| CARICOM: FROM CONFUSION TO CONFIDENCE
BY ISAAC NEWTON
The future of Caricom is as strong as the present
condition of the Caribbean mindscape.
Considering the historical, economic, political,
social, and structural traps that have kept integration
at bay for so many years; and our astounding addiction
to puny square mileage, there is a lack of regional
confidence.
I can only imagine that we danced bare foot on our
wedding night. Now that we have lived together for
several decades, behaving like a tree that provides
plenty of shade but grows no edible fruits unravels
the thread that binds. What accounts for our failure
to pay heed?
We know that we can not place our common destiny
between infidelity and indifference. We are aware
that we must avoid every temptation to invent excuses
that gamble with each others chips, and we recognize
that we must not accept hush money towards self destruction.
Yet our moral center appears too weak to keep our
consensus politics in tact.
Causes of confusion
The fundamental irony is together, we have committed
soul murder-the act of looking outside ourselves for
permanent solutions. Essentially, we give lightweight
priority to an imperishable vision, that within us,
there is a galaxy of culturally compatible goodwill.
If we connect our collective goodwill to our vast
regional intelligence, and that wilderness of innovative
oxygen that is so uniquely Caribbean, the masses,
not merely our leaders, will transform Caricom. It
will become a process of superlative success. But,
we are so afraid to trust each other. We are in constant
search for hidden agendas and under the table schemes.
In contrast, we grant others, usually foreign and
Europeans, face value integrity. We are fearful even
the more that our spiritual, emotional, and psychological
energies both respond to anti-regional progress and
themselves help to shape and oppose our collective
success.
With all the gains of postmodern thinking, we still
find it highly suitable to look to Westernized models
of un-sustainable prosperity to (mis)guide us. And,
we continue to interpret Caribbean possibility through
external frameworks and tales. The minute we wake
up from smothering ethnic relations, predatory differences,
and remote control fiascos by transnational corporations,
and tap into our collective insight, we will get rid
of our childish retreat from, and crowning suspicion
of each other, and with unthreatening love, turn Caricom
into a positive reality. But we must begin by cradling
each other!
Perhaps when we think of Caricom we are mainly concern
about its politics, economics, and dangling structures.
Yet, we might be speeding away from the invisible
intangible of regional self esteem- the primary source
of our self inflicted confusion.
Despite sub-regional and regional ties, there is
massive talk with little teamwork. We have a union
with no communion. Weve experienced conferences
without concrete results. We use smiles that lack
strategy. We entertain values devoid of vision, and
we carve out deals in the absence of direction. Our
alarming distrust creates so much confusion.
Sources of confidence
In every conceivable way, whether seen from beneath
the surface or from above the ground, making Caricom
work to our maximum advantage beats heading international
committees or leading organizations with worldwide
status. That does not mean that we ought not to aspire
to be counted in circles that matter. Or attempt to
exercise our influence through appropriate collaboration
and communication with allies and potential friends.
Strategic priority promises to yield plenty. Lets
first master local and solve regional headaches. And
this must be seen as quite a step forward to expending
limited resources on international visibility without
viability. Clarity begins at home before charity is
extended to neighbors.
Although the Caribbean cant escape the pressures
and consequences of global challenges, we can learn
to mitigate them. Figuring out, what of necessity
will force our development or stimulate and support
our progress further is crucial. No reason why sanity
not vanity, education not ego, should guide us. Self
confidence can inspire results that bring resources.
These resources tied to technical competence can work
miracles with trust-based regional relationships.
Within Caricom are many of the skills and competencies
that are necessary for sustainable progress. National
interest as well as common threats and resources are
imperative to evaluate for a successful regional model.
As part of the Western Hemisphere, possessing self
confidence will help Caricom utilize methods of their
more powerful allies, without trading away their productivity
or profitability. Trade is imperative. Given our unique
culture, we must seek to get the most for our resources-human
or natural. In bilateral agreements (EPA) we should
ask: how does profound penetration by transnational
corporations benefit the poor, create environmentally
friendly wealth for our indigenous population, and
contribute to adaptable organizational structures
that support democracy in the Caribbean? Intelligent
negotiations must primarily guarantee our vital interests
without undermining those of our allies.
Through unconscious neglect, our trust capital has
withered, and in times of rapid change and uncertainty,
doubts, paranoia and suspicion increase. The key is
to aim for mutual respect and collaboration by seeing
each other as partners not obstacles. We must desist
from practices that outmaneuver and manipulate each
other. This weakens our singular ambitions. But nothing
surpasses the need for purposefully resolving current
problems and investing in meaningful relationships.
These action steps will minimize hostilities, and
sway us to concentrate on win/win successes.
In our journey towards regional confidence, trusting
each other as a prerequisite to intelligent cooperation
is unavoidable. Regional confidence will help us balance
tradition with innovation, negotiate disagreements,
and stake out strategic turf. Unwavering relational
authenticity will be earned when we confront our history,
and through it, tackle a monumentally formidable task-Caricom
itself-with the highest honor and greatest accomplishment.
Perchance we fail, let it be recorded, we reached
for the heights.
--
Dr. Isaac Newton of Antigua is an International Leadership
and Change Management Consultant and Political Adviser
who specializes in Government and Business Relations,
and Sustainable Development Projects. Dr. Newton works
extensively, in West Africa, the Caribbean and Latin
America and is a graduate of Oakwood College, Harvard,
Princeton and Columbia. He has published several books
on personal development and written many articles
on economics, leadership, political, social, and faith
based issues.
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