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Caribbean Basin Security Initiative

Updated May 16, 2022

The United States developed the Caribbean Basin Security
Initiative (CBSI), a regional U.S. foreign assistance
program, in 2009 through a process of dialogue with
Caribbean countries. The initiative seeks to reduce illicit
trafficking in the region, advance public safety and security,
and promote social justice. Because of their geographic
location, many Caribbean nations are vulnerable to being
used as transit countries for illicit drugs from South
America destined for the U.S. and European markets.
Strengthened U.S. counternarcotics cooperation with
Mexico and Central America led U.S. policymakers to
anticipate a potential increase in narcotics trafficking
through the Caribbean. Many Caribbean countries have also
suffered high rates of violent crime, including murder, often
associated with drug trafficking activities.
President Obama announced the initiative at the fifth
Summit of the Americas in 2009. U.S. and Caribbean
representatives held follow-up meetings and, in 2010, an
inaugural Caribbean-U.S. Security Cooperation Dialogue,
which approved a declaration of principles, a framework for
engagement, and a broad action plan. In October 2020,
Caribbean and U.S. officials held the ninth dialogue
virtually, with theme of strengthening regional coordination
to address shared security challenges.
In 2017, the State Department released a U.S. strategy for
engagement in the Caribbean (required by P.L. 114-291, the
United States-Caribbean Strategic Engagement Act of
2016). Among the priorities for engagement is security,
with the objectives of strengthening mutual national
security and advancing citizens' safety through programs to
dismantle criminal and terrorist organizations, curb the
trafficking of illicit goods and people, strengthen the rule of
law, and counter vulnerability to terrorist threats-all
efforts central to the CBSI.
Congress has supported funding for the CBSJ. From
FY2010 through FY2022, Congress appropriated $831
million for the CBSI, benefiting 13 Caribbean countries-
Antigua and Barbuda, the Bahamas, Barbados, Dominica,
the Dominican Republic, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, St.
Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines,
Suriname, and Trinidad and Tobago (see Table 1 and
Figure 1). For FY2021, Congress appropriated not less than
$74.8 million for the CBSI in the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2021 (P.L. 116-260, Explanatory
Statement, Division K).
For FY2022, the Biden Administration requested $66
million for the CBSI, but in March 2022, Congress
ultimately appropriated not less than $80 million in the
Consolidated Appropriations Act 2022 (P.L. 117-103; H.R.
2471), and required a spend plan for CBSI funds not later
than 90 days after the bill's enactment. The report to the

House-approved version of the foreign aid appropriations
bill approved in July 2021 (H.Rept. 117-84 to H.R. 4373)
directed the Secretary of State to provide to the Committees
on Appropriations a report on the uses of all CBSI funding
on a country-by-country basis for each program, project,
and activity for FY2010-FY2021 and to integrate such
information into the ForeignAssistance.gov website.
For FY2023, the Administration requested $63.5 million for
the CBSI, almost 21% less than appropriated by Congress
for FY2022 and 15% less than provided for FY2021.
The Caribbean Basin Security Initiative Authorization Act
(H.R. 4133), passed by the House on April 27, 2022, would
authorize $74.8 million for the CBSI for each fiscal year
from FY2022 through FY2026 and would establish
monitoring and reporting requirements for the program. In
addition, the bill would require the State Department, in
coordination with the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID) and the Inter-American Foundation,
to submit a strategy to prioritize efforts to increase disaster
response and resilience.
Coordinated by the State Department's Bureau of Western
Hemisphere affairs and implemented largely by the State
Department, USAID, and the Department of Defense, the
CBSI has targeted U.S. assistance in five areas:
 Maritime and Aerial Security Cooperation, including
assistance to strengthen Caribbean maritime and aerial
operations capability, improve radar coverage, and
sustain those capabilities;
 Law Enforcement Capacity Building, including
assistance to improve law enforcement though police
professionalization, anti-corruption training, and
community-based policing;
 Border/Port Security and Firearms Interdiction,
including support to improve capacity to intercept
smuggled narcotics, weapons, bulk cash, and other
contraband at airports and seaports;
 Justice Sector Reform, including support to increase
the efficacy of prosecutors and criminal courts and
reform and strengthen juvenile justice systems; and
 Crime Prevention and At-Risk Youth, including
assistance to populations vulnerable to being victims of
crime or at risk of recruitment into criminal
organizations.
Although the State Department has not published CBSI
funding statistics by country, a February 2019 U.S.
Government Accountability Office (GAO) report showed
that from FY2010 through FY2018, the Dominican
Republic received almost 23% of CBSI funding, Jamaica
just over 19%, 24% went to seven Eastern Caribbean
countries, and 21% was for region-wide activities.

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