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U.S. Brings Dozens of Foreign Military Chiefs to Washington

February 11, 2026
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U.S. Brings Dozens of Foreign Military Chiefs to Washington

Dozens of military chiefs from the Western Hemisphere are gathering on Wednesday in Washington for the first time to discuss a wide range of security issues that the Trump administration says are paramount to safeguarding the United States.

The rare meeting to strengthen regional cooperation was convened by Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. It will bring together top military leaders from more than 30 countries, including nations such as Denmark, Britain and France that have territories in the area.

During the daylong event at a Washington hotel, General Caine is expected to lead a discussion on the administration’s new national security and defense strategies, which prioritize the Western Hemisphere above Asia and the Middle East, according to officials briefed on the conference.

Gen. Francis L. Donovan, the new head of the military’s Southern Command, which oversees operations in Latin America and the Caribbean, is expected to press for further coordination to fight drug-trafficking and transnational criminal groups in the region, said the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss conference details.

Gen. Gregory M. Guillot, the head of U.S. Northern Command, which oversees homeland defense and Greenland, is expected to talk about border controls and how advanced sensors — in space, on land, in the air and at sea — can help nations monitor their borders, the officials said.

It is unclear whether Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth will address the gathering. President Trump and his top national security advisers are also scheduled to meet in Washington on Wednesday with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel.

General Caine, a former F-16 fighter pilot and Pentagon liaison to the C.I.A., has limited experience in Latin America. In late November, he visited Trinidad and Tobago, a tiny nation in the Caribbean that was a training area for Marines before the U.S. raid last month in which President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela was captured. Trinidadian leaders are seeking to broaden military ties with the Pentagon.

In his first year as Joint Chiefs chairman, General Caine has won the trust and confidence of the White House and Mr. Hegseth, overseeing successful U.S. military operations to bomb three Iranian nuclear sites last June and the Maduro raid. Now his civilian bosses have assigned him the first major steps in enhancing military cooperation in the Americas.

The gathering underscores the potential military implications of the administration’s “Donroe Doctrine,” a Trumpian rebooting of the Monroe Doctrine of 1823, which staked U.S. claims over the Western Hemisphere, as well as new security strategies that prioritize the hemispheric region.

Aides to General Caine and other U.S. military officials cast the meeting on Wednesday in terms of strengthening security cooperation among regional partners, but it comes at a fraught time for Washington’s relations with its immediate neighbors as well as allies in Europe.

Tensions have flared over the U.S. commando raid in Venezuela and the recent contentious debate between Mr. Trump and European allies over the future of Greenland.

Prime Minister Mark Carney of Canada delivered a stark speech in Davos, Switzerland, last month describing the end of the era underpinned by U.S. hegemony. He called the current phase “a rupture.”

The United States is intensifying pressure on Mexico to allow American military forces or C.I.A. officers to conduct joint operations to dismantle fentanyl labs inside the country, according to U.S. officials. The push comes as Mr. Trump presses the Mexican government to grant the United States a larger role in the battle against drug cartels that produce fentanyl and smuggle it into the United States.

Last month also saw the fight over Greenland escalate and then cool off. Mr. Trump has said the United States needs Greenland for national security.

After threatening to seize the island by force, he signaled that he was open to compromise. Indeed, NATO military leaders are expected to discuss a possible Arctic mission later this week.

Eric Schmitt is a national security correspondent for The Times. He has reported on U.S. military affairs and counterterrorism for more than three decades.

The post U.S. Brings Dozens of Foreign Military Chiefs to Washington appeared first on New York Times.

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