Universities all over the world have programmes which recognise significant contributors in academia and real-world fields of accomplishments. It is therefore no surprise that Howard University, arguably amongst the most distinguished, black-focused universities in the USA, has awarded Trinidad and Tobago’s Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley with an honorary Doctor of Letters degree.
The citation of the American university sweeps over what it conceives to be the Prime Minister’s achievements in taking his country through economic, health and infrastructure developmental initiatives and challenges and concludes that his efforts deserve the university’s award.
All of T&T should feel honoured by the recognition given to the Prime Minister. It’s also worthwhile to mention that generations of T&T and Caribbean nationals have received their academic and professional qualifications and training from Howard.
This country’s first prime minister, Dr Eric Williams, was an assistant professor of history at Howard before he contested for and won the premiership of his homeland. So too another distinguished and internationally famous intellectual, C.L.R. James, who was a visiting lecturer in Howard’s Black Studies programmes of the turbulent 1960s and 1970s.
Amongst Howard graduates have been former prime minister of Grenada, Dr Keith Mitchel, T&T goalkeeper Shaka Hislop and noted black activist Kwame Ture’. The award, therefore, has not fallen out of the sky.
Of even deeper significance and potential benefit to T&T and the region were a couple chance comments made by USA President Joe Biden, who received an award from Howard similar to that of Prime Minister Rowley.
“Thank you for being a senior partner in the Caribbean and addressing climate change and supporting democracies across the Western Hemisphere,” noted the US president to Prime Minister Rowley at the awards ceremony.
Most important, after his political quip of not knowing the T&T Prime Minister “was so talented”, was his promise, “We have got to talk.”
We recognise that having found himself in a space with the leader of another country, President Biden had to engage in respectful diplomacy with his Caribbean counterpart. As trivial as the comment may have been though, the onus is now with a T&T and Caricom diplomatic overture to make use of whatever value which can be squeezed out of it.
Yes, it surely can be cynically stated “what else do you expect a President of the USA to say in such circumstances?” Surely by today, even by the end of the ceremony, President Biden, with far more pressing considerations on his mind, would have forgotten having given such a “come on” signal to T&T and the region.
All of that and more would surely be true. However, it is such openings which, when adroitly taken advantage of, can be turned into vibrant and focused diplomacy.
So, instead of cynicism and pushing the notion of the American president simply being diplomatic, a kind of “mamaguy,” a well thought-out Caricom diplomacy can make use of the opening. Somewhere in the Caricom Secretariat and generally across the region, there must be expert and experienced diplomats who must begin the search for an approach to the US President to give greater consideration to the region.