BOGOTA, Colombia — The Trump administration on Tuesday designated another Latin American drug cartel as a foreign terrorist organization, increasing financial pressure on its members and opening the door to potential military action against them.
The U.S. State Department said Clan del Golfo, which is based in Colombia, has been listed both as a foreign and a global terrorist group, calling it a ''violent and powerful criminal organization'' that uses cocaine trafficking to fund violent activities.
''Clan del Golfo is responsible for terrorist attacks against public officials, law enforcement and military personnel, and civilians in Colombia,'' the statement said.
The designation comes after the Trump administration in September added Colombia to a list of nations failing to cooperate in the drug war for the first time in almost 30 years. It was a stinging rebuke to a traditional U.S. ally that reflects a recent surge in cocaine production and fraying ties between the White House and the country's leftist president, Gustavo Petro.
The United States also sanctioned Petro in October over accusations that he had allowed drug cartels in the South American nation to ''flourish'' and export cocaine to the U.S. — accusations that he vehemently denied, arguing that Colombia is intercepting record levels of cocaine shipments without killing suspected smugglers.
With an estimated 9,000 fighters, Clan del Golfo is one of Colombia's most powerful armed groups. Also known by its Spanish acronym AGC, the group evolved from right-wing paramilitary squads that fought Marxist guerillas in Colombia in the 1990s and 2000s.
A report published last year by the Human Rights Defender's Office, a public agency, said that AGC is present in about a third of Colombia's 1,103 municipalities, where it extorts local businesses and has also been accused of recruiting children.
Clan del Golfo has been involved in peace talks with Colombia's government since September, which could lead to the disarmament of its fighters in exchange for reduced sentences for its leadership.