• Military medicine · Mar 2008

    Operation Aftershock: the U.S. military disaster response to the Yogyakarta earthquake May through June 2006.

    • Dennis Amundson, David Lane, and Elizabeth Ferrara.
    • Department of Internal Medicine, Naval Medical Center, San Diego, CA 92134-5000, USA.
    • Mil Med. 2008 Mar 1; 173 (3): 236-40.

    AbstractThe U.S. military has recently been involved in many humanitarian assistance and disaster response missions around the world. This newfound role is in response to the U.S. government's desire to use "medical diplomacy" rather than "military might" to shape its relationship with foreign governments. With each of these humanitarian assistance and disaster response missions, the U.S. military has learned how to more rapidly insert desperately needed services and skill sets into disaster-struck communities, how to arrange for in-country services (translation services, transportation, etc.) that cannot be readily brought in, and how to work closely with foreign governments and nongovernmental organizations to determine their needs and expectations without the U.S. military appearing as if it were trying to establish a permanent presence.

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