Thank you, Minister Mitchell.
I am honored to address this, my second, Joint Task Force Meeting. I
am pleased to be joined by the U.S. delegation that includes the
Embassy's Deputy Chief of Mission Brent Hardt; Admiral Brian Peterman,
Commander of the Coast Guard's Seventh District; Mark Trouville, DEA
Special Agent in Charge - Miami; Robert Knotts, SOUTHCOM's Deputy
Director of J-33; William Bent - Washington Western Hemisphere Affairs;
Kevin Brown, Desk Officer, International Law Enforcement Bureau; and
members of the Embassy's Law Enforcement Team led by our DEA Agent In
Charge Kevin Stanfill.
I appreciate the continued strong commitment of the Government of The
Bahamas to our joint counternarcotics efforts. These efforts have
resulted in significant achievements in our shared fight against drug
trafficking throughout The Bahamas. It was not that long ago that the
bulk of the cocaine entering the U.S. came through The Bahamas. Today
our experts tell us that less than ten percent of cocaine entering U.S.
enters through The Bahamas. This dramatic decline demonstrates what can
be achieved when our countries join forces in the face of a common
threat. Now, while we should be pleased with our successes, we must also
look at the challenges we face moving forward.
One little-told story that I would like to highlight is our Embassy's
extensive training initiatives in upgrading the capabilities of Bahamian
law enforcement and defense personnel.
Since the beginning of 2005, The United States has funded more than
four million dollars worth of training for more than 900 officials
encompassing over 20,000 man-hours. The recipients of this training have
included members of the RBDF, RBPF, Customs and Immigration.
My goal is to continue the U.S. government's commitment to provide
training and technical assistance. Such training, I believe, is the best
means to strengthen the capability of our Bahamian law enforcement
partners. In short, training provides knowledge, expertise and boosts to
morale that pay dividends long after the training ends. I would welcome
your input into the types of training that would be most beneficial to
your organizations.
As I noted at the outset, OPBAT is one of the true success
stories in the war on drugs and is a model for multilateral cooperation
that is now being emulated in other parts of the world. This success
does come at a price. The U.S. government spends more than thirty
million dollars a year in support of OPBAT. This funding comes from a
number of different U.S. agencies, each of which faces its own funding
constraints.
For example, our State Department's Narcotics Affairs Section faced
the prospect of a loss of half our funding in FY 2005. Our common
interventions in Washington -- including a forceful presentation by
Minister Mitchell -- helped turn this around.
This ongoing budgetary pressure requires that we continually examine
how we fight narcotics trafficking in The Bahamas. We must be prepared
to justify our use of resources and assets to the decision makers in
Washington.
Our success in reducing the flow of cocaine through The Bahamas to
less than ten percent leads some to argue that The Bahamas no longer
requires U.S. attention and resources. We know that should we reduce our
vigilance, The Bahamas could once again become the preferred route for
drug traffickers looking for the easiest way to move their goods from
South America to the U.S.
I will continue to make the case that we cannot afford to let our
guard down here, but I also need to be able to make the case that we are
making the best use possible of the resources at hand.
We must continue to adapt in the face of new challenges whether they
be drugs trafficked by fast boats from Colombia, sloops from Haiti or
cargo containers. Drug traffickers are not standing still, they change.
They find gaps in our defenses and exploit them.
We must stay ahead of them, looking honestly at our strengths and
weaknesses and changing the way we do business when necessary.
Any organization that stands still will be overtaken. OPBAT is no
different. We have to be flexible in deploying our assets. As
traffickers move their operations to different locations, we must
reevaluate where we base our assets. As they change tactics, we must
change ours. We want the Bahamian government to be full partners in this
process. To assist you, we are committed to providing training and
capacity building so, going forward, The Bahamas and Turks and Caicos
can carry on more of our joint counternarcotics mission.
I would like to briefly mention the issue of illegal migration. It is
appropriate that we discuss this issue here, as migrant traffickers
often move illegal narcotics along with their migrant passengers.
Coast Guard assets have played a key role in interdicting both
illegal migrants and narcotics heading to The Bahamas and to the U.S.
Illegal migration creates great economic costs to the Bahamian
government.
I hope that by openly discussing the challenges we face today we can
work together to find the best, most cost efficient and effective way,
to defeat our common drug-trafficking threat. This is a fight we cannot
afford to lose. It wasn't that long ago that The Bahamas was synonymous
with cocaine trafficking. It is our combined task to ensure that this
never occurs again.
I am confident that, with the leadership of the people in this room
today, we will together meet this challenge.
Thank you.