. He served his two terms, then his Biden got elected, didn't do anything good and Ecuador elected a conservative government. They presided over huge cuts to spending, which increased the crime rate. Ecuador protested and was going to impeach had the president not dissolved congress in a legal move called "Mutual death." If the president dissolves congress he has to face another election. He didn't even bother to run.
Two left wing candidates were neck and neck in the surprise election. The second place candidate was murdered in broad daylight in front of God and everybody. Just two weeks after the assassination, the left over leftist won the first election (they have two) with a dark horse centrist getting second place. In the second election, the dark horse billionaire's son political newbie centrist won. He has been jailing, and disqualifying from ever being President, his political opposition from that popular center left wing government.
"International Law" is a term that means a whole lot of nothing these days.
If this channel isn’t doing well, why not just stick these videos on one of the channels that are doing well? Maybe people just aren’t aware of this channel.
How interesting
OMG, that's, that's a way to say Jorge alright
Guayaquil too😂
first time seeing him smile to big XD
Oldest man has survived *2* pandemics
Oh boy Copa America this June and both Ecuador and Mexico shares the same group
Actually it would be Russia who benefits as it would scare Europeans citizens about the risk of nuclear fallout. 5:19
Comparing the raid on the mexican embassy and the approved entry of police into the equadorian embassy is just flat out misleading. Quite dissapointed in TLDR for covering this news in this manner.
There is no respect for anti- war measures, like Embassies' invulnerability or UN Councils.
WW2 is 90 years away, and we are repeating mistakes.
Has precedent??????? Completely different.
"I learned it from watching you!"
Maria Elisa Camargo vs Valeria Garza
Today's story has nothing to do with Assange?
All speech is free, but some speech is more free than others. - Elon Musk, probably
Cis gender
He really is a pig
What?
Pretty sure Musk wouldn't have minded if the politicians being suspended had been left-wing
@@legtendgav556its a reference to animal farm. All are equal some are more equal is the original line
Loved the pun haha
Condemning raid on one embassy while Israeli AIRSTRIKE on the Iranian consulate killed dozens.
Iran does not recognize Israel so that protection does not extend to that situation...
@@theotherohlourdespadua1131 That is just not true, there is not legal basis for what you are saying.
There is no overstating just how absolutely insane Israels actions were. There is no precedent of a state deliberately bombing an embassy. It didn't even happen during WW1, WW2 or even the 19th century. Even during the medieval era and Roman empire, the protection of envoys and messengers even from enemy states was a recognized norm.
The only other historical instance was NATO bombing the Chinese embassy in Belgrade in 1999, killing 3 Chinese journalists.
Now that the world didn’t forcefully respond to this, it undermined the very core of international relations: the sanctity of diplomacy. And if that's the case, we're entering a world we've never known. And Ecuador has followed their lead
You shouldn’t be able to claim asylum and live in an embassy to escape arrest
Wouldn't he have survived two pandemics?
Can i buy £1.99 of shares instead ? 😂
"Guayaquil" is pronounced "why-a-_kill_"
8:33 pretty sure he survived two pandemics. Spanish flu
see that musk right now became expert of brasilian constitutional law.
Better than our supreme court.
Constitution is public information not that hard to read it.
@@rsjeyt exactly. And jurisprudence isn't hard to find either, the issue is the thugs changing it at every second.
Yep Brazil is now a socialist dictorship. Its nor very har to see for a nromal person
6:29 The IAEA head looks like younger Joe Biden.
"So what get your hide - parts out of here in tell the Mexican president to stay out of other country's business he has a real problem with that."
The problem with Ecuador is that its president is very young and very ignorant.
Latino Embassies keep getting in Trouble.
Is a normal Latino Family feud. calm down world.
Don't you mean 2 pandemics?
That is an invasion of another countries territory.
i need big ben emoji. i must have it
We all know who's behind such acts. If you look at the trading partners of Ecuador, it will give you an idea of what I'm talking about...
Current Ecuadorean president is literally a USA citizen born AND raised in Miami.
@@ericktellez7632 I'm saying that I'm pretty sure that the Mexican embassy got raided because of the CCP or the Russian government that influenced the Ecuadorian government to do so. They like to create 'chaos' in peaceful nations to extract resources to the mainland.
@@ericktellez7632 My previous comment was deleted. I mean that it's probably China that pushed Ecuador to commit such a horrendous act!
@@ericktellez7632 My previous comment was deleted, but I was trying to say that this event might be influenced by countries like China. Their goal is to create 'chaos' in the West in order to extract resources.
If Donald Trump fled to the Russian embassy do you really think the U.S. would just let him hang out there indefinitely.