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France And Panama Tighten Caribbean Maritime Security As Trafficking Pressures Rise
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) France and Panama have signed a letter of intent to work more closely at sea in the Caribbean, turning day-to-day cooperation into a clearer playbook.
Rear Admiral Jean-Baptiste Soubrier, who commands the French Armed Forces in the Antilles, and Commissioner Luis Antonio De Gracia, head of Panama's National Aeronaval Service, sealed the deal in early October.
The focus is practical: share intelligence faster, align patrols and boardings, and streamline the legal handover from ships at sea to police and customs on shore.
The story behind the story is geography and scale. About 5–6 percent of world trade moves through the Panama Canal, and the same region doubles as a corridor for long-haul cocaine shipments bound for Europe , including via the French Caribbean territories.
That makes Panama a pivotal gatekeeper and the French Antilles a frontline EU outpost. In 2024, French naval operations reported roughly 48 metric tons of drugs seized, with more than half of those interdictions directed from the Antilles command.
The tempo has stayed high this year, reinforcing the need for quicker, cleaner coordination across borders. Both forces bring concrete capacity.
Based mainly in Martinique and Guadeloupe, the French Antilles command fields about 1,300 personnel in a joint air-sea posture that handles surveillance, interdiction, search and rescue, disaster response, and environmental protection.
Panama Upgrades Aeronaval Service
Panama 's aeronaval service performs similar tasks in its national waters and coastal approaches, running patrols and rescues and working with partners across the region.
For readers outside the region, this matters for three simple reasons. First, safer shipping: tighter coordination helps protect crews and cargo in one of the hemisphere's busiest sea lanes.
Second, earlier interdiction: faster intelligence sharing and synchronized patrols can cut drug volumes before they reach ports. Third, resilience: when hurricanes or accidents strike, units that already train and communicate together can respond quicker.
This agreement is not a grand statement but a nuts-and-bolts upgrade-ships, aircraft, radios, procedures, and people-designed to make the Caribbean a little harder for traffickers and a little safer for everyone else.
Rear Admiral Jean-Baptiste Soubrier, who commands the French Armed Forces in the Antilles, and Commissioner Luis Antonio De Gracia, head of Panama's National Aeronaval Service, sealed the deal in early October.
The focus is practical: share intelligence faster, align patrols and boardings, and streamline the legal handover from ships at sea to police and customs on shore.
The story behind the story is geography and scale. About 5–6 percent of world trade moves through the Panama Canal, and the same region doubles as a corridor for long-haul cocaine shipments bound for Europe , including via the French Caribbean territories.
That makes Panama a pivotal gatekeeper and the French Antilles a frontline EU outpost. In 2024, French naval operations reported roughly 48 metric tons of drugs seized, with more than half of those interdictions directed from the Antilles command.
The tempo has stayed high this year, reinforcing the need for quicker, cleaner coordination across borders. Both forces bring concrete capacity.
Based mainly in Martinique and Guadeloupe, the French Antilles command fields about 1,300 personnel in a joint air-sea posture that handles surveillance, interdiction, search and rescue, disaster response, and environmental protection.
Panama Upgrades Aeronaval Service
Panama 's aeronaval service performs similar tasks in its national waters and coastal approaches, running patrols and rescues and working with partners across the region.
For readers outside the region, this matters for three simple reasons. First, safer shipping: tighter coordination helps protect crews and cargo in one of the hemisphere's busiest sea lanes.
Second, earlier interdiction: faster intelligence sharing and synchronized patrols can cut drug volumes before they reach ports. Third, resilience: when hurricanes or accidents strike, units that already train and communicate together can respond quicker.
This agreement is not a grand statement but a nuts-and-bolts upgrade-ships, aircraft, radios, procedures, and people-designed to make the Caribbean a little harder for traffickers and a little safer for everyone else.

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