By
Donna Miles, American
Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON,
Feb. 1, 2009 – The senior U.S. military officer focused on Latin America and
the Caribbean arrived in Guatemala today to bolster the solid U.S.-Guatemalan
partnership and underscore the growing importance of international and
interagency cooperation in protecting regional stability.
Navy
Adm. James Stavridis, commander of U.S. Southern Command, left his Miami
headquarters for Guatemala City, where he will meet with President Alvaro Colom
Caballeros and his senior defense and military leaders. Stavridis also plans to
visit one of Guatemala’s major peacekeeper training centers.
Stavridis
said that, throughout his visit, he’ll echo the message he delivered just a few
days earlier to Honduran government and defense leaders in Tegucigalpa:
Partnership is vital because no one country can tackle the region’s transnational
security challenges alone.
“In
everything we do at SOUTHCOM -- in every aspect of our security cooperation --
our approach is international,” Stavridis told American Forces Press Service
Jan. 30 during his return flight from Honduras. “We try to be a force for
multinational activity, because of the power in everyone working together.”
SOUTHCOM
works actively to help partner nations build capacity within their armed forces
through training programs, bilateral and multilateral exercises and equipment
contributions.
While
in Guatemala, for example, Stavridis will help christen three Boston Whaler
vessels that will support Guatemala’s counter-narcotics operations. The United
States purchased the launches and 20 sets of night-vision goggles through a
counterdrug security assistance program.
Days
earlier, Honduras took delivery of four U.S.-funded “fast boats” to enhance its
own capabilities in protecting its shores and waterways from transnational
threats ranging from narcotics trafficking to piracy to global terrorism.
That
effort, part of SOUTHCOM’s Enduring Friendship security assistance program,
also includes training in how to operate and maintain the watercraft, improving
Honduras’ ability to protect its shores.
Stavridis
said he was impressed in Honduras by the country’s deep interest in
international cooperation and recognition of its benefits.
The
day before his arrival, Honduran police seized 1.5 metric tons of cocaine with
an estimated street value of $25 million, as well as an aircraft and two
“go-fast” boats used by the drug runners. Tipped off by intelligence from
SOUTHCOM’s Joint Interagency Task Force-South counterdrug operation based in
Key West, Fla., and with tracking and hand-off involving the U.S., Mexico, and
Guatemala, Honduran forces swooped in on the traffickers in their first-ever
aircraft interdiction.
Stavridis
called the mission “a huge win” and said it exemplified the power of
cooperation.
“The
Hondurans were so excited about this drug bust which their forces concluded,
but really was the result of Mexican, U.S., Guatemalan and Honduran activity
coming together, in terms of both intelligence and actual activity,” he said.
“And in all our conversations, the Hondurans emphasized how excited they were
about further international cooperation”
Stavridis
praised the partnerships Honduras and Guatemala have forged with each other and
other neighboring nations to promote their shared security interests. “They
work together on everything from trade and the economy to counternarcotics,
disaster relief and peacekeeping,” he said.
This
cooperation, he said, is paying off through increased information sharing and
interoperability, and enhanced capability that promotes regional security and
stability.
Stavridis
noted the professionalism of the all-volunteer Honduran military, which
includes a U.N.-certified peacekeeping battalion. It’s reflective, he said, of
the steady democratic leadership that’s governed Honduras since 1983, a stark
contrast to the country’s first 150 volatile years of independence.
Writing
in his personal blog during the return flight to Miami, Stavridis summed up his
impressions after two days in Tegucigalpa.
“After
a busy couple of days, I felt good about our security engagement and the
continuing partnership,” he wrote. “Clearly our interagency partners are doing
fine work in their lane of development and diplomacy.” He also noted that the
largest Peace Corps contingent in the Americas is at work in Honduras.
“And
I felt that our work on security and defense issues was a helpful part of the
equation,” he wrote.
During
all his country visits, Stavridis said he carries the message about the
strength of interagency as well as international cooperation. He said he hopes
the U.S. example can serve as “a powerful model” for the region.
While
in Honduras, he met with the embassy’s country team to discuss security
challenges and ongoing initiatives and pledge continued support to the
collective interagency effort to help Honduras address them.
Stavridis
spends about 75 percent of his time visiting the 45 countries and territories
in his area of focus, which covers 16 million square miles. Since taking
command two and a half years ago, he figures he’s visited just about every
country, and many two or three times.
That’s
because, he said, there’s no better way to foster the relationships that lead
to powerful partnerships than face to face.
Fluent
in Spanish, Stavridis said he enjoys talking with officials and reporters alike
in their own language, often surprising his hosts in what he views as a simple
sign of respect. He’s now studying Portuguese so he can better communicate
directly when visiting Brazil.
In
a region highly unlikely to experience all-out war, Stavridis calls
communication the most important tool in his arsenal. “In this hemisphere, we
are in the business of ideas, not missiles,” he said. “Our main battery, so to
speak, is communications.”
And
the best way to communicate, he said, is in person.
“You
can write articles, post to blogs and send out videos and magazines, but
nothing can beat personal contact,” Stavridis said. “There is real power in
human contact. It trumps everything. And that’s really what these trips are all
about.”