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HomeTopicsLatin AmericaPanama Hosts Largest Multinational Canal Protection Exercise

Panama Hosts Largest Multinational Canal Protection Exercise

Twelve nations will send more than 1,500 security personnel to Panama for Panamax 2026, the largest multinational training exercise of the year focused on defending the Panama Canal.

Panama’s Ministry of Public Security announced the drills on May 15. The operational phase runs from July 6 to August 14, with temporary movements of naval vessels, aircraft and helicopters scheduled between July 1 and August 31. All deployments will occur under Panamanian government coordination and authorization.

A final planning meeting begins Monday in Panama City and runs through May 22. Delegates from the participating countries will finalize operational scenarios, logistics and guidelines.

The exercise brings together security forces from the United States, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Paraguay and six other allied nations. Officials describe it as a hemispheric effort to strengthen joint responses to regional threats, including terrorism, transnational crime and potential humanitarian crises that could affect the canal.

Panama has no standing army. The country abolished its military in 1990 and relies on the National Police, the National Aeronaval Service and the National Border Service for security duties. Foreign assets will operate only with explicit Panamanian approval, and authorities have stressed that the drills will respect national sovereignty and the canal’s permanent neutrality.

The Panamax series began in 2003 as a U.S.-led initiative to improve cooperation on canal security. Panama has hosted or participated in earlier versions, including the bilateral Panamax Alpha drills conducted with U.S. Southern Command earlier this year. Those February exercises focused on jungle operations, patrolling and medical evacuation.

This year’s Panamax 2026 marks a return to a larger multinational format on Panamanian soil. The government called the decision to host the exercise a demonstration of Panama’s leadership in international security cooperation and protection of one of the world’s busiest trade routes.

Canal traffic carries roughly 5 percent of global maritime commerce. Disruptions there ripple through supply chains worldwide. The exercise aims to test rapid-response capabilities should threats emerge to the waterway or surrounding infrastructure.

Planning for Panamax 2026 has been under way for months. The upcoming week-long meeting in Panama will lock in the final details before the summer deployments begin. Participating forces will train in maritime, air and land scenarios designed to simulate real-world threats while maintaining strict adherence to Panamanian protocols.

No live-fire exercises or permanent bases are planned. Once the drills conclude in mid-August, all foreign personnel and equipment will depart under the same coordinated arrangements. The Ministry of Public Security said the exercise builds on years of bilateral and multilateral work with strategic partners. It also reaffirmed that Panama will continue to manage its own security while welcoming cooperation that enhances regional stability.

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