Shield of the Americas Summit
2026 international summit hosted by U.S. President Donald Trump
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The Shield of the Americas Summit was a one-day international meeting held on March 7, 2026, at the Trump National Doral Miami resort in Doral, Florida. Hosted by U.S. President Donald Trump in his second term, the summit brought together leaders and senior officials from roughly a dozen countries in Latin America and the Caribbean to discuss coordinated action against transnational organized crime and above all drug cartels, as well as illegal emigration, money laundering, and what U.S. officials described as growing foreign interference in the Western Hemisphere, especially by China.[1][2]
| Shield of the Americas Summit | |
|---|---|
Heads of state and government representatives at the inaugural Shield of the Americas Summit, Trump National Doral Miami | |
| Host country | United States |
| Date | March 7, 2026 |
| Cities | Doral, Florida |
| Venues | Trump National Doral Miami |
| Participants | See Participants |
| Chair | Donald Trump |
The gathering formally launched the Shield of the Americas , presented by the Trump administration as a standing mechanism for intelligence sharing, joint law enforcement operations, and in some cases direct military support targeting cartel leadership and infrastructure, including the joint United States and Ecuador attack on a group of FARC dissidents called Comandos de la Frontera during the Ecuadorian conflict (2024–present).[3][4][5] The event was widely viewed as an alternative forum to the repeatedly postponed Ninth Summit of the Americas, deliberately limited to governments seen as ideologically compatible with the administration's priorities.[6]
Background
The summit took place against the backdrop of record U.S. overdose deaths attributed to fentanyl and other synthetic opioids largely produced by Mexican cartels, combined with persistent concern in Washington about Chinese investment in ports, telecommunications, and critical minerals across the region.[7]
Administration officials had already pointed to several recent actions as precursors: expanded counternarcotics cooperation with Ecuador, the high-profile January 2026 U.S. special-operations capture of former Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, and broader rhetoric framing narco-trafficking as a form of "asymmetric warfare" against the United States.[1][8] The choice of Trump National Doral as the venue, together with the prominent role given to Special Envoy Kristi Noem (recently transferred from Homeland Security), underscored the personal investment of the president in the initiative.[9]
Participants
Attendance was by invitation only and skewed toward right-leaning or Trump-friendly administrations. The following delegations were confirmed to have participated at the head-of-state or head-of-government level unless otherwise noted:
United States – President Donald Trump (host), Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Special Envoy Kristi Noem
Argentina – President Javier Milei
Bolivia – President Rodrigo Paz Pereira
Chile – President-elect José Antonio Kast
Costa Rica – President Rodrigo Chaves
Dominican Republic – President Luis Abinader
Ecuador – President Daniel Noboa
El Salvador – President Nayib Bukele
Guyana – senior representative (most likely President Irfaan Ali)
Honduras – President Nasry Asfura
Panama – President José Raúl Mulino
Paraguay – President Santiago Peña
Trinidad and Tobago – Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar
Major regional powers governed by left-of-center administrations Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico were not invited.[6]
Agenda and proceedings
Three main themes dominated the closed-door sessions and public remarks: strengthened counternarcotics operations (including U.S. offers of precision strikes on high-value cartel targets), enhanced border and migration controls, and measures to limit economic and political leverage exercised by China, Russia, and to a lesser extent Iran in the hemisphere.[2][10]
Trump also used parts of his closing address to connect hemispheric security to recent U.S. military strikes on Iranian assets and to reiterate warnings directed at the governments of Cuba and the post-Maduro transitional authorities in Venezuela. Bilateral side meetings produced several smaller announcements, among them preliminary agreements on Venezuelan gold and oil transactions with U.S. partners.[8]
Outcomes
The most concrete result was the signing of a joint "Commitment to Countering Cartel Criminal Activity" declaration by all participating delegations. The document committed signatories to the newly formed ACCC Alliance framework, which envisions regular intelligence exchanges, coordinated arrests, asset seizures, and in language left deliberately ambiguous the possibility of "kinetic" operations against cartel leadership.[3][11]
Trump's remarks on Mexico and cartel violence
During the summit, President Trump criticized the role of Mexican drug cartels in regional violence and organized crime, calling Mexico the "epicenter" of cartel activity in the Western Hemisphere. He stated that much of the drug trafficking and gang-related violence in the region originates there.
President Trump also specifically criticized Claudia Sheinbaum, the current president of Mexico, suggesting her administration had not done enough to counter cartel influence. He emphasized that the United States would take measures to protect national security, including strengthening border security, reducing human smuggling, and cooperating with regional partners to target organized crime. President Trump also called for participating countries to enforce stricter domestic law and order measures, particularly against gangs and organized crime, as part of a coordinated effort to combat cartel networks and associated violence.[12]
Reception
Supporters in the United States and among attending governments welcomed the summit as overdue recognition of the transnational nature of the drug trade and a pragmatic realignment of hemispheric partnerships. Critics, including several nongovernmental organizations, expressed concern that the emphasis on military solutions and the exclusion of major democracies risked legitimizing authoritarian-leaning leaders while sidelining human-rights considerations.[13] Some press coverage also highlighted lighter moments, among them Trump's offhand remark that he had "never really learned Spanish" and photographs showing cosmetic cover on what appeared to be a recent hand injury.