JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Monday, May 19, 2025

How Amer­i­ca is try­ing to re­claim its back­yard...

The 'Coke' Wars

by

20100417

US De­fense Sec­re­tary Robert Gates vis­it­ed Bar­ba­dos late last week in what was the fi­nal leg of a Latin Amer­i­can and Caribbean tour–that al­so in­clud­ed stops in Pe­ru and Colom­bia. Gates' vis­it to Bar­ba­dos, where he held talks with re­gion­al se­cu­ri­ty chiefs, has been viewed by ex­perts as an at­tempt to gauge progress in the Oba­ma ad­min­is­tra­tion's Caribbean Basin Se­cu­ri­ty Ini­tia­tive, which was launched in late De­cem­ber 2009. It re­mains un­known at the time of writ­ing whether a se­cu­ri­ty del­e­ga­tion from Trinidad & To­ba­go at­tend­ed the talks. When con­tact­ed on Wednes­day af­ter­noon, a spokesman at the Min­istry of Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty could shed no fur­ther light on the mat­ter. "I am not sure who, if any­one, will be at­tend­ing. We are in the mid­dle of an elec­tion cam­paign and they are busy with that at the mo­ment."

The Caribbean Basin Se­cu­ri­ty Ini­tia­tive (CB­SI) is a mul­ti­lat­er­al agree­ment in­volv­ing all 14 Cari­com mem­ber states, as well as the Do­mini­can Re­pub­lic and the Unit­ed States. While in the­o­ry the ini­tia­tive al­lows for US as­sis­tance on a mul­ti­tude of se­cu­ri­ty is­sues, its pri­ma­ry re­mit is to as­sist re­gion­al ef­forts aimed at com­bat­ing in­ter­na­tion­al drug traf­fick­ing and transna­tion­al or­gan­ised crime. At its in­cep­tion in De­cem­ber 2009, Julis­sa Rey­onoso, As­sis­tant Sec­re­tary of State told Con­gress that: "The ini­tia­tive will help the Caribbean na­tions ad­dress a wide spec­trum of is­sues af­fect­ing the safe­ty of our cit­i­zens across a 15-na­tion re­gion with which we share close his­tor­i­cal and cul­tur­al ties." She fur­ther added how­ev­er that: "Stem­ming the flow of nar­cotics re­mains fore­front in our na­tion­al in­ter­est."

When tes­ti­fy­ing be­fore mem­bers of the Sen­ate sub­com­mit­tee who would ul­ti­mate­ly de­ter­mine fund­ing for the CB­SI, Stephen C John­son, a for­mer As­sis­tant Sec­re­tary for De­fense, stat­ed that: "$US 3.2 bil­lion over 25 years (spent in the re­gion) is in­signif­i­cant to what the Unit­ed States cur­rent­ly spends on se­cu­ri­ty as­sis­tance in oth­er parts of the world." John­son's words ob­vi­ous­ly had the de­sired ef­fect, in that the sub­se­quent bud­get al­lo­cat­ed to the CB­SI was re­port­ed to be around $US 37 mil­lion; to be spread over a five-year pe­ri­od. While all the re­ports com­ing out of Bar­ba­dos have so far been pos­i­tive, a gov­ern­ment-lev­el meet­ing deal­ing with or­gan­ised crime and cor­rup­tion in the re­gion was prob­a­bly the last thing that the Ja­maicans want­ed right now. Diplo­mat­ic ties be­tween the US and Ja­maica are cur­rent­ly at a low ebb due to the lat­ter's re­fusal to ex­tra­dite a Ja­maican man cur­rent­ly want­ed on mul­ti­ple felony charges by the Amer­i­can au­thor­i­ties.

Christo­pher "Dud­dus" Coke is sus­pect­ed of be­ing in­volved in se­ri­ous crime, in­clud­ing in­ter­na­tion­al arms and drug traf­fick­ing, but re­peat­ed US re­quests to ex­tra­dite him have been con­tin­u­al­ly re­buffed by the Ja­maican au­thor­i­ties. The Amer­i­cans be­lieve that the lack of co­op­er­a­tion by the gov­ern­ment in Kingston stems from Coke's al­leged links to se­nior mem­bers of the rul­ing par­ty. As a re­sult, the US State De­part­ment's an­nu­al In­ter­na­tion­al Nar­cotics Con­trol Strat­e­gy Re­port pulled no punch­es in launch­ing a with­er­ing at­tack on high-lev­el pub­lic cor­rup­tion in Ja­maica. The re­port high­light­ed that: "Per­va­sive pub­lic cor­rup­tion con­tin­ues to un­der­mine ef­forts against drug-re­lat­ed and oth­er crimes, and plays a ma­jor role in the safe pas­sage of drugs and drug pro­ceeds through Ja­maica. For the first time, cor­rup­tion ranked first to crime and vi­o­lence as the area of great­est con­cern for Ja­maicans. It re­mains the ma­jor bar­ri­er to im­prov­ing counter-nar­cotics ef­forts.

In­deed, Ja­maica's de­lay in pro­cess­ing the US ex­tra­di­tion re­quest for a ma­jor sus­pect­ed drug and firearms traf­fick­er with re­port­ed ties to the rul­ing par­ty high­lights the po­ten­tial depth of cor­rup­tion in the gov­ern­ment." The Ja­maicans to­tal­ly re­fute the al­le­ga­tions and state that they sim­ply op­pose Coke's ex­tra­di­tion on a mat­ter of prin­ci­ple; in that the wire­tap ev­i­dence against him was il­le­gal­ly ob­tained. Nev­er­the­less, many peo­ple be­lieve that it is they who will blink first in this mod­ern-day de­pic­tion of David ver­sus Go­liath. In­deed, Ja­maican Prime Min­is­ter Bruce Gold­ing has since tasked the At­tor­ney Gen­er­al to re-ex­am­ine the facts of the case per­tain­ing to the Amer­i­can re­quest. Some Ja­maicans feel that in this cur­rent pe­ri­od of glob­al aus­ter­i­ty, their gov­ern­ment stands lit­tle to gain by an­ger­ing the Amer­i­cans. One con­cerned cit­i­zen re­marked that, "When they (the US) thought that Man­ley was flirt­ing with Cas­tro in the ear­ly 70s, the Yanks put such a fi­nan­cial squeeze on us that I don't think our econ­o­my ever ful­ly re­cov­ered. We can ill af­ford to cross them again."

An­a­lysts in the re­gion have long since main­tained that the end of the Cold War, along with the dra­mat­ic rise in Is­lamist ter­ror­ism in the Mid­dle East and else­where, has led to Amer­i­ca large­ly shift­ing its in­ter­na­tion­al fo­cus away from its trop­i­cal neigh­bours, to oth­er parts of the globe. Gates' Latin Amer­i­can jaunt, how­ev­er, is but an­oth­er in a string of high-pro­file vis­its to the re­gion by an ad­min­is­tra­tion less than two years in­to its tenure. It fol­lows hard on the heels of Hillary Clin­ton's re­cent trips to Latin Amer­i­ca and Oba­ma's at­ten­dance at Trinidad's Sum­mit of the Amer­i­c­as in April last year. Notwith­stand­ing the change of gov­ern­ment and vast­ly in­creased num­bers of ca­su­al­ties, when one com­pares the speed and alacrity with which the US re­act­ed to the Hait­ian cat­a­stro­phe, to its slug­gish and lack­adaisi­cal re­sponse to its own New Or­leans dis­as­ter, we get the sense that this is an Amer­i­ca at­tempt­ing to re-as­sert it­self in a re­gion that it prob­a­bly feels it has ne­glect­ed for too long.

High-pro­file re­cent wars such as Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as Viet­nam and Ko­rea be­fore that, make it hard­er to sell the fact that the Unit­ed States has in­ter­vened more times in the Caribbean Basin than in any oth­er part of the world. Some in the re­gion may al­so be of the mind that those in­ter­ven­tions have not al­ways been favourable to, or in the best in­ter­ests of, the lo­cal peo­ples. So whether this rekin­dled Latin Amer­i­can/Caribbean 'love af­fair' is a gen­uine de­sire to im­prove the re­gion's lot, or is sim­ply a flex­ing of the Amer­i­can mus­cle in the face of an in­creas­ing­ly bel­liger­ent Venezuela, and a resur­gent Rus­sia–both of whom are ex­pand­ing their sphere of in­flu­ence in the Caribbean do­main–re­mains to be seen.

Ki­to John­son

Scot­land Yard po­lice­man


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored