Panama Defense Forces#Panamanian Air Force

{{more citations needed|date=February 2025}}

{{Short description|Armed forces of Panama from 1983 to 1989}}

{{Infobox national military

| name = Panama Defense Forces

| native_name = {{lang|es|Fuerzas de Defensa de Panamá}}

| image = PanamaDFlogo.png

| alt =

| caption = Emblem

| image2 = Coat of arms of Panama (1925-1941, 1946-2006).svg

| alt2 =

| caption2 = Cap badge

| motto = {{lang|es|Todo por la patria}}
(All for the homeland)

| founded = 1946

| current_form = 1983

| disbanded = 1990

| branches = Army
Air Force
Navy
Police

| headquarters = El Chorrillo

| flying_hours =

| website =

| commander-in-chief = Manuel Noriega

| commander-in-chief_title = Commander-in-Chief

| chief minister =

| chief minister_title =

| minister =

| minister_title =

| commander = Colonel Marcos Justine

| commander_title = Chief of staff

| age =

| conscription =

| manpower_data =

| manpower_age =

| available =

| available_f =

| fit =

| fit_f =

| reaching =

| reaching_f =

| active = 16,300

| ranked =

| reserve =

| deployed =

| amount =

| percent_GDP =

| domestic_suppliers =

| foreign_suppliers =

| imports =

| exports =

| history = Wars and Battles

| ranks = Military ranks of Panama

}}

The Panama Defense Forces ({{langx|es|Fuerzas de Defensa de Panamá}}; FFDD), formerly the National Guard (of Panama) ({{langx|es|Guardia Nacional}}),{{Cite book |last=American Forces Information Service |url=https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/GOVPUB-D2-302e230a2f40d5f99e8f92c01255db62/pdf/GOVPUB-D2-302e230a2f40d5f99e8f92c01255db62.pdf |title=A Pocket Guide to Panama |publisher=U.S. Department of Defense |year=1981 |location=Washington, D.C. |oclc=777341317 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230427133812/https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/GOVPUB-D2-302e230a2f40d5f99e8f92c01255db62/pdf/GOVPUB-D2-302e230a2f40d5f99e8f92c01255db62.pdf |archive-format=PDF |archive-date=2023-04-27 |url-status=live}}{{cite web | url=https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/centam/pa-gn.htm | title=Panama - National Guard (Guardia Nacional) }} were the armed forces of the Republic of Panama.

It was created in 1983, led by Panama's dictator General Manuel Noriega and his general staff. It was dismantled by the United States Armed Forces after the U.S. invasion of Panama in 1989.

History

{{Cleanup rewrite|2=section|date=August 2021}}

{{more citations needed section|date=April 2023}}

Before the coup d'état in Panama of 1968 that overthrew President Arnulfo Arias Madrid, the military police were called National Guard. Since the 1950s and under the command of Colonel and President José Antonio Remón Cantera. He negotiated with the U.S. president Dwight D. Eisenhower issues of sovereignty and defense of the Panama Canal, obtaining important equipment for the police and the National Guard, as well as the training of pilots in Colombia and officers in the United States Military Academy. In 1964, the National Guard of Panama avoided having a conflict with the Armed Forces of the United States on Martyrs Day, staying quartered. In 1968, after the triumph of Arnulfo Arias in the elections and a few days after the swearing in of the same, there was a meeting between Arias and the high officers of the National Guard, General Vallarino, Colonels Pinilla and Urrutia and Lieutenant Colonel Torrijos, to agree on Vallarino's retirement, in return Arias would respect the law of the ladder.

President Arnulfo Arias Madrid assumed on October 1, 1968, on October 10, the retirement ceremony of General Bolívar Vallarino, outgoing commander of the National Guard and unexpectedly the forced retirement of Colonel José María Pinilla Fábrega incoming commander, was held appointed Colonel Bolívar Urrutia as commander in chief and Lieutenant Colonel Aristides Hassán, second commander in chief of the National Guard, as well as a series of abrupt changes and transfers which violated the law of the ranks and the agreement reached between President Arias and the high command of the National Guard. In response to this, on October 11, Major Boris Martínez, head of the Chiriquí military zone and Lieutenant Colonel Omar Torrijos Herrera, who until now served as Executive Secretary of the National Guard command commanded the military coup against President Arias Madrid, the coup leaders offered the presidency to Ricardo J. Alfaro and Raúl Arango, who at the time of the coup was the vice president of the republic and commander of the Benemérito Fire Corps of Panama who declined the offer of the military, Therefore, they decided to create the Government Military Board, which was headed by Colonels José María Pinilla and Bolívar Urrutia. All liberties and political rights of Panamanian citizenship were abolished, the 1946 Constitution was repealed and major transformations of political and social order in the Panamanian nation were initiated. During this time there were guerrilla movements in the city and in the interior of the country by the Panamanian left and the supporters of the ousted President Arias Madrid. There were also acts of war and sabotage against the government and the National Guard, freedom of expression was strongly censored by closing newspapers. The issuance of pamphlets and clandestine writings was developed. On February 24, 1969, Colonel Torrijos with a group of officers who supported in a maneuver as part of the intestine fights stun Colonel Boris Martínez and sent him on a plane to Miami as a military attache which he rejected and never had ties with the military staying to live there as an asylee.

By December 1969, while General Omar Torrijos already attended an equestrian competition which his friend Fernando Eleta Almarán had invited his friend, a conspiracy composed of Colonels José María Pinilla, Bolívar Urrutia, Amado Sanjur, they tried to overthrow him, but Torrijos was supported by the then Major Manuel Antonio Noriega who served as head of the Chiriquí military zone, receiving him on the night of December 16, 1969, this day is called Loyalty Day, once Torrijos entered Chiriquí the caravan of military and civilians who supported him grew as he went along from Chiriquí, to the presidency of the republic which defeated all coup attempts, definitively consolidating Torrijos in power. The National Guard crushed all opposition movements towards 1970.

After crushing the opposition movements, the already general Omar Torrijos Herrera took control and established in 1972 a National Assembly of Representatives, who immediately named him "Chief of State of the Panamanian Revolution." This military body established a system of nationalist vindication, to which part of the private sector joined, and the country went through a period of social and cultural transformations, with the recovery of the Panama Canal as the main objective of Torrijos, and the creation of the ruling party, Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD). At the same time, harmful and denounced characteristics were evidenced, such as armed repression, censorship of the printed press and the disappearance of political opponents at the beginning of said government. The Torrijos-Carter Treaties signed in 1977, demanded from the regime (called "the process" by its militants) democratization, its quartering and the call for elections.

By 1978, General Torrijos abandoned power, but maintained control of the National Guard. After his death in a strange plane crash on July 31, 1981, - where the main suspect was the CIA for not complying with the requirements of the World Bank - the National Guard was involved in a power struggle between the military commanders involved. Colonel Florencio Flores took possession of the position of commander in chief for a few months, until after a conspiracy among senior officials of the General Staff they overthrow him by sending him to retirement. Given this, the conspiracy officers create a succession agreement to the command known as the Torrijos plan in which the first to ascend to the command would be Lieutenant Colonel Rubén Darío Paredes, then Lieutenant Colonel Armando Contreras will follow, Lieutenant Colonel Manuel Antonio Noriega would follow and culminate with Lieutenant Colonel Roberto Díaz Herrera, the self-proclaimed General Rubén Darío Paredes Del Río decided with his staff to carry out certain repressive actions against the media opposing the regime censuring some media. In a maneuver for power General Paredes retires Colonel Armando Contreras who had already reached the time to ascend to the command, maintaining links in front of the command until 1983.

On August 20, 1983, Colonel Noriega was promoted to general and the National Guard Command and began a period marked by dictatorial decisions. His first decree was the change of the name of the military entity to the Defense Forces of Panama, with the mentality of converting the military police into an army for the joint tasks of the defense of the Panama Canal along with the United States Army. For the reorganization of the military institution, he had the military advice of Israeli intelligence experts and reputed military officers, among them the Argentine Colonel Mohamed Ali Seineldín, veteran of the Falklands War and, at that time, military attaché of the Republic Argentina in Panama.

That year the closure of the School of the Americas was ordered, which for the CIA meant losing its base in Central America. At the end of 1983 the political strategies were prepared to launch the official candidate of the 1984 elections: Colonel Noriega convinces General Paredes to benefit from his retirement and receive the support of the State and the Defense Forces to aspire to the presidency. Then, Paredes is betrayed, since the Comandancia and the PRD launch at the last moment Dr. Nicolás Ardito Barletta as the official candidate. Once orchestrated the electoral fraud by presidential decree, Noriega is promoted to General.

= Military coup of October 3, 1989 =

{{Main|1989 Panamanian coup attempt}}

On October 3, 1989, a military coup was planned, in which some officers, under the command of Lt. Col. Moisés Giroldi Vera, tried to overthrow General Noriega. Although they successfully captured Noriega, a loyalist counter-attack forced the officers to surrender. They were later tortured and killed. Giroldi and his subordinates intended to end the economic embargo imposed by the United States, and negotiate with the U.S. military a political solution to a war action and create a commission to review the outcome of the 1989 elections, which were cancelled to deliver the presidency to the true winner, in this case to the political party ADO Civilista, headed by Guillermo Endara, Ricardo Arias Calderón and Guillermo Ford. This would mean withdrawing General Noriega and his entire staff, as some of colonels had been in retirement for more than 12 years and were still in their positions, earning high salaries, in contrast to the troops that failed to collect more than $250 per month.

In order to clean the deteriorated image of the Defense Forces, it was decided to withdraw Noriega, but they did not count on the general already having counterattack plans when changing power. The events led to terrorist actions, such as the cyanide contamination of the Chilibre water treatment plant, and then blamed the Americans for such action. Against this plan were Lieutenant Colonel Moisés Giroldi Vera and his followers, who obviously rejected him. Moisés Giroldi was captured along with 400 other police and coup soldiers and sent to Fuerte Cimarrón, the basic military training school in Panama, and then sent to the Tinajitas Prison and Coiba, where many were tortured and subsequently executed. General Manuel Antonio Noriega then ordered all the barracks to deliver any weapons of heavy caliber, which were stored in containers under the custody of the G-2 under the command of Colonel Luis Córdoba.

File:Operation Just Cause Rangers 3rd sqd la comadancia small.jpg during the attack on the Panama Defense Forces Command.]]

= Post-invasion democratic government =

When the Defense Forces were dismantled, the government of Guillermo Endara (1989–1994) was commissioned to form a new institution with the help of the U.S. Army. The force, initially a police vocation, was attached to the Public Force, idealized by the then Vice President Ricardo Arias Calderón.{{Cite web |title=Historia |url=http://www.policia.gob.pa/Policia_Nacional.html |access-date=13 February 2020 |website=www.policia.gob.pa |language=es}} The new government organized it as a police force of the Panamanian state, subordinated to the executive branch; calling it National Police with the explicit purpose of providing protection to the life, honor and property of nationals wherever they are and of foreigners under the jurisdiction of their territory. Colonel Roberto Armijo was appointed as the first head of this police force.

In order to grant legal bases to the new police organization, Executive Decree No. 38 of February 10, 1990 was issued, through which the Public Force was organized, one of whose components is the National Police. The Executive appointed Colonel Eduardo Herrera Hassan as Director of that Force. Herrera Hassán was then dismissed on charges of conspiracy in August, being replaced Lieutenant Colonel Fernando Quezada, who in turn was dismissed in October of the same year, by opening a public discussion with the director of a newspaper. Hassán attempted a coup d'état on December 5, 1990, giving his reason as a final consequence to the level of senior officers in the institution.

Structure

{{unreferenced section|date=December 2020}}

= Land Forces =

File:Three 5th Infantry Division (Mechanized) soldiers inspect a Soviet-made ZPU-4 14.5mm anti-aircraft machine gun left behind by Panamanian Defense Force soldiers who fled the base during the early stages of Operation Just Cause.jpg which was abandoned by Panama Defense Forces.]]

As an army corps, members of the land forces considered themselves as police and soldiers at the same time. Until 1989 there were a total of 16,300 troops and about 3800 reservists and civil collaborators called the Dignity Battalions, trained to resist the possible invasion of a foreign country.

The Panama Defense Forces had four battalions and eight infantry companies, plus special forces units. The country was divided into twelve military zones, which were generally led by a major or a lieutenant colonel. Each military zone had one or two reaction squads.

As weapons, the infantry had fifty light cannons, eight hundred heavy mortars and one thousand light mortars; Fifty KPV 14.5 x 114 Russian anti-aircraft machine guns (known as "4 Mouths"), armored vehicles V150 and V300. The infantry was armed with Russian AK-47 and AKM rifles and rocket-propelled grenade launchers RPG-2, RPG-7 and RPG-18, in addition to U.S. weapons such as the M16-A1, M-60 machine guns and .45 caliber service pistols.

= Notable units =

The following are notable units of the PDF:

==Battalions==

The PDF's four battalions consisted of 600 to 700 men. A fifth battalion, "Atlantica", based around 8th Infantry/Military Police Company, was planned but never formed.

  • Battalion 2000 (Prov. de Panamá ) - based at Fort Cimarron and had three line companies; "Eagle", "Fury", and "Mechanized" (with AFV's) plus Fire Support Company. Bn 2000 also had two attached units, 1st Infantry and Fire Support Company "Tiger" and 2nd Infantry Airborne Company "Puma" which was the nationwide rapid reaction force.
  • Cémaco Battalion (Prov. del Darién ) - located at Las Palmas and consisted only of 1st Mountain Company was to secure the Panama-Columbia Border,
  • 2e Paz Battalion (Prov. de Chiriquí ) - The 2nd Peace Battalion was based in 5th Military Zone and tasked with protecting the Panama-Costa Rica Border. It consisted of a Command Company, and Air Assault Companies A "Fortuna" and B "Copal"
  • Military Police Battalion "Victoriano Lorenzo" - Infantry crossed trained as Military Police, consisted of the 5th (Ft Amador) and 8th (Ft Espinar) Infantry Companies

==Numbered Companies==

File:Escudo de la Séptima Compañía de Infantería Macho de Monte.png.]]

  • First Tigres de Tinajita Infantry and Fire Support Company
  • Second Pumas de Tocumen Infantry Company, airborne
  • Third Red Devils Infantry Company of Chiriquí, support for the Paz Battalion
  • Fourth Infantry Company Urraca, Custody of the General Staff
  • Fifth Victoriano Lorenzo Infantry Company, Custodiar Canal Security
  • Sixth Expeditionary Infantry Company, Mechanized
  • Seventh Macho de Monte Infantry Company, Commander Escort
  • Eighth Military Police Company

= Support units =

  • Mounted Unit - a company size horse cavalry unit whose primary duty was as a presidential escort, maintained several dozen horses.
  • Commando Unit - Unidad de Commandoes containing two Tactical Operations Groups all located at Fort Espinar.
  • G-2 Intelligence and Counterintelligence Section. Directed by Colonels Wong, Purcell and Luis "Papo" Córdoba in 1989
  • Civic action: military engineering works section, composed of reservists
  • UESAT (Unidad Especial de Seguidad Antiterror): Special Anti-Terror Security Units one of which was a 70 counter-terrorism force and the other was a platoon sized bodyguard for Noriega. Originally based out of Flamenco Island near Fort Amador, moved to Panama Viejo by Noriega after the October 1989 coup.{{cite book | last = Thomas| first = Donnelly| date = 1992| title = Operation Just Cause| publisher = Lexington Books| page = 74| isbn = 0669249750}}
  • Dignity Battalions: Popular militia created in 1988, in accordance with the constitutional precept that states that: "All Panamanians are required to take up arms to defend national independence and territorial integrity of the State" (Art.310), formed by volunteers of all social classes, in order to collaborate in the national defense before the imminence of a foreign military invasion of Panama, a fact that arose in December 1989. Consisted of 11 organized and seven paper battalions consisting of 25 to 250 volunteers.
  • CODEPADI (Commission for the Defense of Homeland and Dignity): Civil Protection Corps, created to assist in the event of a foreign military invasion of Panama. Formed primarily by personnel of the civil service and led by officials of state agencies.

=Police Force=

The green uniformed Fuerza Policia was the national law enforcement force providing police and highway patrol duties nationwide. The around 5,000 police personnel were under the jurisdiction of the PDF. The following two "Public Order" companies were formed; 1st Centurions, disbanded after the October coup attempt for not supporting Noriega, and 2nd Doberman, who helped defend the "La Comandancia". Other components of the FP were the Transit Police and the Highway patrol.

The DENI (Departmento de Nacionalde Investigationes) was both a criminal police and secret police maintaining a large network of informers throughout the population and government, and possibly US Forces in Panama. During the 1989 US invasion DENI was led by Nivaldo Madriñán.

The National Guard continued to exist but as an umbrella agency under the PF containing the Presidential Guard, Penitentiary Guard, Port Guard, and Forestry Guard.

= Special Forces =

The Special Forces Group consisted of the Explosives Unit, the Frog Men Unit, the Command Unit, the School of Commandos and Special Operations (ECOE) and the UESAT (Special Counter-Terrorism Unit) and Counterintelligence Unit.

= Panamanian Air Force =

Image:Roundel of Panama.svg

The Panamanian Air Force (Fuerza Aerea Panamena, FAP), also known as "Los Gallinazos", was founded on 17 January 1969 and its motto was Desde el Aire, Orden Paz y Lealtad (From the Air, Order Peace and Loyalty). It was headquartered in Tocumen and had bases at Curundú, David, Paitilla and Santiago. It was composed of a squad of helicopters and a squad of fixed-wing aircraft. The helicopter squad was composed of 22 helicopters that were mostly Huey or UH-1N type armed with M60 machine guns and an AS 332 Super Puma Eurocopter. The fixed-wing squadron was composed of 38 aircraft T-35 Pillán, Cessna, Twin Otter, CASA CN-235, called by the FAP in codename "Elektra", used for paratrooper and infantry forces, CASA C-212 Aviocar, Cessna 208 Caravan and a Boeing 727. It had around 500 personnel.

= Panamanian National Navy =

File:Escudo de la Marina Nacional de Panamá.png

The National Naval Force (Fuerza de Marina Nacional, FMN) was composed of a small group of patrollers and landing units. It also had a Marine Corps Company. It was founded on 17 January 1969 and its motto was "Con Bien Viento y Buena Mar" (By good wind and good sea).{{cite web|url=https://i.pinimg.com/originals/30/3a/ca/303aca517efbf9e107ebfa2c35987d91.jpg|title=Fuerza de Marina Nacional|language=es}} Its headquarters was Fort Amador. It had two fleets, an Atlantic fleet based at Coco Solo and a Pacific fleet based at the Port of Balboa. It had smaller bases at Cocos Island, Colón Island and Pedregal. It had around 500 personal and operated 8 landing craft, 2 logistics support ships made from converted landing craft, and a single troop transport.

Ranks

{{see also|Military ranks of Panama}}

=Commissioned officer ranks=

The rank insignia for Commissioned officers.

style="border:1px solid #8888aa; background-color:#f7f8ff; padding:5px; font-size:95%; margin: 0px 12px 12px 0px;"

{{Ranks and Insignia of Non NATO Armed Forces/OF/Blank}}

{{Ranks and Insignia of Non NATO Armies/OF/Panama (1968-1989)}}

=Other ranks=

The rank insignia for Non-commissioned officers and enlisted personnel.

style="border:1px solid #8888aa; background-color:#f7f8ff; padding:5px; font-size:95%; margin: 0px 12px 12px 0px;"

{{Ranks and Insignia of Non NATO Armies/OR/Blank}}

{{Ranks and Insignia of Non NATO Armies/OR/Panama (1968-1989)}}

{{Ranks and Insignia of Non NATO Air Forces/OR/Blank}}

Military regions

The Panama Defense Forces were organized by military regions which were further divided into military zones. In total there were 4 military regions and 12 military zones.{{cite web|url=https://history.army.mil/documents/panama/pdfob.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071214085213/http://www.history.army.mil/documents/panama/pdfob.htm|url-status=dead|archive-date=December 14, 2007|title=Panamanian Defense Forces Order of Battle|website=history.army.mil|access-date=19 February 2023}}{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bgHPw7kH0LQC&dq=GC10+Panquiaco&pg=PA182|title=Panama: A Country Study|first=Richard F.|last= Nyrop|page=183|date=1981|publisher=Department of the Army}}

File:Panama (1983).svg in 1983 ]]

class="wikitable"

|+

!Military Region

!Provinces

!Military Zone

!Provinces

rowspan="4" |First Military Region

| rowspan="4" |

|1st Military Zone

|Panamá Province

2nd Military Zone

|Colón Province

10th Military Zone

|Panamá Oeste Province

11th Military Zone

|San Miguelito District

rowspan="2" |Second Military Region

| rowspan="2" |

|9th Military Zone

|Darién Province

12th Military Zone

|San Blas Region

rowspan="4" |Third Military Region

| rowspan="4" |

|3rd Military Zone

|Veraguas Province

4th Military Zone

|Herrera Province

6th Military Zone

|Coclé Province

7th Military Zone

|Los Santos Province

rowspan="2" |Fourth Military Region

| rowspan="2" |

|5th Military Zone

|Chiriquí Province

8th Military Zone

|Bocas del Toro Province

Equipment

=Small arms=

class="wikitable mw-collapsible"
style="text-align: left; width:12%;"|Name

! style="text-align: left; width:8%;"|Origin

! style="text-align: left; width:18%;"|Type

! style="text-align: left; width:7%;"|Quantity

! style="text-align: left;width:8%;"|Photo

! style="text-align: left;width:47%;"|Notes

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Handguns
Browning Hi-Power

| {{flag|Belgium}}

| Semi-automatic pistol

| Unknown

| 120px

| {{cite book| last = Rottman| first = Gordon| author-link = Gordon L. Rottman| title = Panama 1989-90| url=https://issuu.com/eduardoalexiscamargoallen/docs/elite_037_-_g.rottman_-_panama_1989| publisher = Osprey Publishing| series = Elite| volume = 37| date = 2010| pages = 14, 15, 57, 62, 63| language = English| isbn = 9781855321564}}{{cite book| last = Ezell| first = Edward| author-link = Edward C. Ezell| title = Small Arms Today| publisher = Stackpole Books| volume = 2nd| edition = | date = 1988

| pages = 299–300| language = English | isbn = 0811722805| jfm =}} FN origin

Colt M1911A1

| rowspan="3" | {{USA}}

| Semi-automatic pistol

| 227 before 1975

| 120px

| US Origin, Foreign Military Sales and Military Assistance Program.

S&W Model 10-2

| rowspan="2" | Revolver

| Unknown, 218 by 1977

| 120px

| Service revolver for Panamanian Police Force.

Colt .38 Special Revolver

| Unknown

| 120px

|{{cite book| last = Weeks| first = John| author-link = Col. John Weeks| title = Jane's Infantry Weapons 1980-1981| publisher = Jane's Publishing Company| volume = Sixth| edition = | date = 1980

| pages = 676| language = English | isbn = 0710607024| jfm =}}

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Carbines
M1 Carbine

| rowspan="2" | {{US}}

| rowspan="2" | Carbine

| 138 before 1964

| 120px

| rowspan="2" | US origin, Military Assistance Program. 7 in 1958

M2 Carbine

| 809

| 120px

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Assault rifles
AKM

| {{flag|Soviet Union}}

| rowspan="6" | Assault rifle

| Unknown

| 120px

| Standard service rifle.

M16A1

| {{USA}}

| 2300 by 1978

| 120px

| 1,650 acquired directly from Colt, Sherwood International delivered 650 to police units in 1978. Service rifle alongside the T65 rifle, being replaced by AK series rifles at the time of the US Invasion.

T65

| {{flag|Taiwan}}

| rowspan="4" | Unknown

| 120px

| Delivered in 1986. Service rifle alongside the M16A1 rifle, being replaced by AK series rifles at the time of the US Invasion.

MPi Kms 72

| {{flag|East Germany}}

| 120px

| rowspan="2" |

AK-47

| {{USSR}}

| 120px

IMI Galil

| {{flag|Israel}}

| 120px

| Only known to be used by UESAT.{{cite web

| url = https://www.laestrella.com.pa/nacional/090525/elite-fuerza-noriega

| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221117040432/https://www.laestrella.com.pa/nacional/090525/elite-fuerza-noriega

| archive-date= November 17, 2022

| title = La Estrella De Panama

| date = May 29, 2009

| website = La Estrella De Panama

| access-date = November 16, 2022}}

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Battle rifles
FAL

| {{flag|Belgium}}

| Battle rifle

| Unknown

| 120px

|

M1 Garand

| {{USA}}

| Semi-automatic rifle

| 213 before 1975

| 120px

| US Origin, Military Assistance Program

Breda PG

| {{flag|Italy}}

| Battle Rifle

| 1 in 1958

| 120px

| A single 7mm rifle was found during a US Government Audit in 1958.

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Sniper rifles
M21 Sniper Weapon System

| {{USA}}

| Sniper rifle

| rowspan="2" | Unknown

| 120px

| rowspan="2" |

SVD Dragunov

| {{USSR}}

| Designated marksman rifle

| 120px

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Machine guns
M60

| {{USA}}

| rowspan="2" | General-purpose machine gun

| rowspan="2" | Unknown

| 120px

| rowspan="2" | Standard general-purpose machine gun alongside the FN MAG.

FN MAG

| {{flag|Belgium}}

| 120px

Colt Model 611 Heavy Barrel Automatic Rifle

| rowspan="3" | {{USA}}

| Light machine gun

| 200

| 120px

| Heavy Barreled Colt M16A1 "Model 611" with M60 type bipod.

Browning M2

| Heavy machine gun

| Unknown

| 120px

| Standard heavy machine gun.

M1919A4

| rowspan="2" | Medium machine gun

| 15 in 1958

| 120px

| Surplus National Guard weaponry. Numbers are as of 1958.

ZB-53

| {{flag|Czechoslovakia}}

| rowspan="2" | Unknown

| 120px

|

MG-42

| {{flag|Nazi Germany}}

| General-purpose machine gun

|

|

M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle

| rowspan="2" | {{USA}}

| Automatic rifle

| 18 before 1975

| 120px

| National Guard Surplus, 7 in 1958. Used by PDF Commandos defending Paitilla Airport from US Navy Seals during the Battle of Paitilla Airport.{{cite news |last=Melissa |first=Healy |date=27 January 1990 |title=Tactics Switch May Have Boosted Navy’s Invasion Toll : Panama: A last-minute change increased the exposure of commandos sent to sabotage Noriega’s plane. Four died in the ensuing exchange with the dictator’s loyalists. |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-01-27-mn-625-story.html|publisher=Los Angeles Times |access-date=25 March 2025}}

M1917 Browning machine gun

| Heavy machine gun

| 3 in 1958

| 120px

|

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Submachine guns
Uzi

| {{flag|Israel}}

| Submachine gun

| Unknown

| 120px

| Both Fixed and Folding butt-stocks used. Known to be used by UESAT soldiers. Believed to be FN origin. Mini Uzi reported but not confirmed.

M1928A1 Thompson

| rowspan="3" | {{USA}}

| rowspan="3" | Submachine gun

| 101 in 1958

| 120px

| US Origin, M1A1 and M1928A1. Mainly used by police organizations.

M3A1

| 2 in 1958

| 120px

| Surplus National Guard weaponry. Numbers are as of 1958.{{cite web| last1 = Hardin| first1 = Herbert O.| author-link = Herbert O. Harden| last2 = Neely | first2 = J.| title = Report On The Police Forces Of The Republic Of Panama| website = USAID

| publisher = International Cooperation Agency| date = September 1958| url = https://pdf.usaid.gov/pdf_docs/Pnadw902.pdf| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20111023110847/http://pdf.usaid.gov/pdf_docs/PNADW902.pdf| url-status = dead| archive-date = October 23, 2011| access-date = November 17, 2022}}

M50 Reising

| 112 in 1958

| 120px

| Surplus National Guard weaponry. Numbers are as of 1958.

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Grenade launchers
M79

| rowspan="2" | {{USA}}

| rowspan="3" | grenade launcher

| Unknown

| 120px

| rowspan="3" |

M203

| 200

| 120px

H&K 69

| {{GER}}

| Unknown

| 120px

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Bolt-action rifles
M1917 Enfield

| rowspan="2" | {{USA}}

| rowspan="4" | Bolt-action rifle

| 1,350 in 1958

| 120px

| National Guard surplus, manufactured by Eddystone, Winchester, and Remington.

M1903 Springfield

| 434 in 1958

| 120px

| National Guard surplus, manufactured by Springfield and Lee.

Mauser Model 1893

| {{flag|German Empire}}

| 1,500 in 1958

| 120px

| rowspan="2" | National Guard surplus '7mm'

FN Carbine

| {{BEL}}

| 302 in 1958

| 120px

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Shotguns
Remington 870

| rowspan="4" | {{flag|USA}}

| rowspan="4" | Pump action shotgun

| Unknown

| 120px

| 12 gauge, 870P Folding stock

{{cite book| last1 = Rottman| first1 = Gordon| author-link = Gordon Rottman| title = Just Cause 'Intervention in Panama 1989-90'| publisher = Concord Publications Company| date = 2007

| pages = 4, 5| language = English | isbn = 978-9623616331| jfm =}}

Ithaca 37

| 36

| 120px

| 12 gauge, US Origin Military Assistance Program

Stevens Model 77E

| 6

|

| 12 gauge, US Origin Military Assistance Program

Winchester 1200

| Unknown

| 120px

| 12 gauge, US Origin

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Hand grenades
RGD-5

| {{flag|Soviet Union}}

| rowspan="3" | Hand grenade

| rowspan="3" | Unknown

| 120px

| Used alongside US made hand-grenades.

M67 grenade

| rowspan="2" | {{USA}}

| 120px

| {{cite report |author=Fundación de ParquesNacionales y Medio Ambiente |date=December 2015 |title=Humanitarian Clearance of Contaminated withUXOs lands at Rio Hato Bombing & Firing Range, Cocle Province, Panama. |url=https://fundacionpanama.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Non-Technical-Survey-Jan13-2016-rev-GM.pdf |publisher=Fundación de ParquesNacionales y Medio Ambiente |page=16 |access-date=November 20, 2022 }}

Mk2 grenade

| 120px

|

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Land mines
M18A1 Claymore

| {{USA}}

| Anti-personnel mine

| Unknown

| 120px

|

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Rocket-propelled grenade launchers
RPG-7

| rowspan="5" | {{flag|Soviet Union}}

| Rocket-propelled grenade

| rowspan="7" | Unknown

| 120px

|

RPG-2

| Shoulder-fired Recoilless gun

| 120px

|

RPG-18

| rowspan="4" | Rocket-propelled grenade

| 120px

|

Type 56 RPG

| 120px

| Chinese copy of RPG-2

Type 69 RPG

| 120px

| Chinese copy of RPG-7

M20A1B1 Super Bazooka

| {{USA}}

| 120px

|

LRAC F1

| {{FRA}}

| Shoulder-launched missile weapon

| 120px

|

=Crew served weapons=

class="wikitable mw-collapsible"
style="text-align: left; width:12%;"|Name

! style="text-align: left; width:8%;"|Origin

! style="text-align: left; width:18%;"|Type

! style="text-align: left; width:7%;"|Quantity

! style="text-align: left;width:8%;"|Photo

! style="text-align: left;width:47%;"|Notes

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Recoilless rifles
M67 recoilless rifle

| {{USA}}

| rowspan="2" | Recoilless rifle

| rowspan="2" | Unknown

| 120px

| 90mm Recoilless Rifle

Type 52

| {{PRC}}

| 120px

| Chinese copy of US 75mm M20 Recoilless Rifle.

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Mortars
M2 Mortar

| {{US}}

| rowspan="3" | Infantry mortar

| rowspan="6" | Unknown

| 120px

| 60mm Mortar

Soltam C03 60mm Mortar

| {{flag|israel}}

| 120px

| 60mm Mortar

M29 Mortar

| rowspan="3" | {{US}}

| 120px

| 81mm Mortar

M30 Mortar

| rowspan="2" | Heavy mortar

| 120px

| 106.7mm Mortar

M2 4.2-inch mortar

| 120px

| 106.7mm Mortar

MO-120-RT

| {{FRA}}

| Heavy mortar

| 120px

| 120 mm Mortar

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Anti-aircraft guns
ZPU-4

| rowspan="2" | {{USSR}}

| rowspan="2" | Anti-aircraft gun

| ~20

| 120px

| 14.5mm Anti-Aircraft gun

ZPU-1

| Unknown

| 120px

| 14.5mm Anti-Aircraft gun

{{cite web

| url = https://tanks-encyclopedia.com/1989-us-invasion-of-panama/

| title = 1989 US Invasion of Panama

| last = Hill

| first = Andrew

| date = July 14, 2021

| website = The Online Tank Museum

| access-date = October 30, 2022

}}

=Less Lethal Weapons=

class="wikitable"
style="text-align: left; width:12%;"|Name

! style="text-align: left; width:8%;"|Origin

! style="text-align: left; width:18%;"|Type

! style="text-align: left; width:7%;"|Quantity

! style="text-align: left;width:8%;"|Photo

! style="text-align: left;width:47%;"|Notes

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Less lethal weapons
Federal Riot Gun

| rowspan="2" | {{USA}}

| Riot gun

| rowspan="2" | Unknown

| File:Federal M201-Z 37mm Launcher.png

| 38mm Tear gas gun

Federal Laboratories Model 515 Triple Chaser

| Tear Gas

|

| A CS gas grenade that splits up into three parts upon deployment.

=Armoured Vehicles=

class="wikitable"
style="text-align: left; width:12%;"|Name

! style="text-align: left; width:8%;"|Origin

! style="text-align: left; width:18%;"|Type

! style="text-align: left; width:7%;"|Quantity

! style="text-align: left;width:8%;"|Photo

! style="text-align: left;width:47%;"|Notes

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Armored Personnel Carriers
V-150

| rowspan="2" | {{USA}}

| rowspan="2" | Armored Personnel Carrier

| ~17

| File:LAV-150 Commando.jpg

| 4 Command Vehicles, and 13 Armored Personnel Carriers, Fitted with mounted 7.62mm Machine guns/and or Browning .50 Machine guns, also a '90' version with a 20mm cannon.

V-300

| 13

| File:LAV-300 Vehicle @ 2018 Kalayaan Parade.jpg

| Multiple versions- APC versions, Recovery Versions, and a Fire Support Vehicle version fitted with Belgian Cockerel 90mm MK III gun and 7.62mm Machine guns.

=Unarmored Vehicles=

class="wikitable mw-collapsible"
style="text-align: left; width:12%;"|Name

! style="text-align: left; width:8%;"|Origin

! style="text-align: left; width:18%;"|Type

! style="text-align: left; width:7%;"|Quantity

! style="text-align: left;width:8%;"|Photo

! style="text-align: left;width:47%;"|Notes

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Utility Vehicles
M151

| rowspan="4" | {{USA}}

| Military light utility vehicle

| rowspan="4" | Unknown

| File:AMG M151 A2 (1978) GB (owner Gavin Broad).JPG

|

CUCV

| Pickup Truck

| File:M1009cucv.jpg

| {{cite encyclopedia

| editor-last = Foss

| editor-first = Christopher

| title = Jane's Military Logistics 1988

| encyclopedia = Jane's Military Logistics

| volume = Ninth Edition

| pages = 520, 528, 532

| publisher = Jane's Publishing Inc

}} US Foreign Military Sales

M35

| rowspan="2" | Military truck

| File:Truck M35.jpg

|

{{cite web

| url = https://nara.getarchive.net/media/a-panamanian-m-35-25-ton-truck-carrying-members-of-1st-battalion-509th-infantry-1dcb21

| title = 1989 US Invasion of Panama

| website = NARA AND DVIDS PUBLIC DOMAIN ARCHIVES

| date = January 1990

| access-date = October 30, 2022

| quote = A Panamanian M-35 2.5-ton truck carrying members of 1ST Battalion, 509th Infantry, and their parachutes backs up to the loading ramp of a C-130E Hercules aircraft at the David airport. The soldiers parachuted into a drop zone outside the city to conduct operations in support of Operation Just Cause. Exact Date Shot Unknown

}} {{frac|2|1|2}}-ton Truck

M809

| File:M813 fr 260-10.jpg

| 5 ton Truck

Robur All Wheel Drive Truck

| {{GDR}}

| Truck

| 32

| File:Robur LO 2002 pic9.JPG

| In port of Balboa, Panama, 32 were confiscated from Danish Cargo ship 'Pia Vesta' originating from East German Port of Rostock in 1986, later found in Panama Defense Force service.{{cite news |author= |date=June 19, 1986 |title=Star-Phoenix |url=https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/512232327/ |location=Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada |access-date=November 17, 2022}}

M38A1

| rowspan="3" | {{USA}}

| rowspan="3" | Military light utility vehicle

| 2

| File:'67 Kaiser Jeep (Auto classique VAQ St-Lambert '12).jpg

| National Guard era, numbers are as of 1958

M38

| 8

| File:Willys M38 JT-23-70 pic3.JPG

| National Guard era, numbers are as of 1958

Willys MB/Ford GPW

| 3

| File:Covered Willy's jeep Wings Over Wine Country 2007.JPG

| National Guard era, numbers are as of 1958

Land Rover Series I

| {{UK}}

| Military light utility vehicle

| 6

| File:Land Rover Series 1 HT (cropped).jpg

| National Guard era, numbers are as of 1958

Gurgel X12

| {{BRA}}

| Truck

| Unknown

| File:Gurgel X12 TR (1978) Classic-Days 2022 DSC 0107.jpg

| {{cite encyclopedia

| editor-last = Schumacher

| editor-first = Rose

| title = Panama

| encyclopedia = World Defense Forces

| volume = Second Edition 1989

| pages = 114

| publisher = ABC Clio

}}

=Aircraft=

class="wikitable mw-collapsible"
style="text-align: left; width:12%;"|Name

! style="text-align: left; width:8%;"|Origin

! style="text-align: left; width:18%;"|Type

! style="text-align: left; width:7%;"|Quantity

! style="text-align: left;width:8%;"|Photo

! style="text-align: left;width:47%;"|Notes

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Helicopters
Bell 205A1

| rowspan="2" | {{USA}}

| rowspan="3" | Utility Helicopter

| 21

| File:Agusta-Bell AB-205A Huey, Italy - Army JP7113745.jpg

| Armed with M60D machine guns in each door. At least 1 with FN MAG machineguns fitted in gunpods. According to World Defense Forces Second Edition (1989): 9 UH-1H Iroquois, 8 Bell UH-1B, 4 Bell UH-1N.

Fairchild Hiller FH-1100

| 3

| File:Fairchild-Hiller FH1100 Le Bourget 03.06.67.jpg

| {{cite magazine |url= http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1975/1975%20-%201681.html |title= World Air Forces 1975: Panama |magazine=Flight International |date=28 August 1975 |page= 307 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190404224659/https://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1975/1975%20-%201681.html |archive-date=4 April 2019 |publisher= flightglobal.com |access-date=12 March 2013}}

Eurocopter Super Puma

| {{flag|France}}

| 1

| File:Aerospatiale_AS-332B1_Super_Puma_-_Lofting.jpg

|

{{cite web

| url = https://photius.com/countries/panama/national_security/panama_national_security_panamanian_air_force~750.html

| title = Panama Panamanian Air Force and National Navy

| website = Countries of the World

| date = 10 November 2004

| access-date = May 14, 2023

}}

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Airplanes
CASA C-212

| {{flag|Spain}}

| Medium STOL military transport aircraft

| 3

| File:( FAP- ) 225 Casa C.212 Panama Air Force (7488486058).jpg

|

de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Otter

| rowspan="2" | {{CAN}}

| rowspan="2" | STOL utility transport

| 1

| File:Harbour Air De Havilland Canada DHC-3T Vazar Turbine Otter C-FHAS 3 (cropped).jpg

|

de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter

| 2

| File:WinAir De Havilland Canada DHC-6-300 Twin Otter Breidenstein.jpg

| One was destroyed in the 1981 Panamanian Air Force Twin Otter crash

Short SC.7 Skyvan

| {{UK}}

| Utility aircraft

| 1

| File:Short Skyvan SC.7 (G-BEOL) arrives at RIAT Fairford 12July2018 arp.jpg

|

Boeing 727

| {{USA}}

| Narrow-body jet airliner

| 1

| File:B-727 Iberia (cropped).jpg

|

ENAER T-35 Pillán

| {{flag|Chile}}

| Trainer Aircraft

| 10

| File:Spanish Air Force CASA T-35C Tamiz (ECH-51) Lofting.jpg

| B and D model, used for search work.

Cessna 172

| rowspan="3" | {{USA}}

| Civil utility aircraft

| rowspan="2" | 2

| File:Cessna 172S Skyhawk SP, Private JP6817606.jpg

|

Cessna U17B Skywagon

| Military utility aircraft

| File:Cessna U-17 Skywagon seen at Stefanovikion 3.jpg

|

Lockheed L-188 Electra

| Turboprop airliner

| 1

| File:Panama - Air Force Lockheed L-188C Electra.jpg

| 188C model, in service from 1973 to 1984.

Britten-Norman BN-2 Islander

| {{UK}}

| utility aircraft

| 2

| File:BN-2T_Islander_-_RIAT_2014_(16372337311).jpg

|

Dassault Falcon 20

| {{FRA}}

| Business jet

| 1

| File:Dassault_Falcon_20E_Belgium_-_Air_Force,_LUX_Luxembourg_(Findel),_Luxembourg_PP1278001849.jpg

|

=Naval Vessels=

class="wikitable mw-collapsible"
style="text-align: left; width:12%;"|Name

! style="text-align: left; width:8%;"|Origin

! style="text-align: left; width:18%;"|Type

! style="text-align: left; width:7%;"|Quantity

! style="text-align: left;width:8%;"|Photo

! style="text-align: left;width:47%;"|Notes

style="align: center;" colspan="7" | Ships
Landing Ship Medium (R)

| {{USA}}

| Amphibious assault ship

| 1

| File:Uss Pee Dee River LSMR-517.jpg

| Former USS Smoky Hill River (LFR-531) >

{{cite web

| url = https://www.navsource.org/archives/10/06/06531.htm

| title = USS Smoky Hill River (LFR-531)

| last = Priolo

| first = Gary P.

| date = April 20, 2007

| website = NavSource Online

| access-date = March 7, 2023

}}

Vosper Thornycroft 103 Foot, 96 ton Patrol Boat

| {{UK}}

| Rough-Water Patrol Craft

| rowspan="4" | 2

|

| GC10 Panquiaco and GC11 Ligia Elena, fitted with 2 20mm cannons each. 23 man complement.

{{cite web

| url = https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/centam/pa-navy.htm

| title = Panama Navy

| last = Pike

| first = John

| date = July 6, 2017

| website = Globalsecurity.org

| access-date = March 7, 2023

}}

Unspecified 19 meter, 13 ton Utility Coastal Patrol Craft

| rowspan="3" | {{USA}}

| rowspan="2" | Patrol Boat

|

| Armed with a pair of 12.7mm machineguns each, 10 man complement. Transferred from the US Coast Guard in the mid-1960's.

Unspecified 12 meter 35 ton Coastal Patrol Craft

|

| Armed with 1 12.7mm machineguns each, 4 man complement. Transferred from the US Navy in the mid-1960's.

Unspecified 35 Ton Swift Ships

| Unspecified Vessel

|

| MN GC-201 Comandante Torrijos and MN GC-202 Presidente Porras received in the 1980s and constructed in the USA.

References

{{reflist}}