Mottley a sane,consistent voice

Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley has established herself as a principled voice for democratic values and social justice throughout the Caribbean region, drawing stark contrasts with previous generations of regional leaders. Her recent condemnation of both the kidnapping of Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro by US forces and the delayed election results in Guyana’s March 2020 general election demonstrates her consistent commitment to institutional integrity.

Unlike her Caribbean Community (CARICOM) predecessors who remained silent during decades of democratic erosion in Guyana from the 1950s through the 1990s, Mottley recognizes the essential relationship between strong democratic institutions and social justice. Historical Caribbean leaders often acquiesced to US gunboat diplomacy and interventionist policies that toppled elected governments without evidence of communist threats.

The Guyanese people suffered particularly under this foreign policy approach, enduring a reign of terror that specifically targeted Indo-Guyanese communities. The subsequent dictatorship of Forbes Burnham created widespread suffering, reducing Guyana to the Western Hemisphere’s poorest nation—a tragedy that might have been prevented had regional leaders demonstrated Mottley’s courage earlier.

This analysis connects current US foreign policy under President Trump to centuries of Western expansionism dating back to Alexander the Great and the Roman Empire, arguing that modern US imperialism continues this tradition by forcibly removing uncooperative regimes.

The commentary calls for more citizens and leaders with Mottley’s moral fortitude to challenge injustice, noting that some Caribbean citizens ironically celebrate US military power. Mottley demonstrates that neither military nor economic supremacy is prerequisite for ethical leadership on the global stage.

Had Mottley’s principles prevailed historically, the Caribbean might have avoided authoritarian figures like Dési Bouterse, Papa Doc Duvalier, Eric Gairy, Forbes Burnham, and Rafael Trujillo. The region could have developed into an enviable society rather than suffering the corruption and emigration that continues to affect many nations.