What’s a caravan?

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Caravans are processions of vehicles carrying VIPs and their support staff, often accompanied by police support for safety. The US president’s motorcade includes armored vehicles, police, and hazmat teams, and routes may be closed for safety. Funeral processions are identified by flags or stickers.

A caravan is a procession of vehicles traveling in a group, usually carrying Very Important Persons (VIPs) and their support staff. Since the people are often high-profile individuals, the procession is often accompanied by police support and other protections designed to keep the occupants safe. Examples include inaugural processions, visits by heads of state to various regions, and funeral processions. For a caravan to run smoothly, great coordination is required.

The famous president of the United States uses motorhomes to get around. A presidential motorcade can include a large number of cars, because in addition to the president and his spouse, the procession can include local politicians, photographers, and other guests of the president. The main members of the group usually travel in armored vehicles, and are accompanied by police on motorcycles and cars.

Details of the presidential motorcade are deliberately withheld from the public out of concern for their safety. Observers, however, can clearly see that it usually includes several armored vehicles, an ambulance, a counter-attack team, press vans, Secret Service transport vehicles, and various police vehicles. A hazmat team typically travels with the group to look for potential problems, along with an official who can change the route, if necessary. It is not uncommon to use dummy vehicles in a caravan.

Depending on the type of caravan, a road may be closed to allow cars to pass. This practice is common with heads of state, as the procession can be considered an important event, and people may want to see it. Travel is also safer when vehicles use a closed road; cars can be hit more easily, and the lack of passing cars reduces the risk of disruption.

In the case of a caravan traveling on open roads, as is often the case with a procession of cars traveling to a funeral, the vehicles are usually identified by flags or window stickers. Anyone who has noticed a long line of cars with “funeral” stickers on their windows has passed by a caravan. In cities where a visiting head of state plans to travel this way, citizens may be informed that they can stop at specific locations to watch for passing cars, though the precise route is not always revealed.




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