Akash Samaroo
Lead Editor - Politics in Florida for the Shied of the Americas
In a historic moment, Trinidad and Tobago has joined a newly established military alliance led by United States (US) President Donald Trump known as the Americas Counter-Cartel Coalition.
This agreement was ratified following Trump’s signing of the Doral Charter at the Shield of the Americas summit in Doral, Florida.
It came during a meeting where this country’s Prime Minister was singled out for special mention by the US President, who held her hands as the two met before the summit began. He later gifted her the pen he used to sign the agreement.
Addressing the handpicked invitees at the Summit, President Trump said, “The heart of our agreement is a commitment to using lethal military force to destroy the sinister cartels and terrorist networks once and for all. We’ll get rid of them. We need your help.”
He added, “You have to just tell us where they are. We have amazing weaponry, as you probably noticed over the last short period of time.”
Critics have argued the “shoot first” policy violates international law by replacing due process with extrajudicial maritime killings, sparking fears of mistaken identity and regional instability. Legal scholars further contend it oversteps executive authority by treating a law enforcement issue as an unauthorised military conflict.
“We’re knocking the hell out of them where we can. We’re going to go heavier,” Trump declared.
According to a media release from the White House, this agreement and coalition mean that, “The United States will train and mobilise partner nation militaries to achieve the most effective fighting force necessary to dismantle cartels and their ability to export violence and pursue intelligence through organised intimidation.”
Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar, who stood to the right of President Donald Trump during the signing ceremony, was presented with the pen used to sign the agreement by the US President himself. During that part of the ceremony, the Washington Post March, a world-famous US military composition, was played.
The symbolic gesture appeared to delight the Trinidad and Tobago leader, who has remained steadfast in her support for the expanding United States military presence in the Caribbean and the region’s joint campaign against drug cartels.
President Trump told the various nations’ leaders in attendance, “I saw it so badly, how you’re suffering with what’s happening with the crime in the region. And I said, if we ever come back, we’re going to eradicate that crime, and I’m going to work with you, and if you want, we’re going to do it, we can do it pretty easily.”
The other countries present were Guyana, Paraguay, Dominican Republic, Panama, Honduras, El Savador, Ecuador, Costa Rica, Chile, Bolivia and Argentina. The White House, however, confirmed that 17 nations will be part of the coalition.
Trump said, “The nations gathered here today are filled with unlimited potential. You have tremendous potential. It’s a great, a great part of the world. But to fulfil that tremendous potential, we must smash the grip of the cartels and criminal gangs and horrible organisations run by, in some cases, absolute animals, and truly liberate our people. And some people are afraid to do it, because it’s so, they’ve gotten such a foothold. But I think you can get out of that, and we’ll work with you if you need.”
President Trump claimed that drugs coming through maritime transhipment points are down “96 per cent.”
“We’re trying to find out who the other 4 per cent are, because I think they’re the bravest people in the world.”
Meanwhile, US War Secretary Pete Hegseth said, “We look forward to working with all of your countries and more that are not here to say, with our shared assets and our intelligence and our capabilities, with American leadership, we will go on offence against the cartels. They will know that we’re just around the corner. Whether it’s drug boats or on land, we look, the America’s Counter-Cartel Coalition, the ACCC, will be a force for good, for peace through strength in this hemisphere.”
And President Trump told the summit that the US is strengthening its military arsenal with 10 new battleships being constructed.
“Not to use them, we don’t want to use them, but by having them, nobody’s going to play games. Just good to have them, we don’t want to use them.”
Commenting briefly on Cuba, President Trump said, “Cuba’s in its last moments of life, as it was. It’ll have a great new life, but it’s in its last moments of life, the way it is. These situations in Venezuela and Cuba should make clear under our new doctrine, and it is a doctrine, that we will not allow hostile foreign influence to gain a foothold in this hemisphere. That includes the Panama Canal, which we talked about. We’re not going to allow it. And together, we’ll protect our sovereignty, our security, and our cherished freedom and independence.”
China is one of the “foreign influences” the US President referred to.
During his speech, there was a light moment shared between President Trump and Prime Minister Persad-Bissessar as it pertained to the pronunciation of her name and its similarity in spelling to his former Democratic opponent and Vice President of the US, Kamala Harris.
While trying to pronounce Persad-Bissessar’s first name, Trump said, “I have to be very careful with this because, you know, your word, your first name is very similar to a first name that we have. But fortunately, it’s pronounced different.”
He added, “But I had to be careful with that first name.”
The US President added, “This is Kamla as opposed to Kamala. I like Kamla better, in many ways. And I have to say thank you very much, but I have to be careful with that first name. I don’t want to get it mixed up because it would ruin your reputation completely.”
During the official “family photo” with the invited heads of state and government and President Trump, Sinead O’Connor’s song “Nothing Compares 2 U” was played, a track that was frequently used during Trump’s presidential campaign.
