While US Southern Command does not have “sufficient” US military assets to help in the fight against the drug trade, it hasn’t faced a significant shortfall in intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance assistance, SOUTHCOM Commander Gen. John Kelly said Jan. 8 during a Pentagon briefing. However, the command is encouraging partner nations throughout the region to purchase its own ISR assets to help surveil targets in their own countries, he said. These will likely be cheaper models manufactured in other countries that would be more easily acquired, Kelly said. SOUTHCOM largely depends on surveillance from P-3 Orion aircraft, flown by both the US Department of Homeland Security and the US Navy. “I don’t get much ISR, but I don’t need an awful lot more,” Kelly said. A greater need is helicopters to be used to interdict ships carrying drugs, he said.
President Donald Trump on July 4 signed into law $150 billion in defense funds as part of the tax-and-spending package known as the “One Big, Beautiful Bill” after congressional Republicans approved the legislation in narrow, drawn-out votes earlier this week.