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The Jamaica Gleaner has criticised Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar for her government’s approach to the US naval build-up in the southern Caribbean and its threat of military action against Venezuela.
In an editorial published Monday, the newspaper described it as “not clear what the Trinidad and Tobago government intended to signal by reserving its position” on CARICOM’s declaration that the region should remain a zone of peace. CARICOM had reaffirmed “the importance of dialogue and engagement towards the peaceful resolution of disputes and conflict” and expressed support for “the territorial integrity of countries in the region” and the right of citizens “to pursue their livelihoods in safety.”
The Gleaner highlighted that while CARICOM’s position applied to disputes such as Venezuela’s claim over western Guyana, it also provided lessons for the US–Venezuela tensions. The editorial noted that CARICOM’s statement did not explicitly address Washington’s request for Antigua and Barbuda and Grenada to host satellite listening posts to support US operations. It warned that such a request could “erode the CARICOM ideal of non-alignment and of the Caribbean as a zone of peace,” potentially making the countries hosting the facilities complicit in hostilities.
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