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Honduran Navy

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Honduran Navy
Fuerza Naval de Honduras
Founded14 August 1976; 48 years ago (1976-08-14)
Country Honduras
TypeNavy
RoleNaval warfare
Size4.000
Part ofArmed Forces of Honduras
PatronOur Lady of Suyapa
Motto(s)Spanish: Mares azules y no manchados de sangre ante zozobras
Blue and blood-clean seas in face of risky waters
ColorsBlue and White
EngagementsWorld War II
Website[1]
Commanders
General Commander of the Honduran Navy Rear Admiral Austacil Hagarin Tomé Flores

The Honduran Navy is one of the Armed Forces of Honduras's three branches.

The Honduran Navy was created through a presidential decree in the 14th of August of 1976, with the stated goal of defending Honduran territorial waters, both in the Caribbean and the Pacific coasts.[1]

History

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Background

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During Brigadier José Santos Guardiola's presidency, there was an attempt to organize a navy, but due to the lack of funds it didn't come to be. The government acquired some ships, but no warships. In 1860, the government had 200 men from the army mustered into a schooner in order to aid the British screw sloop HMS Icarus, which had been stationed in British Honduras, in combating an invasion by the filibuster William Walker. Walker was ambushed near the Sico Tinto Negro River, captured, and, nine days later, found guilty and executed.[2]

In September 1865, during Captain General José María Medina's presidency the Honduran Military Marine was instituted, with the president boarding the schooner Colibrí.

Afterwards, in the 1890s, a contract was signed with a German firm for the construction of two steamers, named Tatumbla and 22 de Febrero, with gross tonnages of 108 and 22 tons, capable of steaming at 10 and 7 knots, respectively, both built in Kiel. The Tatumbla had two guns. In the early 1900s, another steamer was comissioned, the Hornet; only in 1934 would the next acquisitions come, with the Bufalo and the Zambrano. During the 1940s, the Tiger, the General Carias and the General Cabañas were acquired.

World War II

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SS Contessa, Honduran-flagged cargo and passenger ship active during World War II.

Honduras maintained good diplomatic relations with Germany between the end of the 19th Century and the 1930s. During this period, many businesses were opened by German immigrants in Honduran soil, and when World War II started in Europe, some citizens of German descent left the country to fight for Germany. The country's ports were on occasion used by German submarines for resupply.[3]

In the aftermath of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, due to diplomatic pressure from the United States, relations with the Axis powers were broken, however. In December 8 1941, Honduras declared war on Japan, and, four days later, on Italy and Germany, with Honduras thus joining the Allies. Some ships carrying Honduran goods had already been sunk by this point, and the situation worsened over the following months, with many directly Honduran ships sunk and around 200 Honduran citizens killed. In the following years, Honduran pilots and sailors were involved in World War II.[4]

Professional Naval Force

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Honduran naval pennant

In November 1950, a regulation for the Navy's insignia and uniforms was issued by the government, and in April 1964, the first two officers and 14 enlisted men (who belonged to the Army's Third Infantry Battalion) were assigned to it. One of the officers, Ensign O'Connor Bain, was sent to the US Coast Guard Reserve Officer Training Center in Yorktown, Virginia, and the other, Ensign Regalado Hernández, together with the enlisted men, to the Naval Base Panama Canal Zone, where they were trained by Panamaian and North American officers. Afterwards, they formed the "First Boats Detachment", equipped with US donated patrol boats, which would be used as the core for the Navy when it was formally created in 1976, with Lieutenant Colonel Bain as its first commander.[5]

In 1977, the Navy acquired three ships, the Guaymuras, 105 feet long, and the Patuca and the Ulua, both 65 feet long. In 1982, it was also given the 40+ year old tender USCGC Walnut, renamed to Yojoa; it served until 1998, when it was lost during Hurricane Mitch.[6] These were the Navy's only proper ships until 1988, when it received the Landing Craft Utility Punta Caxinas, capable of transporting 100 tons of cargo and still in service as of 2021.[7] A few years later, a new Peterson Mk3 patrol boat was acquired, and in 2013 a further two Damen Stan Patrol 4207 also were.[8]

Active Naval Bases

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The Honduran Navy operates from four main naval bases, but it also has another two installations.

Honduran Navy Installations
Name Location Notes/Mission
Puerto Cortés Naval Base Puerto Cortés, Cortés Department Headquarters station on the Caribbean coast, host to the Naval Studies Center and the Naval Repairs Center
First Marine Infantry Battalion HQ La Ceiba, Atlántida
Honduras Naval Academy [es] La Ceiba, Atlántida Founded in February 2000, it is tasked with training officers for the Navy; these may later on continue their studies in the Honduras Defence University.
Puerto Castilla Naval Base Puerto Castilla, Colón WWII-era naval base in the Caribbean coast
Amapala Naval Base Amapala, Valle Base on the Tiger Island in the Pacific coast
Caratasca Naval Base Caratasca Lagoon, Gracias a Dios

Fleet

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Class Origin Type In Service
Damen Stan 4207 patrol vessel Netherlands Patrol Vessel 2
Sa'ar 62-class offshore patrol vessel Israel Patrol vessel 1
Guardian patrol boat United States Patrol vessel 2
Swiftship patrol boat United States/Israel Patrol vessel 9
Various classes Various Interceptor/patrol launches 79
LCM-8 LCU United States Landing craft 4
Golfo de Tribuga-class LCU Colombia Landing craft 1

Comanders

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Honduran Navy Commanders
Order Commander Beginning of term Term end
1 Infantry Lieutenant Colonel Erin O'Connor Bain 1976 1978
2 Infantry Colonel José Matías Hernández García 1978 1980
3 Brigadier General Rubén Humberto Montoya 1980 1984
4 Infantry Colonel Humberto Regalado Hernández 1984 1986
5 Infantry Colonel Ronnie H. Martínez Méndez 1986 1987
6 Infantry Colonel Carlos Reyes Barahona 1987 1988
7 Ship Captain Leonel Martínez Minera 1988 1989
8 Brigadier General Arnulfo Cantarero López 1989 1990
9 Brigadier General Luis Alonso Discua Elvir 1990 1991
10 Brigadier General Reinaldo Andino Flores 1991 1993
11 Rear Admiral Giordano Bruno Fontana Hedman 1993 1997
12 Ship Captain Ricardo Reyes Rivera 1997 1999
13 Ship Captain Hermán Iván Ramírez Lanza 1999 2000
14 Rear Admiral Rolando Gonzáles Flores 2000 2002
15 Artillery Colonel Nelson Willy Mejía Mejía 2002 2004
16 Rear Admiral José Eduardo Espinal Paz 2004 2007
17 Rear Admiral Juan Pablo Rodríguez Rodríguez 2008 2011
18 Rear Admiral Ramón Cristóbal Romero Burgos 2011 2011
19 Vice Admiral Rigoberto Espinoza Posadas 2011 2013
20 Rear Admiral Héctor Orlando Caballero Espinoza 2013 2015
21 Rear Admiral Jesús Humberto Benítez Alvarado 2015 2017
22 Ship Captain Efraín Mann Hernández 2017 2019
23 Ship Captain José Jorge Fortín Aguilar 2019 2021
24 Ship Captain Pablo Antonio Rodríguez Sauceda 2021 2023
25 Ship Captain Austacil Hagarin Tomé Flores 2023

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ "Historia de las Fuerzas Armadas de Honduras" (PDF). conferenciafac.org (in Spanish). Conferencia de las Fuerzas Armadas Centroamericanas. Retrieved 11 September 2024.
  2. ^ Martelle 2019, p. 327.
  3. ^ "Submarino alemán frente Amapala, increíble para muchos..." hondurasisgreat.org (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 September 2024.
  4. ^ "Honduras participó activamente en la Segunda Guerra Mundial, historias que ni se imagina..." Honduras is Great (in Spanish). 2015-05-09. Archived from the original on 2021-11-13. Retrieved 2024-09-14.
  5. ^ "Historia de la Fuerza Naval en Conmemoración de su 159 Aniversario". sedena.gob.hn (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 September 2024.
  6. ^ "WALNUT WLM 252". navalcovermuseum.org. Retrieved 14 September 2024.
  7. ^ "Punta Caxinas cumple un aniversario más de servicio a Honduras". ffaa.mil.hn (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 September 2024.
  8. ^ "La Fuerza Naval de Honduras recibe el primero de dos patrulleros Damen Stan Patrol 4207". infodefensa.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 September 2024.

Sources

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  • Martelle, Scott (2019). William Walker's Wars. Chicago Review Press. ISBN 9781613737323.