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Press Release | Oct. 5, 2016

RELEASE: SOUTHCOM deploys relief mission to Haiti

U.S. Southern Command

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

MIAMI – A U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM)-directed team will begin deploying to Port-au-Prince, Haiti today on a mission to provide humanitarian and disaster relief assistance.

The advance team, comprised of a joint task force commander and a command and control element, will arrive first and will set up operations at Port-au-Prince international airport. The team will prepare for the arrival of additional personnel and equipment via C-130.

The helicopters and crew that arrived Tuesday to pre-position at Grand Cayman Island will remain until the weather is safe for helicopter travel to Haiti. When they do arrive, they will provide heavy lift support to ongoing U.S. disaster relief assistance missions requested by the government of Haiti.

The mission is in support of a request by the government of Haiti to provide U.S. disaster relief operations led by the U.S. Agency for International Development’s (USAID) Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA).

The team of approximately 100 military personnel and nine helicopters pre-positioned at Grand Cayman Island Tuesday in anticipation of a request to support the relief efforts.

Members from Joint Task Force-Bravo (JTF-B) and Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force-Southern Command (SPMAGTF-SC) departed Honduras’ Soto Cano Air Base Tuesday aboard CH-53E Super Stallion, CH-47 Chinook, and UH-60L Black Hawk helicopters.

The mission of Joint Task Force-Bravo includes being prepared to support disaster relief operations in Central America, South America and the Caribbean, when directed by SOUTHCOM.

SPMAGTF-SC deployed to Central America in June to serve as a rapid response force during the hurricane season. It was headquartered out of Soto Cano Air Base in Honduras and was postured to rapidly deploy in support of a disaster relief mission in the region.

Historically, U.S. military capabilities are needed most in the critical early stages of a disaster relief operation, when fewer resources, capabilities and disaster-response experts are available to help victims and impacted communities. As those disaster-relief missions progress and more experienced experts arrive to aid longer-term recovery and reconstruction, U.S. military capabilities are no longer requested, and roles previously performed by military units are assumed by other, more experienced relief organizations.

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