Tag Archives: Fuerzas de Defensa de Panamá

The ‘Pineapple’ is no more

“A source close to the family of Manuel Noriega says the former Panamanian dictator has died at age 83. The onetime U.S. ally was ousted as Panama’s dictator by an American invasion in 1989 and spent years in prison in several countries.”

Operation Just Cause (Blue Spoon) resulted in the death of 26 U.S. troops and more than 325 wounded. PDF casualties were estimated at about 235 military and wildly divergent (200-3,000) figures when it comes to civilian casualties.

A Panama Defence Force patch for the Septima Compania de Infanteria ‘Macho de Monte’ (7th Infantry Co) which, along with Battallion 2000, were considered the elite of Noriega’s forces. The force was named after a fierce wild boar native to Panama. Trained in both COIN and commando operations, this was the force that primarily put down the 3 October coup against Noriega and had 200 troops headquartered at the Rio Hato Airfield in the Cocle province some 45 miles from Panama City and 50~troops at La Comandancia in the capital. These were the hard cases of the PDF. (Patch is Currently on display at the USAF Armament Museum. Photo by Chris Eger)

“Jump Into Night, Torrijos Airport by Al Sprague Panama, 1989” The operation used 27,000 U.S. active, reserve and National Guard troops and included combat parachute jumps, Delta operations to rescue high-value personnel, and extensive use of Naval Special Operations to hobble the PDF.

Troops on the ground in Just Cause, note the extra M203 rounds. The 10,000-strong joint Canal Zone garrison of USSOUTHCOM was reinforced by 17,000 from the Fort Ord-based 7th Infantry Division and elements of the XVIII Airborne Corps among others.

U.S. Army M-113 near the destroyed Panamanian Defense Force Headquarters in Operation Just Cause, 21 December 1989. The PDF and their Dignity Battalion irregulars amounted to about 20,000 under arms, though only about 3,500 were serious infantry troops.

Panama doubles down on Glock

The Central American country of Panama, home to a large American expatriate community, is purchasing another 5,000 Glock 17s for their national police force.

The background of the PNP

Back in 1903, with a little help from President Teddy Roosevelt, Panama obtained independence from Colombia and the U.S. took over a failing French canal project to join the Atlantic Ocean (via the Caribbean Sea) to the Pacific. With the help of the U.S. military, the new country helped reform its inherited army units into the Policía Nacional de Panamá. This small force, numbering as low as 200 men under arms in the 1920s, kept the peace in the country (along with a significant American military presence), even engaging in a small-scale border war with Costa Rica.

When the Panamanian National Guard (Guardia Nacional de Panamá) was established in 1952, the PNP took a back seat to the larger military force until Manuel Noriega merged the two in the Fuerzas de Defensa de Panamá (Panama Defense Forces) in the 1980s. Backed by the U.S., the PDF received a lot of surplus Vietnam-era gear from the Pentagon.

Then came Operation Just Cause.

U.S. Army M-113 near the destroyed Panamanian Defense Force headquarters Operation Just Cause, 21 December 1989

U.S. Army M-113 near the destroyed Panamanian Defense Force headquarters Operation Just Cause, 21 December 1989

In 1990, with Noriega arrested on drug charges and the PDF dismantled after a brief but sharp invasion by 27,000 U.S. troops, the PNP was restructured and largely disarmed. Most of the military-grade weapons were impounded and the police force issued with a number of Smith and Wesson Model 10 .38s shipped in from U.S. military storage– mostly former USAF guns. These guns were augmented by additional Taurus-made K-frames in the mid-1990s and a few semi-autos (PT-99s).

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Today the 22,000 officers of the PNP serve as the police, border control, and defense forces for the country of 3.8 million, which includes an estimated 25,000 Americans who live in the former U.S. Canal Zone.

Enter Glock

In 2011, the PNP looked to replace half of their armory with new guns and moved to do so by purchasing 13,000 Glock 17 9mms.  The cost of these guns was $7.6 million, or about $580 a pop. Of course, it included two mags and a cleaning kit for each gun and marking each extensively with a national crest and PNP motto plus training, support and spare parts.

Now, the PNP is looking to bring more Glocks on board as cops are in many cases underarmed.

Pistola Glock 17 utilizada por las unidades de la Policía Nacional de Panamá.

Read the rest in my column at Glock Forum