Senior Reporter
dareece.polo@guardian.co.tt
A Venezuelan official is suggesting that President Christine Kangaloo’s recent call for diplomacy should be directed squarely at the United States, as the world’s largest aircraft carrier arrived close to the country’s borders.
The USS Gerald R Ford entered Caribbean waters on Sunday, joining eight warships, a nuclear submarine, F-35 aircraft and hundreds of military personnel. Its arrival comes as US President Donald Trump refuses to rule out deploying troops to Venezuela, even while insisting he remains open to talks with President Nicolás Maduro.
The Venezuelan official, who spoke with Guardian Media via WhatsApp on the condition of anonymity, was responding to remarks Kangaloo delivered at the Annual Heads of Missions Dinner on November 5.
Addressing diplomats and their spouses, including Foreign Affairs Minister Sean Sobers, Kangaloo said, “Cooperation is always better than conflict, dialogue is always better than disputation, and respect is always better than regret.”
The official described her message as accurate and timely, adding it “fit perfectly for Trump and generally US governments through history to follow.”
Meanwhile, former foreign affairs minister Dr Amery Browne is sharply criticising what he views as Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar’s prolonged absence from open media scrutiny, arguing that more than five months without a full press conference have coincided with a dramatic redirection of Trinidad and Tobago’s foreign policy.
In a Facebook post on Monday, Browne claimed the Government has “outsourced diplomacy,” strained relations with regional neighbours, distanced itself from the universality of international law, and presided over domestic upheaval. .
“So many months with only sporadic Prime Ministerial tweets and WhatsApp messages to select reporters. The initial practice of Kamla Persad-Bissessar appearing at post-Cabinet press conferences has fallen into abeyance. The question is why,” he wrote. “The problem the Prime Minister faces is that the tune being played is not her own; she is merely lip-syncing from an externally scripted agenda and finds herself unable to properly explain or justify it in front of the press.”
In a brief response yesterday, Persad-Bissessar dismissed Browne’s critique, saying, “If Amery hates the American government and American people, he should simply return his and his family’s US visas to the local US embassy.”
