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Why Haiti's Such a Mess (And Why Bill Clinton Was So Wrong to Prop Up Aristide)
History News Network ^ | Feb 10, 2004 | Michael Radu

Posted on 02/18/2004 7:58:48 AM PST by XHogPilot

Why Haiti's Such a Mess (And Why Bill Clinton Was So Wrong to Prop Up Aristide)

By Michael Radu Mr. Radu is Senior Fellow and Co-Chair, Center on Terrorism and Counterterrorism, at the Foreign Policy Research Institute in Philadelphia.

Ten years ago, in September 1994, U.S. troops invaded Haiti under the auspices of restoring democracy, human rights and the rule of law. At the time, the Clinton-conceived operation was hailed by leftists as a model of liberal interventionism, as former Catholic priest Jean-Bertrand Aristide was restored to power and an oppressive military regime was ousted. There was only one problem with this scenario: not only was Aristide vehemently anti-capitalist and (ironically) anti-American, he was every bit as brutal a despot as his predecessors. To make matters worse, the Clinton administration knew beforehand of Aristide's radical pedigree but chose to prop him into the dictator's chair anyway, in one of foreign policy's all-time worst liberal bungles. Today, the disastrous results of Clinton's experiment in Caribbean colonialism are painfully evident.

Despite the fact that Haiti, the second oldest independent state in the Americas, just recently marked its 200th anniversary in November 2003, freedom and prosperity remain sadly elusive for the country's citizens.

While the country, or more precisely the Jean-Bertrand Aristide regime, celebrated this bicentennial, most Haitians were too busy demonstrating against Aristide or simply scrounging for food—or a raft to Florida—to take part in any festivities.

In 2004, Aristide himself will celebrate the tenth anniversary of Operation Restore Freedom, which returned him to power. Friends of his, like Jesse Jackson and Randall Robinson, had helped pester the Clinton administration into undertaking this intervention. At the time, I pointed out that such an operation was an oxymoron, for how could one “restore” Haitian freedom, when the Haitian people have always been denied such freedom?

Ten years later, despite claims that Operation Restore Freedom was a great foreign policy triumph for the Clinton administration, the failure of Aristide's regime to transform Haiti's profoundly dysfunctional society into a functional one is all too evident. Indeed, if ever there was a case of a country hopelessly dysfunctional, from its civil society to its elected leadership, it is Haiti, which has become an almost perfect example of a society beyond salvation. Its problems are stubbornly rooted in violence and terror, which continue to enjoy mass support.

Aristide's election in 1990 (when he promised to “necklace” his opponents, or burn them alive) is often declared to have been Haiti's first free election, despite the notorious François “Papa Doc” Duvalier's election in 1957. Besides this ongoing democratic charade, since 1994 the Catholic Left in Haiti has destroyed what little remained after two centuries of savagery in the name of social justice and heretical liberation theology.

But Haitian corruption and misery are threats that reach well beyond the borders of Haiti. Washington has proven unable to do anything about Haiti, or even to protect the U.S. against wave after wave of Haitian émigrés coming to Florida. Haiti has also repeatedly invaded—raping, destroying, and stealing as much as possible—today's Dominican Republic, while always managing to remain eras behind it in terms of development.

The U.S. and European Union have suspended aid after the fraudulent 2000 elections that returned Aristide to power. Even Paris and Ottawa now agree with Washington that no more of the $500 million promised to Port-au-Prince in the ebullient days of 1994 should be delivered to Aristide.

Such a decision is absolutely necessary, since Haiti has always pursued the same solution to its problem of ungovernability: deflect blame and ask for money from outsiders. Hence, “You owe us $21,685,135,571.48, screams the bankrupt regime in Port-au-Prince” (London Telegraph, Oct. 10, 2003). This refers to the 90 million francs Haiti alleges it wrongfully had to pay France in 1825 in connection with Haitian crimes under founding father Dessalines as the country fought for independence, including murder, rape, confiscation of property, and similar actions against white French civilians, mostly women and children. That was the amount demanded by Paris in return for granting independence. With good reason, since Jean-Jacques Dessalines's 1805 Constitution clearly stated that “No white man of whatever nation he may be, shall put his foot on this territory with the title of master or proprietor, neither shall he in future acquire any property therein.”

Such racist constitutions in Haiti have since changed, but the behavior of its government has not. The French are right to dismiss this monetary claim, not just because it is extortion, but also because -- due largely to Paris' influence -- the EU has already wasted almost $2 billion on Aristide's thuggish regime. And no matter how much Aristide and his lackeys spend on lobbying in Washington, it appears that even his racialist supporters in the United States are embarrassed by him now.

The Washington Post reported (on November 18, 2003) that, at the 200th anniversary celebration, Aristide told Haitians, “After 200 years of economic violence, the traces of slavery are still here. Poverty today is the result of a 200-year plot. Whether it be slavery or embargo, it's the same plot. You are victims.” Referring to the aid suspensions—-which he calls “economic sanctions”--he said, “We got out of the blockade then, now there's another one. It's the same conspiracy. We won that victory. We can walk toward another victory.”

The undeniable truth is that Aristide is merely the latest incarnation of an uninterrupted chain of murderous tyrants who have ruled Haiti over the centuries. In fact, the country still glorifies the racist Jean-Jacques Dessalines (Emperor Jacques I) as its “founding father.” That a genocidal murderer is the national hero makes perfect sense in Haiti, where Dessalines's assassin, Henri Christophe (King Henry I, 1806-20), is also glorified as a founding father. Although many Haitians excuse Christophe's act as a part of Haiti's independence struggle, it is obvious that Haiti's history of bloodshed, from the lines of succession to the lush fields of the countryside, underpins its current political and social culture.

And the tragic spin of Haiti's history wheel continues. Whereas under Francois Duvalier the sinister “tonton macoute” gangs controlled the population, now it is Aristide's “chiméres” gangs doing the killing and beating. Members are recruited from the worst ghettos. Formed for the purpose of beating up or even murdering opposition, some of these gangs themselves are now considered “opposition.” One famous thug, Amiot Metayer, the alienated leader of a formerly pro-Aristide “community organization" called the “Cannibal Army,” was found dead on a roadside in Gonaives with his eyes shot out. His gang's members blame Aristide.

Even a cursory understanding of Haitian history should have taught the Clinton administration that to speak of “Restoring Freedom” in a country that never had it -- or wanted it -- is ridiculous. The real reason for Clinton's intervention was the invasion of Florida by Haitians, an invasion that has not abated and never will, because of the very fact that, by per capita income, Haitians today have only 60 percent of what they did in 1800. “Restore Freedom”? Freedom has not yet dawned upon Haiti's bloodstained shores. To insist Bill Clinton restored freedom insults the meaning of the word itself.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: aristide; clinton; duvalier; haiti; iraq; nationbuilding; papadoc; portauprince
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Haiti is edging into anarchy under Aristide's communist leadership. A coup is likely any day. Thanks X42.
1 posted on 02/18/2004 7:58:49 AM PST by XHogPilot
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To: XHogPilot
Clintoon-legacy bump.
2 posted on 02/18/2004 8:05:50 AM PST by bolobaby
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To: XHogPilot

not only was Aristide Clinton vehemently anti-capitalist and (ironically) anti-American, he was every bit as brutal a despot as his predecessors. To make matters worse, the Clinton administration Liberals knew beforehand of Aristide’s Clinton’s radical pedigree but chose to prop him into the dictator's chair anyway
 

Owl_Eagle

”Guns Before Butter.”

3 posted on 02/18/2004 8:11:19 AM PST by End Times Sentinel (“Before going out drinking, always tape a handcuff key to the inside of your watch band.”)
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To: XHogPilot
Clintoon blew it. I say let the U.N. fix his mess.
4 posted on 02/18/2004 8:12:23 AM PST by 1Old Pro
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To: XHogPilot
It is NOT a black or white thing. It is a socialism vs capitalism/democracy thing...
5 posted on 02/18/2004 8:14:31 AM PST by 2banana
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To: bolobaby
Clintoon-legacy bump.

Darn it, you beat me to it!

6 posted on 02/18/2004 8:16:14 AM PST by TheSpottedOwl (Until Kofi Annan rides the Jerusalem RTD....nothing will change.)
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To: XHogPilot
since 1994 the Catholic Left in Haiti has destroyed what little remained after two centuries of savagery in the name of social justice and heretical liberation theology

This is about the only phrase in the whole otherwise excellent article I would agree with. Aristedes was, unfortunately, a Catholic priest, but he did indeed go in, wholeheartedly, for "heretical liberation theology" (read Communist). This movement, led by Leonardo Boff, has always been opposed by the Pope and has fortunately receded in most of Latin America. Aristedes was, in fact, defrocked from the priesthood and condemned by the Church before the clinton Putsch, which no doubt made him ore attractive to clinton. The first thing Aristedes did on gaining power was tear down the Catholic cathedral and attempt to murder the bishop for defrocking him. So I think it's fair to say that Aristedes is a CINO--Catholic in Name Only.

7 posted on 02/18/2004 8:17:34 AM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: XHogPilot
It's only a matter of time before al-quaeda sets up in Haiti. An al-quaeda backed tyranny, with strong ties to drug trafficking, 150 miles from Miami and right next to the main shipping route from east coast ports to the Panama Canal would not be good for us at all.

America should strongly look at taking over Haiti and making it a US protectorate. With order restored under an American administration, Haiti would be an ideal location for off shore call centers and other industries.
8 posted on 02/18/2004 8:19:09 AM PST by bobjam
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To: XHogPilot
Its unfortunate that the Haitian people have had to endure the monotonous series of tyrants that have ruled that country since almost its initial inception.

We should remember that Haitian regiments in the service of the French Crown served here in the U.S. during our war for independence on our side. Haiti was also the second new world nation to throw off European domination after the United States ahd successfully achieved its own. Unlike the U.S. however, the European domination of Haiti by the despicable French was more than merely political. It was based totally on race slavery, a slavery far more oppressive and brutal than that suffered by American blacks in the anti-bellum south. This explains, but of course does not excuse, the excesses of the Haitian rebels against their brutal French overlords. As a matter of fact, I believe that the George Washington of Haiti, Toussant L'Overture (spelling) actually died miserably in a French prison after being perfidiously captured under a flag of truce.

Like the French troops who did likewise, they returned to their native country imbued with dangerous ideas - ideas of freedom and independence.

All people desire and deserve freedom and independence.

We here in America have been blessed by Divine Providence in having had an established foundation of freedom and self-rule based on institutions established in England that go back into the mists of the past.

The Jury System, Anglo-Saxon Common Law,an armed citizens' militia, the Magna Charta, the Provisions of Oxford, the House of Commons, etc. produced a long evolved sense of self-rule and concepts of freedom. These traditions and beliefs formed the foundations of political thinking of the very first Engllish settlers here.

Years of essential political isolation from direct control by the increasingly plutocratic and despotic British Crown allowed America's founders to experiment with democracy and perfect it. It is still evolving.

And so, we are fortunate in a way the French, the Germans, the Hatians, and others are not.

It takes time to develop a Democracy, time to develop a sense of the right and dignity of the individual.
9 posted on 02/18/2004 8:38:15 AM PST by ZULU (GOD BLESS SENATOR McCARTHY!!!!)
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To: bobjam
America should strongly look at taking over Haiti and making it a US protectorate

A lot of Haitians would love this. My wife is Haitian and I was there over the Christmas holidays.

Aristide is not at all unpopular with the ordinary people. The middle and upper classes, who are more aware of the corruption and failed socialism, are the ones who want him out now. Like everywhere, the socialist have managed to play the class warfare card to portray Aristide as the "friend of the poor" when he is anything but.

Aristide will be "term limited" in two years. As bad as things may be, Haiti really needs to learn how to change administrations without shooting up the place. Succession by coup always selects for the most brutal of candidates.

10 posted on 02/18/2004 9:41:28 AM PST by dinasour
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To: dinasour
Aristide will be "term limited" in two years.

Methinks Aristide will be "term limited" like Ceaucescu was.

11 posted on 02/18/2004 9:45:14 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: dfwgator
Methinks Aristide will be "term limited" like Ceaucescu was.

That could happen, but would be unfortunate. A civil war there would force US intervention. The Coast Guard wouldn't be able to interdict a million boat people.

12 posted on 02/18/2004 10:12:05 AM PST by dinasour
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

To: XHogPilot
The problem is Haiti is all Bush's fault. Did you not know that? Just wait a week or 2 and the mainstream media will tell you all about it.
14 posted on 02/18/2004 10:28:30 AM PST by Uncle Hal
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To: XHogPilot; All
Cross-link:

-Haiti, descending into chaos again--

And on a personal note, my brother-in-law's church just cancelled a humanitarian aid mission there.

15 posted on 02/18/2004 12:25:27 PM PST by backhoe (Has that Clinton "legacy" made you feel safer yet?)
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To: bobjam
Your suggeted solution has already been tried. The U.S. occupied and administered Haiti for twenty years between 1915 and the 1930s, and failure was the result. Unfortunately, for nation builders in both parties, the only reaction to repeated failure is to try, try again
16 posted on 02/18/2004 12:35:00 PM PST by Austin Willard Wright
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To: bobjam
Your suggeted solution has already been tried. The U.S. occupied and administered Haiti for twenty years between 1915 and the 1930s, and failure was the result. Unfortunately, for nation builders in both parties, the only reaction to repeated failure is to try, try again
17 posted on 02/18/2004 12:35:04 PM PST by Austin Willard Wright
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To: XHogPilot
Haiti is a Ghetto always has been... and with the same problems all Ghettos have.. Haiti needs a "PapaDoc" just as every Ghetto has their own PapaDoc's... Communism ghettoizes whatever it touches.. thats why...All communist leaders are PapDoc's.. the dictatorship of the proletariat requires a PapaDoc Duvalier whatever his name might be...

Communism is not LIKE socialism, it "IS" socialism....

18 posted on 02/18/2004 12:57:05 PM PST by hosepipe
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To: bobjam
America should strongly look at taking over Haiti and making it a US protectorate.

That was my thought when I saw the news this morning. It would be far easier and cheaper to take care of the Haitians in their own country, after we accomplished regime change, than it would be to let all of them swim over here, then have to deal with them. I'm sure we have some formally educated Haitians here who could form a reasonable government and non-corrupt police force.

Who knows, we might be able to convice the Cuban people to overthrow their dictator, too.

19 posted on 02/18/2004 12:57:37 PM PST by hunter112
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To: ThatsAllFolks2
They used to say that in England. Now more people go to a mosque there than an Anglican Church.
20 posted on 02/18/2004 1:24:50 PM PST by bobjam
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