KINGSTON — Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness has been warned against becoming a pawn in Washington’s bid to solicit votes in its diplomatic war with the Maduro regime in Venezuela.
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s highly anticipated visit to Jamaica has been marked by intrigue and outrage in the lead-up to talks with Holness and a select group of Caribbean leaders that have been viewed by CARICOM Chairman Mia Mottley as a coup of sorts.
Pompeo will arrive in the island this evening for a two-day working visit where he is expected to meet with the leaders of The Bahamas, Belize, St Kitts, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, St Lucia, and St Maarten.
Of the eight nations to be represented, five – Jamaica, Haiti, The Bahamas, St Lucia and Dominican Republic – were involved in a deeply polarising meeting with President Donald Trump at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida in March last year.
It is felt that Pompeo’s meetings here are a follow-up to that parley, and Curtis Ward, a former deputy representative of Jamaica to the United Nations, believes that the island has found itself between a rock and a hard place.
“Pompeo spoke in the OAS (Organization of American States) at a special session he requested last Friday and he singled out Jamaica and refers to the country as a good friend of the United States. In my opinion, he is pushing Mr Holness as the de facto leader of CARICOM, which he’s not. Sadly, at the moment, it seems CARICOM is void of a strong leader. Jamaica used to be the leader on foreign policy, but not anymore,” Ward said.
“Nobody in CARICOM pays any respect to what Jamaica does anymore, so Jamaica has to be extremely careful of how it deals with the Trump administration,” he added. See full article in Jamaica Gleaner at http://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/lead-stories/20200121/trump-card-former-envoy-says-holness-danger-being-us-pawn-caricom-coup