Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09BRIDGETOWN514
2009-08-24 15:46:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Bridgetown
Cable title:  

GOOD PROGRESS AT SECOND CBSI WG MEETING

Tags:  MASS EAID KJUS SNAR PREL XL 
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R 241546Z AUG 09
FM AMEMBASSY BRIDGETOWN
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 7707
INFO EC CARICOM COLLECTIVE
AMEMBASSY SANTO DOMINGO 
DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHDC
SECDEF WASHDC
DHS WASHDC
HQ USSOUTHCOM J5 MIAMI FL
UNCLAS BRIDGETOWN 000514 


STATE FOR WHA/CAR,INL AND PM
STATE PLEASE PASS AID/LAC
DOJ FOR OPDAT, DEA, USMS
OSD FOR RICHARDSON

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: MASS EAID KJUS SNAR PREL XL
SUBJECT: GOOD PROGRESS AT SECOND CBSI WG MEETING

-------
SUMMARY
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UNCLAS BRIDGETOWN 000514


STATE FOR WHA/CAR,INL AND PM
STATE PLEASE PASS AID/LAC
DOJ FOR OPDAT, DEA, USMS
OSD FOR RICHARDSON

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: MASS EAID KJUS SNAR PREL XL
SUBJECT: GOOD PROGRESS AT SECOND CBSI WG MEETING

--------------
SUMMARY
--------------


1. (U) An August 13 working group meeting between Caribbean
officials and USG representatives made good progress on moving the
President's security agenda for the Caribbean region forward. The
two sides agreed to craft a political declaration, strategy, and
action plan to frame assistance under the initiative, and agreed to
hold a follow-up working group meeting in Santo Domingo in October
and a high-level dialogue in the U.S. tentatively scheduled for
December. The two sides did not agree on adding other donor
countries to the group, as the Caribbean side was eager to highlight
partnership with the USG. This meeting showed our Caribbean
counterparts to be more focused and serious about operationalizing
this engagement than at any time in recent memory. Delegates list
at end of cable. End summary.

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Caribbean Delegation Focused, Prepared
--------------


2. (U) In Bridgetown, August 13, 2009, officials representing,
inter alia, Barbados, St. Kitts, the Dominican Republic, The
Bahamas, Trinidad and Tobago, CARICOM, RSS, and the United States of
America held a meeting of the Joint Working Group on Caribbean-US
Regional Security Cooperation (also known as the Caribbean Basin
Security Initiative, or hereafter, CBSI). The meeting was the
second follow-up to the President's pledge at the Summit of the
Americas in Trinidad in April, 2009 to re-engage with the region on
common security concerns, and followed a successful preparatory
meeting in Paramaribo on May 20.


3. (U) Each delegation presented its contribution to the CBSI
strategy, followed by feedback on the presentations by the other
delegations. This was followed by delegation presentations on the
regulatory instruments and institutions, resource mobilization
initiatives, and the reporting and review procedures utilized within
CBSI's cooperation framework. With regards to the implementation of
the arrangements of the CBSI, discussion pertained to the
categories, prioritization, responsibility for, and mechanisms for
engagement.


4. (U) The Caribbean delegation's preparation was focused,
detailed, and comprehensive, in stark contrast to the expected norm

from CARICOM consensus-making procedures. It included a detailed
matrix, broken down by "pillars" (threat reduction, vulnerability
reduction, and capacity building),which showed a great deal of
consideration had been given to providing the USDEL with a detailed
needs assessment on a regional basis. Also of note was the effort
made by CARICOM member delegates to fully involve the Dominican
Republic's delegates and inputs into their final document. The
Caribbean delegation in fact spent an entire day August 12
incorporating the DR's inputs into their presentation, and replaced
all of the documentation labeled "CARICOM-US" with "Caribbean-US" in
recognition of the need to include the DR as a full member of the
Caribbean delegation. The Caribbean delegation's chair, St. Kitts
National Security Ministry PERMSEC Astona Brown, also made specific
mention of the Regional Security System (RSS) as a crucial partner
in developing a security assistance program for the region - an
important tip of the hat to bring the RSS, which is often
marginalized by CARICOM, into the discussions as a full partner.

--------------
Decisions and Next Steps
--------------


5. (U) Political Declaration: The Caribbean delegation's initial
presentation envisioned what amounted to a formal signed agreement
as the governing document for a new regional security partnership.
The USDEL walked that proposal back and secured agreement to instead
negotiate a Political Declaration that would be issued following the
first high-level meeting (details below) and would establish the
goals of the partnership. The USDEL also proposed, and the
Caribbean delegation agreed, to develop a strategy and to create an
action plan to accompany the Declaration that would set measurable
goals and timelines for further progress.


6. (U) Development of Needs Assessment: Drawing on the excellent
first draft of a needs assessment matrix compiled by the Caribbean
delegation, the USDEL agreed to comment on proposals and to add
programs into the mix that were not in the initial assessment in
order to capture assistance that is currently available through
various USG agencies. The Dominican delegation undertook to provide
to CARICOM their needs and capacities assessment for input into the
assessment matrix.


7. (U) Next Steps: The USDEL proposed, and the Caribbean
delegation agreed, that the next WG meeting should be hosted by the
Dominican Republic, tentatively the first week of October, 2009.
[Note: The DR MFA subsequently confirmed their willingness to host
in Santo Domingo the first week of October in a letter to WHA/CAR
Director De Pirro. End note.] Both sides agreed to work in the
interim to develop a draft Political Declaration, a Strategy and an
Action Plan, with an eye to finalizing the three documents at the
October WG meeting. The USDEL also agreed to have all of its
comments and additions to the assistance matrix added by the date of
the WG meeting. Finally, the USDEL proposed and the Caribbean
delegation accepted in principle that the USG would host a high
level dialogue tentatively in early December, to adopt the
Declaration, Strategy and Action Plan. The level of participation
was left open.

--------------
No Agreement on Expanding the Group
--------------


8. (U) The USDEL proposed on several occasions that the group
consider expanding participation in the initiative to include other
potential donor countries and organizations - notably the UK,
Canada, France, the Netherlands, the EU and the OAS and UN - on the
argument that doing so would improve donor coordination, ensure
assistance programs were complementary and not duplicative. The
Caribbean delegation raised a number of concerns with the proposal,
though, noting that expanding the group could make it too large to
be effective and noting that doing so would force them back to the
drawing board to incorporate program elements they specifically left
out because they were underway with other donors.


9. (U) Moreover, there was a palpable reluctance on the part of the
Caribbean delegation to "dilute" the focused partnership with the
U.S. on a high-visibility, long term engagement plan. The
delegation clearly valued partnership with the U.S. and was eager to
maintain our full and undivided attention. In side discussions with
CARICOM Assistant Secretary General Colin Granderson and others,
USDEL clarified that expansion to foreign partners could take place
in stages. First, bringing in only Canada, the UK, France, the
Netherlands and possibly Spain, which are already regional and
bilateral security partners for the United States and Caribbean
countries. Expansion to others, such as Mexico, Colombia, Central
America, UN, OAS, and SICA could be leftfor future discussion.

--------------
COMMENT
--------------


10. (U) Caribbean participants were seriou, focused, and ready to
work on institutional andoperational issues. While internal
coordination or the Caribbean countries will be tricky - especilly
since we have made it clear that CARICOM wil not be our negotiating
partner - the region senes an opportunity here to hold the
sustained attention of the U.S. and to put some real programs in
play to address critical security concerns.

11 (U) The Caribbean side was also clearly pleased ith the
inclusion of social dimension programs, specially those dealing
with at-risk youth and juvenile justice. A common complaint in the
region over the past few years has been that the U.S. is concerned
only with counter-narcotics law enforcement activity, and that
broader issues of regional crime and insecurity have been ignored.
This WG meeting showed regional partners eager to engage on these
broader issues and very happy to see us ready to do the same. On a
similar note, our regional partners were clearly pleased to have the
undivided attention of the USG, reflected in their reluctance to
internationalize the group to include other donors.


12. (U) Delegates list:

Representing Barbados

Mrs. Antoinette WILLIAMS, Permanent Secretary Office of the Attorney
General
Ms. Teresa MARSHALL, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Foreign
Affairs and Foreign Trade
Mr. Gilbert GREAVES, Permanent Secretary (Ag.),Defence and
Security
Mr. Darwin DOTTIN, Commissioner of Police
Col. Alvin QUINTYNE, Chief of Staff

Ms. Shirley BELL, Chief Parliamentary Counsel, Office of the
Attorney General

Representing St. Kitts

Mrs. Astona M. BROWNE, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of National
Security and Immigration

Representing The Bahamas

Ms. A Missouri SHERMAN-PETER, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of
National Security

Representing the Dominican Republic

Ambassador Rafael B DIAZ, Secretary of State For External Relations,
Ministry of External Relations
Mr. Diogenes CHECO, National Drugs Council
Mr. Braulio DE LA ROSA
General Ismael Antonio ALVARADO

Representing Trinidad and Tobago

Mrs. Jennifer BOUCAUD-BLAKE, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of
National Security
Mrs .Claire EXETER, Snr. International Relations Specialist,
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Ms. Antoinette LUCAS-ANDREWS, International Affairs Advisor,
Ministry of National Security
Col. Roland MAUNDAY, Defence Attach, Washington (Designate),
Ministry of National Security
Col. Anthony PHILLIPS-SPENCER, Defence Attach, Washington
(Outgoing),Ministry of National Security
Mrs. Claire DE BOURG, Senior International Relations Officer,
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Mr. Norton JACK, Senior Legal Advisor to the Attorney General,
Ministry of the Attorney General

Representing CARICOM

Ms. Lynne Anne WILLIAMS, Executive Director, CARICOM IMPACS
Mr. Francis FORBES, Director, Liaison Office, CARICOM IMPACS
Mr. Michael JONES, Director (Ag.),JRCC, CARICOM IMPACS
Mr. Collin MILLINGTON, Director, RIFC, CARICOM IMPACS
Ms. Selicia DOUGLAS, Policy and Research Analyst, CARICOM IMPACS
Ms. Chesley OLLIVIERRE, Research Officer, CARICOM IMPACS
Dr. Annmarie BARNES, Security consultant
Mr. Colin GRANDERSON, Assistant Secretary General, Directorate of
Foreign and Community Relations, CARICOM SECRETARIAT
Ms. B Van Dyke, Rapporteur, CARICOM SECRETARIAT
Mr. Nigel Duncan, Conference Services, CARICOM SECRETARIAT

Representing the United States of America

Dr. D. Brent Hardt, Charge' d'Affaires, a.i. U.S. Embassy
Bridgetown, U.S. Department of State
Ms. Velia DE PIRRO, US Department of State
Mr. Mike FORTIN, US Department of State
Mr. Giovanni SNIDLE, US Department of State
Mr. Michael KITE, USAID
COL Alfred BROOKS, SOUTHCOM
Ms. Ashley RICHARDSON, US Department of Defense
LTC Nicole BONTRAGER, US Joint Staff
Ms. Kathleen O'CONNOR, US Department of Justice
Mr. Larry MIZELL, US Department of Homeland Security
CPT Scott JENDRO, JIATF-South
Ms. Carol HORNING, US Embassy, Georgetown
Mr. John MOPPERT, US Embassy, Nassau
Mr. Joseph RUNYON, US Embassy, Santo Domingo
Ms. Geneve MENSCHER, US Embassy, Paramaribo
Mr. Sean OSNER, US Embassy, Kingston
Ms. Ebony CUSTIS, US Embassy, Port of Spain
Mr. Ian CAMPBELL, US Embassy, Bridgetown
Mr. Jim GOGGIN, US Embassy, Bridgetown
Mr. Norm SCOTT, US Embassy, Bridgetown
Mr. Mark MC HUGH, US Embassy, Bridgetown
Mr. Jack ZALEWSKI, US Embassy, Bridgetown
Mr. Ed GAYNOR, US Embassy, Bridgetown
Dr. Robert BONCY, USAID
Ms Cheryl KAST, US Embassy, Bridgetown
Mr. Curtis FLOURNOY, US Embassy, Bridgetown