Haitians running Haiti?
Now let’s fast forward to last December 31, 2003 as Luigi Einaudi
of the Organization of American States (OAS) is ushered into
the lobby of the Hotel Montana for Haiti’s bicentennial celebrations.
While checking into the luxury hotel he makes this comment in
front of several witnesses: “The real problem in Haiti is that
the international community is so screwed up and divided that
they are letting Haitians run Haiti.” When questioned about his
objectivity given his attendance at the opening of the Haiti
Democracy Project (HDP),
a Washington think-tank funded and supported by right-wing Haitians
opposed to President John Bertrand-Aristide, he becomes defensive
and denies he had been there at all. After it is pointed out
to him that there are photos on
the organization’s website of him with HDP Director James Morrell
he quips, “Maybe I was there, I don’t remember, but I really
think Morrell is a kook.” The exchange turns to the question
of Otto
Reich’s role as “fixer” for the Bush Administration in Haiti,
at which time Einaudi grows red in the face and visibly angry,
shouting, “You are ignorant, you don’t know what you are talking
about,” as he makes a mad dash for the Hotel’s elevator.
It is duly noted that Mr.
Einaudi has since gotten his wish. Haitians no longer run Haiti.
The Golden Rule of U.S. sponsored Democracy:
He Who Owns the Gold Makes the Rules
The forced ouster of Haiti’s president on February 29, 2004
begins with the economic and political isolation of Aristide’s
party, known as Lavalas, following the national elections of
May 21, 2000. Aristide’s predecessor, President Rene Preval,
delays the elections several times. Preval’s stated purpose is
to insure proper voter registration. The opposition accuses him
of delaying the national elections to coincide with the upcoming
presidential elections. The opposition and several “undisclosed
diplomatic sources” claim this is being done to give Lavalas
candidates the advantage of “riding on Aristide’s coattails.”
Preval finally relents despite his continuing
concerns over inadequate time for voter registration and security
preparations
for polling stations throughout the country. The elections are
finally held on May 21, 2000 and initially praised as the “most
free and fair election in Haitian history” by the U.S. State
Department and the Organization of American States (OAS). When
it becomes clear that the Lavalas party has won by a landslide,
despite the absence of Aristide’s mythical coattails, these very
same forces discredit the results of the elections.
After initially praising the process of the
elections, the OAS later claims that Lavalas purposely miscalculated
the vote to
favor seven of their senatorial candidates. It is interesting
to note that the OAS, and several non-governmental organizations
contracted by the United States Agency for International Development
(USAID), are at the same time deeply involved in overseeing and
monitoring these elections. They are included and present during
discussions by Haiti’s Provisional Election Council when it determines
the method to tabulate the final results. OAS representative
Orlande Marville, another apostle of the HDP and the “kook” James
Morrell, eventually leaks an internal memo criticizing the ballot
counting methods to the press rather then quietly negotiating
a solution. The OAS shows its hypocrisy when it turns a blind
eye to President Alberto Fujimori’s brazen electoral fraud in
Peru the same year. In Haiti, the OAS double standard results
in Lavalas ultimately forcing the seven contested senators to
resign and creating a timetable for new elections as a formula
for compromise.
Why Should I Play if My Rich Uncle’s Gonna
Pay Anyway?
Any political compromise is categorically
rejected by the Haitian “political
opposition” as it becomes more emboldened and entrenched due
to increasing funding and nurturing through programs sponsored
by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
and the European Union (EU). The opposition and their allies
use the issue of the seven contested senate seats to question
the validity of the entire election of May 2000. What is conveniently
ignored, especially today, is that these elections filled more
then 7500 national, municipal and local positions of government
largely due to a huge investment of money and human resources
by the United States and the international community. They got
the democratic process they demanded of Haiti but when the results
finally sink in, they do their best to distance themselves and
finally take to actively supporting a minority “political opposition” to
sully the results. This policy trajectory justifies suspending
all direct international assistance and loans to the government
of Haiti. As a result, it becomes increasingly difficult for
the majority political party, Lavalas, to implement strategies
to alleviate the conditions of extreme poverty among the country’s
poor majority – the party’s popular base.
In November 2000, Aristide is re-elected president of Haiti
after a terror campaign
of mysterious drive-by shootings and bombings rock the capital.
Despite the violence and the political opposition’s decision
to boycott the election, independent international observers
rescue their validity by pronouncing the vote free and fair despite
a low turnout. The press gives ample attention to the detractors
of this election but are conspicuously silent on the three weeks
of terror that preceded it.
Following this period, most international
press attention focuses on the negatives of the Aristide government.
The Lavalas party’s
land reform for the peasants and universal literacy programs
are ignored and dismissed as insignificant by the outside world.
Financial and political isolation begins to take its toll. This
becomes a period in which anything positive about Lavalas appears
to be censored while anything that damages the credibility of
the Haitian government is magnified. In this political climate,
even former “leftist” allies of Lavalas, so-called Haitian human
rights organizations and members of Haiti’s press, justify accepting
tours to the United States – paid for by the U.S. State Department.
During these tours they are encouraged to develop contacts with
the alternative media and the United States “Left” as they preach
the evils of Aristide and Lavalas to a largely uninformed American
audience.
The political and financial isolation of
Aristide and Lavalas following the May 2000 elections also
opened new and unprecedented
levels of support for the “political opposition” from the U.S.
and their partners in the international community. Although this “political
opposition” was incapable of winning at the polls, the U.S. and
the international community provide legitimacy to their Haitian
surrogates by giving them the option to paralyze the country
with a veto over any political compromise that will break the
stalemate over the elections. The final attempt to force the
opposition to make a reasonable compromise with Aristide is a
power sharing solution brokered by the Caribbean Community (CARICOM)
in early February 2004. The opposition, which clearly sees no
advantage in negotiation as long as the U.S. and the EU continue
to support their intransigence, once again rejects compromise.
The Death Insurance Policy
Two years prior to CARICOM’s last ditch effort
to save democracy in Haiti, new and ominous reports emerge
of killings by paramilitary
forces comprised of former death squads and disbanded military
using the Dominican Republic as a safe
haven. At the same time, Haiti’s small but powerful economic
elite is slowly rehabilitated as the legitimate leadership of
the opposition to Lavalas. Andre Apaid, a wealthy owner of many
sweatshops in Haiti, is suddenly touted as an indigenous Gandhi
fighting the evil dictatorship of Aristide while the press and
much of the Haitian left conveniently refrain from questioning
the conditions he imposes upon his own employees. With U.S. and
EU support, Apaid is ultimately able to turn out thousands of
demonstrators demanding Aristide’s resignation. The real power
behind these numbers soon becomes apparent. Apaid’s “movement” evaporates
into next to nothing following Secretary of State Colin Powell’s
disingenuous statement in mid-February 2004 that Washington will
not accept removing Aristide through unconstitutional means.
In the blink of an eye, what was touted in the press as tens
of thousands, mobilized by Apaid to demand Aristide’s resignation,
is reduced to a raucous and violent crowd of several hundred.
While Apaid organizes the opposition demonstrations on the ground,
it is always the U.S. State Department that holds the power of
life or death over Haiti’s fledgling democracy and Aristide's
presidency. Powell’s words soon turn hollow as those now infamous "undisclosed
officials" in Washington are heard from once again. This
time they claim that only a change in the way Haiti is run, and
that includes the possibility of Aristide stepping down, will
solve Haiti's "political crisis."
It is at this moment that the aforementioned
paramilitary forces in the Dominican Republic are suddenly “discovered” in Haiti
by the corporate media amid significant fanfare. While President
Aristide and his spokesmen were left to shout at the wind about
deadly armed incursions by these same forces for more than two
years, corporate media organizations suddenly cough up nice salaries,
per diems and expense accounts in February 2004 to provide the “rebels” with
unprecedented media coverage. These well-armed and trained forces
in Haiti are led by a former Haitian military officer, Guy Phillipe,
accused of human rights abuses by organizations such as Human
Rights Watch and labeled a drug trafficker by the Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) in the spring of 2001. Phillipe’s fellow
ringleader is Jodel Chamblain, the infamous former second in
command of the dreaded paramilitary death squad, the Front for
Advancement and Progress in Haiti (FRAPH). FRAPH was trained
by the CIA and unleashed upon the Haitian population in the aftermath
of the violent military coup against Aristide in 1991. This
band of former military and death squad killers now wreaks havoc
in the north of Haiti – the ultimate threat and justification
for the U.S. government to remove the country’s democratically
elected president.
Dressing the Stage to Orchestrate the Fall
The media’s grand entrance and belated discovery of the paramilitary
forces from the Dominican Republic ushers in what is generously
described by many observers in Port au Prince as “superb theater.” Foreign
embassy after foreign embassy publicly pleads with their citizens
to flee Haiti as the “rebels surround the capital.” Suddenly,
fifty U.S. marines fly into Haiti dressed in full battle gear,
ostensibly to check on security preparations at the U.S. Embassy.
Representatives of the U.S.- and EU-backed opposition to Aristide
take to the airwaves with daily pronouncements that an exit strategy
has already been prepared for the president and it is just a
matter of time before his eventual departure. Then there is the
frightened reaction of the masses of Lavalas partisans who erect
elaborate and deadly barricades at all entrances to Port au Prince
and, finally, throughout the main thoroughfares of the capital
itself. It becomes clear to most observers on the ground that
the so-called rebels never stand a chance of entering the capital
despite U.S. claims to the contrary. Supplies of diesel gasoline,
which is needed to run the mighty turbine generators that provide
electricity to the capital, begin to dwindle as nightly blackouts
combine with the sporadic gunfire of determined Aristide partisans
to create an atmosphere of fear and tension. The drama reaches
epic proportions, as the U.S. demands all of its citizens to
abandon Haiti and, for some unknown reason, suspends all commercial
airline flights to the capital. All of this despite the fact
that not a single foreign national ever receives so much
as a scratch during this period, nor is there ever any threat
whatsoever to the now seemingly sacred tarmac of the Toussaint
Louverture International Airport. The stage is now set to provide
a plausible pretext to remove Haiti’s elected president. All
that’s needed is one more turn of the screw to bring on the final
act.
Friends in Struggle: Venezuela and South
Africa Force Washington’s
Hand
The second week of February 2004 President
Aristide made a public pronouncement that he would never resign
his elected authority,
invoking the image of the fallen democrat Salvador Allende of
Chile by announcing he was “willing to die in office.” The following
week it appeared Washington had all the pieces in place to take
him out including the final gambit of a “rebel” paramilitary
army surrounding Port au Prince. In Washington it was thought
this was more than enough to pressure Aristide into voluntarily
resigning his office and fleeing Haiti. More important was that
all of Washington’s window dressing would give the impression
of yet another embattled dictator of Haiti falling upon his own
sword. The State Department needed just a little more time to
close the noose around Aristide’s neck. The plan was to allow
Phillipe and Chamblain’s forces to move closer to the capital
and clash with defending Lavalas partisans, thus making the scenario
complete for the gullible international press. Unfortunately,
this calculation depended upon a weakened and docile president
of Haiti, paralyzed and incapable of defending himself. Reality
caught U.S. planners by surprise and led to what history will
recall as one of the greatest scandals of U.S.-sponsored democracy
in Latin America and the Caribbean.
In the days preceding Aristide’s overthrow a press report surfaces
that causes panic in the U.S. State Department. An undisclosed
Venezuelan diplomat is quoted as saying his government is prepared
to provide unilateral assistance to the Haitian government under
the terms of the Rio Treaty and the Democratic Charter of the
Organization of American States. At about the same time a credible
source working in the U.S. Embassy in Port au Prince leaks word
of intercepted phone calls of advisors close to Aristide who
are “actively procuring additional arms and ammunition to re-supply
the Haitian National Police. These same advisors discussed releasing
existing stockpiles of arms to local auxiliary forces aligned
with Lavalas.” This new information means that Aristide and
his advisors were actively pursuing means to defend his government
by force of arms, and that the image the U.S. State Department
promulgated of a defeated president reconciled to his fate would
no longer play with the media. It was determined that they had
to act fast before Aristide regrouped for the final showdown.
While the United States watches Venezuela
closely for any move on the part of the Chavez government to
aid Aristide, CARICOM
quietly negotiates with a second friendly nation to provide arms,
ammunition and riot control gear for the Haitian police. The
Republic of South Africa, whose President Thabo Mbeki was one
of the highest ranking international dignitaries to attend Haiti’s
bicentennial celebrations, agrees to send 150 R1 rifles, 5 000
bullets, 200 smoke grenades, and 200 bullet-proof vests to re-supply
Haiti’s embattled police. The U.S. Marines enter Aristide’s residence
with overwhelming force and put him on a plane the very moment
a Boeing 747 filled with this equipment is refueling on a tarmac
in Kingston, Jamaica, less than 300 miles away.
Jamaican Prime Minister PJ Patterson later admits the plane
was refueling in Jamaica before heading on to Haiti, but that
it had been stopped after Aristide's departure. A far cry from
the image presented by the governments of Washington, Paris and
Ottawa of a defeated leader resigned to his fate, it is now clear
that Aristide was prepared to fight to the end to continue his
democratic mandate and the right of Haitians to run Haiti. The
U.S. Marines intervened to insure this would never happen.