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Hospital ship USNS Comfort arrives in Costa Rica
by Ed Adamczyk
Washington (UPI) Jul 22, 2019

The USNS Comfort, a hospital ship on a mission of serving refugees from Venezuela and Nicaragua, arrived in Punterenas, Costa Rica.

The U.S. Navy said Monday the vessel traveled from Callo, Peru, and arrived in Costa Rica on Sunday for a five-day stay in port, part of a 14-nation mission in the Caribbean and in Central and South America.

Over 320 medical professionals from the United States, Canada, Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, Costa Rica and Peru will offer medical evaluations, dental examinations and treatment, optometry, physical therapy, general ambulatory surgery and other services to those who have fled political upheaval in Venezuela and Nicaragua.

The Comfort left Naval Station Norfolk, Va., in May, for its seventh deployment to the region since 2007.

The ship will have visited Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Grenada, Haiti, Jamaica, Panama, Peru, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia and Trinidad and Tobago before its mission is finished. Peru was its second stop, after Ecuador.

The ship completed its five-day "medical mission," the U.S. Southern Command said in a statement last week, to "relieve pressure on national medical systems strained by an increase in Venezuelan migrants." In Peru, over 4,500 patients were treated and over 100 surgeries were performed aboard the ship.

The USNS Comfort is a non-combatant hospital vessel typically staffed by officers of the Navy's Medical Corps, Dental Corps, Medical Service Corps, Nurse Corps and Chaplain Corps, and enlisted Hospital Corpsman personnel.

#USNSComfort has officially arrived in Costa Rica! The #USNavy hospital ship and its crew are ready to interact with the local community and make a difference, just like they did on their last mission stop in Callo, Peru. #EnduringPromise pic.twitter.com/Vh3KSOntsU— U.S. Navy (@USNavy) July 22, 2019


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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Pentagon: 2,100 more troops headed to U.S.-Mexico border in Texas
Washington (UPI) Jul 18, 2019
An additional 2,100 troops, including 1,100 active-duty service members and 1,000 Texas National Guard soldiers, will be deployed to the U.S.-Mexico border "in the next several weeks," the Pentagon announced. Acting Defense Secretary Richard Spencer, who took responsibility of the Defense Department on Tuesday, authorized the additional personnel Wednesday. Spencer has been the Navy secretary since August 2017. Already at the border are about 2,500 active-duty and 2,000 National Guard tr ... read more

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