Trinidad and Tobago backs US military presence in Southern Caribbean

Trinidad and Tobago on Friday reiterated its support for the United States military presence in the southern Caribbean, saying it has been “very effective in inhibiting the innumerable activities of drug cartels within our country.”

- Advertisement -

Kamla Persad‑Bissessar, Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago, told the 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly that the Caribbean can no longer be seen as a safe backwater free from violent criminal networks. “The notion that the Caribbean is a ‘zone of peace’ has become a false ideal,” she said. For too many in the region, peace is “an elusive promise glimpsed, never grasped.”

Persad‑Bissessar used stark statistics to underline the scale of the problem. She noted that in 2024 Trinidad and Tobago, a nation of 1.4 million, recorded 623 murders — 41 per 100,000 — of which more than 40 per cent were gang‑related, driven by narcotics and firearms. Over the last 25 years the country has experienced more than 10,000 murders — equivalent, she said, to losing 1 per cent of the adult population.

On the subject of recent US actions in the region, Persad‑Bissessar said President Donald Trump’s comments on “the relentless narco‑ and human trafficking, organized crime and illegal immigration” “are correct.” She welcomed legal immigration, but warned that “illegal immigration neglects all checks and balances and will only create long‑term disorder,” arguing that many who enter illegally “will not assimilate into their adopted societies — inevitably leading to greater poverty, crime and cultural antagonism.” “This, then, is not phobia or hyperbole; it is simply the stark, naked truth,” she said.

Persad‑Bissessar also argued that tightened protections at the United States southern border have rerouted criminal flows into the Eastern Caribbean, and voiced gratitude for the US military presence in the southern Caribbean for helping to inhibit drug cartels in Trinidad and Tobago. She warned that unless forceful and aggressive actions are taken, “evil drug cartels will continue their societal destruction,” believing affected nations will unreservedly subscribe to morals and ethics “which they themselves blatantly flout.” “We will fight fire with fire within the law,” she affirmed.

“That is why we willingly supported the international security alliance announced by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, involving the US and several countries in South America to combat drug‑trafficking in the hemisphere,” she added.

The United States has deployed an amphibious squadron to the southern Caribbean as part of its effort to address threats from Latin American drug cartels, along with additional assets assigned to US Southern Command. Persad‑Bissessar has publicly defended recent US strikes on suspected drug‑carrying vessels, saying she had “no sympathy for traffickers” and that the US military should “kill them all violently” — comments that have drawn international attention.

Highlighting the regional stakes, Persad‑Bissessar warned that multilateralism is under strain and that coordinated international action is needed to protect stability and citizens across the Caribbean. “For too many in the Caribbean region, peace is not daily life but an elusive promise glimpsed, never grasped and in its absence, our citizens pay a terrible toll,” she said.

More Stories

Venezuela dismisses Guyana, CARICOM concerns over Essequibo brooch

Venezuela has brushed aside concerns raised by Guyana and the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) over a brooch worn by Acting President Delcy Rodríguez depicting a...
Andrew Holness

Jamaica House passes NaRRA bill after marathon debate, amid opposition concerns

The Jamaica Labour Party government led by Andrew Holness used its parliamentary majority in the early hours of Wednesday to pass the National Reconstruction...
Angela Brown Burke

Chaos in Jamaica Parliament as MP Brown Burke suspended over mace incident

Chaos briefly halted proceedings in the House of Representatives of Jamaica on Tuesday after Opposition MP Angela Brown Burke was named and suspended following...
Godwin Friday

St. Vincent PM outlines rules-based plan to tackle debt and stabilize economy

Prime Minister Godwin Friday says his administration will pursue a rules-based fiscal strategy to address Saint Vincent and the Grenadines’s mounting debt and fragile...
Grenada Sign

Grenada strengthens Canadian tourism push with Toronto mission

The Grenada Tourism Authority (GTA) has wrapped up a high-level marketing mission in Toronto aimed at boosting arrivals from Canada, one of the destination’s...

Sandals Foundation brings environmental learning to Caribbean students for Earth Day

Students of Chalky Hill Primary School were among more than 300 children across nine Caribbean islands who stepped out of the classroom and into...
Airbnbs in Jamaica

Jamaican gov’t passes measure to tax Airbnb-style rentals starting 2027

The Jamaica House of Representatives has approved new tax measures that will impose General Consumption Tax (GCT) on short-term rental accommodations, including Airbnb-style properties,...
Jamaica police force JCF

INDECOM probes fatal police shootings as death toll climbs to 37 for April

The Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM) has launched probes into four separate incidents involving members of Jamaica’s security forces in which five men were...
Guyana’s President Dr. Mohamed Irfaan Ali

Guyana President voices alarm over Venezuela Essequibo symbol display

Guyana’s President Dr. Irfaan Ali has expressed “grave concern” over the public display of a brooch worn by Venezuela’s Acting President Delcy Rodríguez that...
Andrew Holness Jamaica

PM Holness says contractors must step up to meet 150,000 housing goal

Jamaica's Prime Minister Andrew Holness is urging the development of an enterprise-level contracting sector to support the Government’s target of delivering 150,000 housing solutions...

Latest Articles