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Press Release | Aug. 27, 2020

SOUTHCOM, South American Defense Leaders Meet Virtually To Discuss Partnering During Pandemic

U.S. Southern Command

MIAMI – U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) hosted defense leaders from South America Aug. 27 during the first virtual South America Defense Conference (SOUTHDEC), focused on how to strengthen defense partnerships in a pandemic environment.

The command invited Chiefs of Defense from Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Perú, Paraguay, Suriname and Uruguay to the annual conference, as well as defense leaders from Canada, French Guiana, Spain and the United Kingdom.

U.S. Navy Adm. Craig Faller, commander of U.S. Southern Command, hosted the forum. He was joined by U.S. leaders and security experts from the Department of Defense, Department of State, Department of Homeland Security, and the William J. Perry Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies.

National Guard leaders from Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New York, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, and West Virginia, whose states partner with militaries in South America, also took part in the conference.

SOUTHCOM sponsors this annual regional conference to facilitate an open and candid dialogue between the region’s top military leaders. The leaders share security cooperation ideas, perspectives, expertise and experiences, as they seek to improve their collective understanding of regional threats and security challenges.

The work completed during SOUTHDEC paves the way for expanded security cooperation and greater collaboration against threats and challenges of mutual concern.

This year, SOUTHDEC’s participants discussed their support of the region’s ongoing response to the pandemic and law-enforcement-led operations against transnational criminal organizations.

Since March, SOUTHCOM has worked with partner nations in South America, Central America and the Caribbean to support their COVID-19 response and mitigation efforts. Under its Humanitarian Assistance Program, the command has purchased and donated supplies, equipment and other vital resources to support the efforts of 28 nations.

“…we have extended that enduring hand of friendship … with humanitarian assistance donations now totaling around $17 million across 300 projects to help friends in need,” Faller said.

Earlier this week, the command donated three field hospitals to Costa Rica, the first of 24 it will donate to 11 countries in the region.

In April, the White House announced the start of SOUTHCOM-led enhanced counter-narcotics operations to degrade the capabilities of drug trafficking organizations, save lives, and directly support its National Drug Control Strategy. To date, the internationally-supported enhanced operations, along with Colombia’s Operation Orion V, have helped law-enforcement authorities disrupt or seize more than 154 metric tons of cocaine and more than 40,000 pounds of marijuana, a loss of more than $4 billion in criminal profits for transnational criminal organizations.

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Additional information:

U.S. Southern Command support of regional pandemic response efforts

Enhanced counter-narcotics operations

Donation of field hospitals to Costa Rica (video and photos)

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