American Forces Press Service
MIAMI, June 20, 2012 – Several military
exercises that just wrapped up or are under way exemplify U.S. Southern
Command’s robust exercise program, one that officials consider integral to
regional stability and U.S. national security.
Exercise Tradewinds 2012, which kicked
off in Barbados June 15 and continues through the upcoming weekend, is focused
on what Air Force Gen. Douglas M. Fraser, the Southcom commander, calls the
most pressing regional challenge: transnational organized crime.
U.S. Marine Forces South is leading the
exercise, which has brought together defense and law enforcement from the
United States, Canada and 15 Caribbean countries for the 28th year to enhance
their ability to work together against a common threat.
Speaking during opening ceremonies in
Bridgetown, Barbados, Marine Corps Col. Michael Ramos, MARFOR-South chief of
staff, emphasized the benefit of Exercise Tradewinds to participating nations.
“We recognize the value of working together to confront these common security
challenges,” he said. “We are truly united through our collaboration and
collective efforts to fight terrorism, illicit trafficking and transnational
criminality in all forms and in being prepared to effectively respond to
natural disasters.”
Another exercise that concluded last
week in Colombia, Fuerzas Comando 2012, brought together special operators from
21 regional countries for a grueling counterterrorism and special operations
skills competition. That event, sponsored by U.S. Special Operations Command
South, was designed to promote military-to-military relationships, increase
interoperability and improve regional security.
“This is the one forum that we have
annually where we can come together as a region and talk about ideas, [about how
to] increase our effect, collectively, against these dangerous non-state-actor
threats we face,” Navy Rear Adm. Thomas L. Brown II, commander of Special
Operations Command South, told American Forces Press Service.
These are just two examples of a broad
Southcom exercise program that last year alone included hundreds of training
and educational events, 12 major multinational exercises with regional partners
and 56 medical readiness training exercises in 13 countries, according to Army
Maj. Gen. Gerald W. Ketchum, the command’s director of theater engagement.
“You don’t want to show up on game day
for the big game, when you have never practiced together,” Ketchum told
American Forces Press Service at the Southcom headquarters here. “And that is
really what the exercise program is all about.”
Toward that end, the exercise program
centers on four basic pillars: security and illegal migration and illicit
trafficking, peacekeeping, counterterrorism, and humanitarian assistance and
disaster relief.
The annual Peacekeeping
Operations-Americas exercise that wrapped up last month brought together the
United States and 15 partner nations to train in skills needed to serve as
peacekeepers in Central and South America and the Caribbean.
U.S. Army South sponsored the four-phase
exercise, conducted over the course of three months in Chile and the Dominican
Republic in support of the State Department’s Global Peace Operations
Initiative.
U.S. Ambassador to Chile Alejandro
Daniel Wolff emphasized the importance of building the skills and
interoperability needed for militaries to conduct vital peacekeeping roles.
“Exercises like this offer the opportunity to learn from each other and to
become more capable in our tasks to create a safer future for everybody,” Wolff
said during the May 11 closing ceremony in Santiago.
Other Southcom exercises focus primarily
on humanitarian assistance. These efforts, Ketchum explained, give military
members an opportunity to use their skills while leaving behind tangible
improvements in host nations. Sometimes it’s a new or renovated school, a newly
dug well or new building to serve as an emergency operations center in the
event of a natural disaster. Other exercises provide training for host-national
medical staffs or desperately needed care in local communities.
For example, Army engineers and medical
professionals currently deployed to Honduras and Guatemala for Beyond the
Horizon 2012 are providing medical, dental and engineering support.
Participants in another joint humanitarian exercise, New Horizons 2012, are
providing training, free medical care and critical infrastructure in poor areas
of Peru.
Officials said the efforts help address
critical needs while showing U.S. support and commitment to the region. For
many of the participants, the reward is getting to make a visible difference in
others’ lives.
"My favorite part of this exercise
is seeing the work getting done," said Army 1st Lt. Johnny Robey,
commander of the Missouri National Guard’s 1140th Engineer Battalion,
supporting Beyond the Horizon 2012 in Honduras. "I enjoy going to the
sites and seeing the immediate impact of what we're here to do.”
Among Southcom’s array of multinational
security exercises, PANAMAX remains the largest. The annual exercise focuses on
supporting the Panamanian government in defense of the strategic Panama Canal.
Eighteen nations participated in last
year’s exercise, working to improve the interoperability of their military and
civil forces to guarantee safe passage through the canal and ensure its
neutrality.
“This is a theme that is embraced by
virtually everyone in the region: free and open access to the canal and flow of
goods through the Panama Canal,” Ketchum said. “Everyone recognizes that it is
clearly something of great value to the entire hemisphere to ensure that.”
Ketchum cited the growing success of the
exercise as partners in the region step up to assume major leadership roles.
Colombia took on the land component commander role last year, and will retain
it during this year’s PANAMAX, in August. “They have embraced this role, and
done a wonderful job,” Ketchum said. “Ultimately, that’s good for all of us,
because we need interoperability and we need to be able to communicate with
each other.”
Meanwhile, Brazil is preparing to assume
leadership of the maritime component role during the upcoming PANAMAX, Fraser
told Congress earlier this year. Fraser called the move “an important step in
strengthening the expanding partnerships in the hemisphere.”
With expansion efforts under way at the
Panama Canal that will increase the seaborne traffic it handles, close, regional
cooperation will be more critical than ever, Fraser told the Senate Armed
Service Committee in March. “I don’t see a direct change to the threat or to
the concerns as we look into the future, but our PANAMAX exercise will remain
critical to that effort,” he said.
Ketchum said the capabilities built and
relationships strengthened through the exercise program have a direct impact on
regional stability and U.S. national security.
“We truly believe that it takes an
international approach to address the challenges we face in the region, and
that these engagements are supporting that effort, he said. “We want to be the
security partner of choice, and we look forward to continuing to work with our
partner nations in the region.”
(Army Sgt. Sarah E. Lupescu, from the
Missouri National Guard; Army Sgt. Alysia Jarmon, from the 65th Public Affairs
Operations Center; and Robert Ramon from U.S. Army South contributed to this
article.)
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