Whenever WikiLeaker Julian Assange gets the boot from Ecuador’s embassy to the United Kingdom, he likely will be cuffed by London cops — and could find himself on a trip to face justice in the US.

WikiLeaks earlier this week said the embassy, which has given Assange asylum for six years, would kick him out within “hours to days,” citing an unnamed Ecuadorian government source.

British police stationed outside the embassy are poised to bust him for jumping bail back in 2010, according to a Bloomberg news analysis. That year, a court ruled he should be extradited to Sweden on rape and molestation charges. Sweden dropped the charges in 2017.

However, Assange has remained in the embassy, fearing extradition to the US. Last year, US prosecutors accidentally made knowledge of a sealed indictment against Assange public. Details of the case remain unknown.

In 2010, WikiLeaks, founded by Assange, starting publishing massive releases of US secrets, ranging from the so-called “Afghan War Diary” to classified diplomatic cables.

WikiLeaks also released documents taken from the Democratic National Committee while Hillary Clinton was running for president in 2016. Some of them reportedly had been stolen by Russian military intelligence.

Ecuador’s President Lenin Moreno accused Assange of “repeatedly’’ violating the terms of his asylum. On Tuesday, he said WikiLeaks had intercepted private phone calls and decried “photos of my bedroom, what I eat, and how my wife and daughters and friends dance.”

WikiLeaks released a statement citing a New York Times report that said Paul Manafort, a former advisor to President Trump, met with Moreno to discuss debt relief in exchange for extraditing Assange.