By: Christopher Louissaint
Email: newsroom@yourdomain.com
Date: December 26, 2025
Location: San Salvador, El Salvador
El Salvador President Nayib Bukele issued a sharp, sarcastic response this week to criticism from former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton over conditions at the country’s flagship maximum-security prison, the Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT).
Clinton had amplified concerns raised in a recent documentary and by human-rights advocates, describing the prison as brutal and questioning the treatment of detainees swept up in Bukele’s ongoing state-of-emergency crackdown on gangs. The remarks drew immediate attention given Washington’s complicated relationship with Bukele’s security strategy, which has dramatically reduced homicide rates while drawing sustained international criticism.

Bukele responded publicly by mocking what he characterized as performative outrage from foreign elites. In his remarks, the Salvadoran president suggested that if critics truly believed systemic abuse was taking place, El Salvador would be willing to “cooperate” by transferring its entire prison population to any country prepared to receive them — including gang leaders and convicted criminals. The statement was widely interpreted as rhetorical defiance rather than a literal proposal.
The exchange underscores the growing divide between Bukele and Western political figures who have questioned the legality and morality of his anti-gang campaign. Since the introduction of emergency measures, Salvadoran authorities have detained tens of thousands of people, often without formal charges, a policy Bukele defends as necessary to dismantle entrenched criminal networks that terrorized communities for decades.
Supporters of the president argue that everyday Salvadorans have reclaimed neighborhoods once controlled by gangs and that public safety has improved to levels unseen in modern history. Critics, however, warn that mass incarceration, opaque legal processes, and prison conditions at facilities such as CECOT risk normalizing human-rights violations under the banner of security.
Clinton has not responded directly to Bukele’s latest remarks. U.S. officials have generally maintained cautious language, balancing concerns over civil liberties with recognition of El Salvador’s steep decline in violent crime.
The confrontation reflects a broader ideological clash over crime, governance, and sovereignty in Latin America, with Bukele positioning himself as unapologetically resistant to foreign criticism while framing his policies as an existential defense of Salvadoran society.
Sources
- Ground News (story aggregation and international context)
- Public statements from the Office of the President of El Salvador
- Public remarks and social media statements by Hillary Clinton
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