By Roysdale Forde S.C- In the inexorable calculus of international relations, where the thunder of naval propellers heralds the drumbeat of hegemony, the recent ingress of the USS Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Group into the waters of Latin America and the Caribbean stands as a clarion call to vigilance.
Ordered by the Trump Administration on October 24, 2025, and transiting the Strait of Gibraltar by November 4, this formidable armada – comprising the world’s largest warship, Arleigh Burke-class destroyers such as the USS Bainbridge and USS Mahan, a nuclear submarine, and the potent F/A-18 squadrons of Carrier Air Wing 8 – has now embedded itself within the U.S. Southern Command’s (SOUTHCOM) area of operations.
Ostensibly a bulwark against “narco-terrorism” and transnational criminal organisations (TCOs), this deployment escalates a campaign that has already exacted 76 lives in 19 strikes on suspected drug vessels since early September, including a lethal engagement off Venezuela’s coast that claimed six lives just last week.
For Guyana, perched on the volatile Essequibo frontier, and the constellation of small, vulnerable Caribbean states – from Antigua and Barbuda to St. Vincent and the Grenadines – this incursion portends not security, but a maelstrom of economic dislocation and social rupture, imperiling the very sinews of sustainable development.
Let us unpack this situation, with juridical precision, the economic tendrils of this escalation. Guyana, whose economy has burgeoned on the ExxonMobil-led Stabroek Block since 2019, yielding over 600,000 barrels of oil per day by 2025, remains inexorably tethered to hemispheric trade corridors. The Caribbean Sea, a vital artery for 90% of Guyana’s exports – crude petroleum, bauxite, rice, and gold – now bristles with American ordnance.
Maritime insurance premiums, already strained by regional volatility, have surged 25% in the wake of these strikes, as Lloyd’s of London recalibrates risks amid supersonic B-1 bomber overflights and F-35 patrols from Puerto Rico. For a nation whose GDP growth, projected at 38% for 2025 by the IMF, hinges on unfettered access to markets in Europe and North America, such perturbations translate into deferred cargoes and ballooning logistics costs.
A single interdiction event – witness the USS Stockdale’s recent entanglement with a Venezuelan-flagged trawler – could cascade into supply-chain snarls, inflating fuel prices and eroding the competitiveness of Guyanese rice in CARICOM forums.
Extend this prism to the broader Caribbean basin, where small island developing states (SIDS), as classified under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, subsist on tourism inflows exceeding $40 billion annually. The Ford’s air wing, capable of 150 sorties per day, calls up the ghosts of Gunboat Diplomacy, deterring cruise liners from Nassau to Bridgetown.
Barbados, with tourism accounting for 40% of GDP, faces phantom cancellations as travel advisories from the U.S. State Department – framed in the lexicon of “heightened threats” – deter visitors, eviscerating hotel revenues and ancillary sectors like artisanal fisheries.
In Haiti and Jamaica, where remittances from the diaspora buoy 25% of GDP, the specter of collateral strikes on “narco-vessels” imperils migrant remittances routed through insecure sea lanes.
Economically, this is not a mere ripple; it is a tsunami of fiscal austerity, compelling debt-laden governments to divert scarce resources from infrastructure to contingency funds, in flagrant contravention of the Montevideo Convention’s principles of non-intervention and sovereign equality.
Socially, the fissures deepen into chasms of inequity and unrest. Guyana’s coastal communities, from Berbice to the Pomeroon, derive livelihoods from a fisheries sector employing about 10,000 people and contributing 5% to national output. The Ford’s sonar arrays and littoral combat ships, prowling for TCOs, disrupt migratory patterns of pelagic stocks, yielding a 12% decline in catches reported by the Guyana Fishing Industry Association in October 2025 alone.
This scarcity, compounded by Venezuelan refugee inflows – now numbering about 25,000 amid Essequibo saber-rattling – exacerbates xenophobic undercurrents, straining social cohesion in a multi-ethnic polity still healing from 2020 election scars.
In the wider Caribbean, vulnerable states like Dominica, reeling from Hurricane Maria’s legacy, confront amplified gender-based vulnerabilities: women-led households, comprising 35% of the poor per UN Women data, bear the brunt of food insecurity as import costs soar.
Moreover, this escalation strikes at the heart of sustainable development, as enshrined in Guyana’s Low Carbon Development Strategy (LCDS) 2030 and the UN’s 2030 Agenda. The LCDS, a paragon of green jurisprudence ratified under Article 4 of the Paris Agreement, posits oil revenues as a sovereign trust for biodiversity preservation in the Iwokrama Rainforest and climate resilience in the Rupununi savannas.
However, with 10,000 U.S. troops now swelling SOUTHCOM’s footprint – including Marines from the 22nd Expeditionary Unit – the specter of resource diversion looms.
Guyana’s $1.2 billion sovereign wealth fund, earmarked for SDG-aligned investments, faces erosion through militarised aid packages that prioritise “security partnerships” over adaptive infrastructure. Offshore oil platforms, vulnerable to errant strikes (recall the USS Gravely’s near-miss with a Liberian tanker last month) threaten marine ecosystems, contravening the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea’s precautionary obligations.
For Caribbean SIDS, whose Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) hinge on loss-and-damage financing, this buildup diverts global attention from existential climate perils to ephemeral narco-theaters, undermining the $100 billion annual pledge from COP29. Sustainable development, in this juridical frame, demands not the clamour of carriers, but the quiet diplomacy of the Rio Declaration – principles now drowned in the Ford’s wake.
Worryingly, amid this geopolitical maelstrom, the People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) Administration’s posture evinces a complacency that borders on dereliction.
President Irfaan Ali’s government, ensconced in the laurels of petro-prosperity, has issued no more than perfunctory communiqués to CARICOM and the OAS, eschewing robust multilateral advocacy for a sovereign foreign policy. Where is the invocation of the Inter-American Democratic Charter to demand transparency in these strikes?
Where the emergency summit with CELAC to fortify regional non-alignment? Instead, whispers of bilateral U.S. pacts – trotted out in Georgetown – betray a myopic deference, prioritising Exxon dividends over the archipelago’s collective sovereignty.
In conclusion, the Gerald R. Ford’s shadow over our waters is no benign transit; it is an affront to the jus cogens of self-determination, presaging economic hemorrhaging, social fragmentation, and developmental retardation.
Guyana, as a frontline sentinel of the Guiana Shield, must rouse from torpor: convene the National Assembly for a foreign policy audit, rally CARICOM to the UN Security Council, and litigate if need be under the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties.
Only through such resolute praxis can we reclaim the narrative from naval behemoths, ensuring that our Caribbean cradle endures not as a chessboard for distant potentates, but as a bastion of equitable, sustainable flourishing. The hour demands not complacency, but constitutional courage.
