Lead Editor-Politics
akash.samaroo@cnc3.co.tt
Defence Minister Wayne Sturge has requested increased military support from the United States to help Trinidad and Tobago combat drug cartels operating in the Caribbean.
Speaking yesterday at the Americas Counter Cartel Conference, a high-level military and defence summit in Florida, Sturge told US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth that while T&T has highly-trained personnel and a strong commitment to pushing back against narco-traffickers, it lacks the resources needed to do so effectively.
“We require assets in the interim that would enhance our maritime domain awareness as well as enable us to carry out targeted reinforcement that would serve both our interests and would deliver immediate hemispheric benefits. Our Government is dedicated and ready to shoulder all responsibility, and once proportionally equipped to the expectations faced upon us, we will deliver results,” Sturge told the summit.
He added, “If we are to deliver effectively as the security anchor in the southern Caribbean, we require assets that would equip us with the capability to disrupt the cartels in the transshipment corridors and to protect our shared economic interests in the energy sector.”
The Defence Minister did not tell Secretary Hegseth exactly what “assets” the country needs.
That question was put to the Prime Minister; however, she did not immediately respond.
The Defence Minister lamented that T&T’s economy limits how much help it can get from international partners.
Sturge, however, pledged T&T’s support for the US military presence in the region.
“We are not observers in this fight. We are on the front line with you. We have lost law enforcement officers in this fight, including one of our sailors during the interception of a semi-submersible, which was transporting a couple tonnes of cocaine. We have lost thousands of citizens over the last two decades to violent crime, fuelled mainly by the actions of the new narco-terror networks.”
He added, “Our doctrine aligns with yours.”
The Defence Minister and those in attendance signed a Joint Security Declaration at the conference.
It provides for coordinated maritime and aerial patrols across the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific, while also backing the use of US lethal force against cartel vessels under the so-called Trump Corollary.
It further allows for the deployment of US military advisers to assist local security forces in land-based operations, following a model recently implemented in Ecuador.
US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth yesterday urged invitees to adopt a more aggressive approach in confronting drug cartels, warning that the Trump administration is prepared to act independently if regional partners fail to effectively counter criminal networks threatening the United States and its border security.
Meanwhile, People’s National Movement (PNM) chairman Marvin Gonzales told Guardian Media that while national security partnerships with the US are nothing new, this seems to be something different that the country needs to know about.
Gonzales said, “It appears as though he’s alluding to new arrangements and new alignments that we as a country do not know of, because the government has consistently not been transparent with us on certain arrangements that they would have made, and agreements that they would have made with other countries and other governments.”
The former national security minister added, “The Minister of Defence is notorious for invoking national security consideration for him not to be transparent in the parliament, as well as the national community, and so we, quite frankly, don’t expect anything different from him, but we continue to make the call for the government to be very transparent on these very, very important matters, because they all impact upon the sovereignty of T&T.”
But former police commissioner Gary Griffith disagreed. Griffith said it would be unfeasible for Government to divulge every aspect of this partnership.
“It is going to be virtually impossible, impractical, if not totally irresponsible, for any government to openly state exactly what are the terms and conditions put into this mutual arrangement that has been made. It definitely will not be anything about taking away part of our sovereign rights. What it would be is a matter of two hands clapping, and for the benefit of the safety and security of both countries,” Griffith said.
He said the US has offered T&T military assets in the past.
“When I was minister of national security, the same thing was being done. I would be leading directly with the relevant representative of the DEA, the FBI, the CIA in the US Embassy itself here in Trinidad and Tobago. And they actually promised that they wanted to give us two US destroyers, albeit over 20 years old. And in return, they wanted to make sure that they will have some degree of support to assist the United States in dealing with the eradication of drugs in the Southern Caribbean.”
