A map by Newsweek shows how previously shuttered military bases in the Caribbean are coming back to life as the United States ...
As the U.S. builds up forces in the Caribbean, veterans of the last major U.S. intervention in Latin America worry that the 1989 invasion of Panama may have left the U.S. military overconfident.
A prospective U.S. invasion of Venezuela poses a greater challenge and carries many more risks than the U.S. invasion of Panama.
The U.S. military has revived jungle warfare training in Panama for the first time in more than 20 years, preparing soldiers ...
President Donald Trump’s administration could revive several deactivated U.S. military bases in Latin America as tensions ...
The US has reactivated military bases in Panama and Puerto Rico to strengthen regional presence, while Ecuador's halted ...
U.S. national security requires three deployed ARG/MEUs, Marine Corps commandant argues in Defense One. That’s Amphibious Ready Groups and Marine Expeditionary Units, like the one built around the ...
Bases in Panama, Puerto Rico, and potentially Ecuador are coming back to life as the U.S. military builds up forces in the region.
American troops have been sent to train in the jungle of Panama as part of a military program that is expected to be ramped ...
Panamanian President José Raúl Mulino rejected claims on Thursday that U.S. military training taking place in Panama is ...
More than 25 years since the U.S. closed its jungle warfare school in Panama, conventional troops are back for a new course.
For the first time in more than two decades, the Pentagon has begun sending conventional ground forces to Panama to train in ...
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