Ben Mutzabaugh

USA TODAY

UPDATE (10:40 a.m. ET): Southwest today confirmed industry speculation by announcing the first international routes it will fly with its own planes.

"We're here to talk about international flights on Southwest Airlines," Southwest CEO Gary Kelly said at a Monday morning press conference. "You're going to get a look at the very first passport stamps our customers will be able to get by flying on Southwest Airlines."

The first international airports to see regularly scheduled commercial service on Southwest-branded planes will be Aruba, Montego Bay (Jamaica) and Nassau in the Bahamas.

Beginning July 1, the airline will fly to those destinations out of Atlanta (Aruba and Montego Bay), Baltimore/Washington (to all three) and from Orlando (Montego Bay and Aruba).

The carrier promised more routes and cities would be added as the merger integration continues.

Southwest says its AirTran-operated routes will continue for now, but that it will eventually attempt to fold most of those into Southwest-operated service.

Check back after noon at USA TODAY Travel's Flights page for additional updates from USA TODAY's Charisse Jones.

ORIGINAL POST: Is Southwest set to unveil its first international routes today?

That's the subject of speculation after the carrier announced a press conference for 10:30 a.m. ET this morning. The carrier declined to specify the topic for the media event, but many industry observers expect the company to make an announcement detailing an upgraded reservations system and possibly its first international flights.

Southwest has stepped into the international market via its subsidiary AirTran, but it has yet to fly its own Southwest-branded planes to destinations in Mexico and the Caribbean.

The carrier has instead offered those options via AirTran, which it announced plans to acquire in 2010. The merger closed in 2011, but Southwest has had a plodding pace in absorbing AirTran. One of the chief reasons for that has been Southwest's reservation system, which lacks the capability to handle international itineraries.

Southwest has been working on upgrades that would allow it to handle such reservations and to eventually old all of Southwest's flight operations into its own.

The Dallas Morning News points out that Southwest CEO Gary Kelly said during the airline's earnings call last week that company was "days away" from unveiling an upgraded reservation system. The Morning News notes that when Kelly was pressed on that in follow up questions, he responded by saying: "Yes sir, we are days away from revealing what our international plans are."

Stay tuned …