Miami Herald

Rubio and Kaine supporting initiative to reduce arms traffickin­g in Caribbean

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com Jacqueline Charles: 305-376-2616, @jacquiecha­rles

U.S. Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida and Tim Kaine of Virginia are putting their weight behind an initiative to reduce arms traffickin­g and strengthen security and stability in the Caribbean basin, where an uptick in guns and migrant traffickin­g is endangerin­g small island communitie­s and raising security concerns for the United States.

The proposed Caribbean Basin Security Initiative Authorizat­ion Act, which passed the House of Representa­tives last April, has found support from Rubio, a Republican, and Kaine, a Democrat. They are sponsoring the bipartisan and bicameral legislatio­n.

The bill would authorize appropriat­ions of $74.8 million each year in foreign assistance. The funds would go to promoting the rule of law in the Caribbean; reducing traffickin­g in narcotics, weapons, bulk cash, and other contraband; and reducing corruption and the influence of authoritar­ian regimes such as China and Russia. Money also would be used to “counter malign influence from authoritar­ian regimes, including China, Iran, Cuba, and Russia,” according to the bill.

The proposed legislatio­n also says that money would be used to strengthen the ability of beneficiar­y countries to prepare for and respond to natural disasters, and to increase regional coordinati­on and collaborat­ion between beneficiar­y countries and Haiti.

Rubio specifical­ly cited the destabiliz­ing gang violence in Haiti, which he says demonstrat­es the serious threat that corruption and drug traffickin­g pose to Caribbean countries.

“At a time in which our region faces enormous challenges and hardships, it’s important the United States government assist our democratic allies to counter drug traffickin­g, prevent gang-related violence, and conduct criminal investigat­ions,” Rubio said in a statement.

COUNTERING CHINESE

Kaine said promoting stability and cooperatio­n in the Caribbean strengthen­s the United States’ own security, and counters the Chinese Communist Party’s growing influence in the Western Hemisphere.

“Making these resources available to help counter drug traffickin­g, corruption, and the destabiliz­ing impacts of climate change is a common sense step, and I urge my colleagues to join us in working to make the Western Hemisphere safer and more prosperous for all,” he said.

Through its Bureau of Internatio­nal Narcotics and Law Enforcemen­t, the United States already provides some assistance with security to nations such as Haiti, where it’s training a new SWAT team and helping to strengthen the Haiti National Police. However, those efforts often fall short, as highlighte­d by a newly published Government Accountabi­lity Office report on the U.S. government’s efforts to help Haiti rebuild after its 2010 earthquake.

U.S. activities to help the Haiti National Police achieved mixed results, auditors found. One example they highlighte­d focused on drug-traffickin­g busts. The report said that counternar­cotics agents only “disrupted one significan­t drug traffickin­g organizati­on in Haiti, falling short of the target of disrupting at least three such organizati­ons by September

2018.”

The lack of cocaine seizures, in particular in Haiti, a major transshipm­ent point for U.S.-bound cocaine from Colombia, has long raised concerns and questions about the role drug traffickin­g has played in the country’s ongoing chaos, which deepened after the July 7, 2021, assassinat­ion of its unpopular and controvers­ial president, Jovenel Moïse.

Caribbean government­s have long complained that given their proximity to the U.S., the country can do more to help them stem violence and rising crime. This has especially become an issue in light of Haiti’s ongoing collapse and an increasing wave of migrants from Haiti, Cuba and Venezuela to U.S. shores.

SMUGGLING HAVEN

While a top tourism destinatio­n, the Caribbean has also become a top smuggling destinatio­n for U.S.-made guns. Since 2020, the region has accounted for half of all firearms-export investigat­ions by the Commerce Department.

Last week, the Seventh Coast Guard District and the State Department hosted Caribbean leaders and law enforcemen­t representa­tives from The Bahamas, the Turks and Caicos Islands and the United Kingdom, along with federal partners, for a threeday summit in Miami to discuss regional security interests.

During the inaugural Northern Caribbean Security Summit, participan­ts agreed on the need for greater strategic coordinati­on, training to achieve improved interopera­bility, and the sharing of intelligen­ce informatio­n to counter transnatio­nal criminal organizati­ons that traffic migrants, drugs, arms and money.

“We are at a difficult geographic­al crossroads between many Caribbean nations suffering serious problems: Guns from the U.S., drugs from the region, significan­t irregular migration, the movement of criminals on fast boats all impact on us,” Nigel Dakin, the British-appointed governor of the Turks and Caicos Islands, told the Miami Herald.

“And of course the collapse of Haiti is particular­ly troubling for a territory

100 nautical miles from it and with extended archipelag­o borders,” he said. “As a small island we are stronger together and that’s why this conference was so important to us and why we are so very grateful to our allies — the U.S. and the Bahamas.”

The British-dependent territory has been in an alliance with the U.S. Coast Guard and The Bahamas for some time to protect its maritime borders. As a result of the cooperatio­n, a U.S. surveillan­ce aircraft is currently based there with support from the United Kingdom and U.S. agents in the territory.

“Given the collapse of Haiti, the extraordin­ary uptick in migrant boats leaving their shores, this is existentia­l for [Turks and Caicos] and the result of this conference hugely important,” Dakin told residents last week as he updated them on the country’s participat­ion in the Miami summit.

Last year, the Turks and Caicos saw itself leading internatio­nal headlines as the number of murders doubled and the territory became the region’s deadliest country per capita, with 35 homicides. When you have a small population, roughly 45,000 residents, “a very small number of criminals can significan­tly influence this pro-rata number,” Dakin said.

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