Caricom's foreign policy body has called for an immediate halt to Israeli-Iranian military strikes, even as US Secretary of State Marco Rubio touched down in St. Kitts to reaffirm Washington's Western Hemisphere priorities amid the escalating Middle East crisis.
COFCOR issued a formal statement expressing grave concern over direct military exchanges between Israel and Iran, calling the situation 'untenable' and urging an immediate cessation of hostilities. The body specifically cited the human cost of the conflict — including deaths and injuries to children — as demanding an 'immediate and empathetic response' from the global community. Separately, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio arrived in Basseterre, St. Kitts and Nevis, for a regional summit focused on the Trump administration's Western Hemisphere agenda, even as the Middle East crisis dominated global attention.
COFCOR's statement places Caricom on record as opposing further escalation — a position with tangible implications. Any widening of the Israel-Iran conflict risks disrupting global oil markets, shipping lanes, and the kind of economic stability that small island developing states depend on. The simultaneous presence of Secretary Rubio in the region underscores how the Caribbean has become a theatre for great-power diplomacy at a moment of acute global tension.
"The continued cycle of retaliation — including the alarming new dimension of direct confrontations between Israel and Iran — leads to an untenable situation fraught with potential for greater regional conflict and global instability."
— COFCOR Statement on the Escalating Middle East Conflict
COFCOR's statement is measured, moral, and — crucially — timely. The Caribbean has always punched above its weight in multilateral forums by anchoring its positions in international law and humanitarian principles rather than great-power allegiances. That tradition holds here.
But the optics matter too. With Marco Rubio physically present in the region while COFCOR was issuing a statement that implicitly challenges US-aligned postures on the Middle East, Caribbean governments are navigating genuinely treacherous diplomatic waters. The bloc must resist the temptation to let Washington's proximity — literal and political — dilute the clarity of its message.
Small island states have the most to lose from global instability and the least leverage to prevent it. That is precisely why COFCOR's call for UN Security Council action is the right move: it names the actors who actually hold the keys and holds them accountable. The Caribbean should continue to speak plainly, speak together, and speak early.
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