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All hell is about to break loose in Haiti...

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Maddy McCall Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 06:36 PM
Original message
All hell is about to break loose in Haiti...
Rebels are 30 miles outside of Port au Prince--the capital city--right now. CNN said their analysts expect the city to fall in the next 24 hours.

Whoa! It will be a bloodbath. Can someone refresh my memory on how much American support Bush has ordered to Haiti?

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knight_of_the_star Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 06:38 PM
Response to Original message
1. I heard from a friend
That they are shipping I think 20 Marines over to the embassy. That won't be able to do much.
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izzie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 07:53 PM
Response to Reply #1
13. I heard 2000 waiting to go in and 20 are at embassy now.
Do they have any oil?
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Tinoire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 07:55 PM
Response to Reply #13
14. No oil... I hope the people burn down that embassy
It has been complicit, up to its neck and for decades, in oppressing them.
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nothingshocksmeanymore Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 06:38 PM
Response to Original message
2. You mean troops or the covert help for the insurgency?
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Maddy McCall Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 06:47 PM
Response to Reply #2
9. Good point.
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Character Assassin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 10:23 PM
Response to Reply #2
25. Well, let's just be ever so precise here. What, exactly, do you mean?
Well?
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ThomWV Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 06:40 PM
Response to Original message
3. No Oil - Who Cares?
Edited on Sat Feb-28-04 06:40 PM by ThomWV
Its not like this was eskimos trying to reclaim the ANWR.
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Tinoire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 06:43 PM
Original message
This is horrible / Hundreds March for Haitian President
In answer to your question, Bush, the NED, & the SOA have been meddling with Haiti for years. He sent support to guard the US Embassy and to protect the overseers of the American corporations down there.

There's free labor in Haiti. The Imperialists aren't letting go of that.

Bloodbath. Owwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww.


Hundreds March for Haitian President

Reported By: The Associated Press
Last Modified: 2/28/2004 6:26:58 PM


NEW YORK (AP) -- Hundreds of supporters of Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide marched in New York on Saturday, demanding that the United States and France resist rebels' demands for his ouster.

"The call for the overthrow of Aristide, the democratically elected president of Haiti, by France, the former colonial power, is clearly racist," said Johnnie Stevens of the International
Action Center, a group in the coalition that organized the march.

At least 1,000 protesters marched in Brooklyn, carrying banners proclaiming "U.S. & France: Stop Supporting Subversion in Haiti" and "Election, Yes, Coup d'Etat, No."

<snip>

The Brooklyn demonstrators blamed the violence on outsiders.

"It is clear to us who know Haiti that this is not an uprising of the Haitian people against their government, but rather a military operation by Haitian former soldiers and death squads with
the support of shadowy sectors in the U.S. and Dominican governments," said Ray Laforest, a native of Haiti and member of the Brooklyn-based Haiti Support Network.

<snip>

http://www.11alive.com/news/usnews_article.aspx?storyid=43552




CNN Poll:
Should the U.S. accept refugees from Haiti during the current crisis?

Yes 32% 55862 votes

No 68% 119057 votes
Total: 174919 votes

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pinniped Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 06:43 PM
Response to Original message
4. Stupid AWOL chimp told them to stay put it will be alright.
Edited on Sat Feb-28-04 06:44 PM by sfg25
:eyes:
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coloradodem2005 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 06:43 PM
Response to Original message
5. I thought Hell already did break loose in Haiti.
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Leilani Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 06:44 PM
Response to Original message
6. There are several ships on the way
but I think they're 2-3 days away yet.

The few marines we sent in are guarding the embassy.
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gristy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 06:47 PM
Response to Reply #6
8. Ships are 2-3 days away??
I guess all our planes are busy over in you know where... shit.
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Tinoire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 06:46 PM
Response to Original message
7.  A rebel leader in Haiti says he's heeding a US request to hold off attack
(Cap-Haitien, Haiti-AP) Feb. 28, 2004 - A rebel leader in Haiti says he's heeding a US request to hold off attacking the capital.

Guy Philippe says that rebels will continue to assemble outside Port-au-Prince, but won't attack the city for a day or two.

<snip>

http://www.wistv.com/Global/story.asp?S=1675941
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Maddy McCall Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 06:49 PM
Response to Reply #7
10. Evidently they are on the move toward the capital now...
and are disregarding Bush's assurances.
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Tinoire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 07:16 PM
Response to Reply #10
12. Someone PLEASE send a film crew and televise this revolution!
Bush may he & his minions ROT in hell.

This is enough to make me sacrifice any principle I ever had and become whorishly ABB.

Bush is evil unrestrained. It may be wiser to endorse restrained evil. Grappling with this now....

===
US puts blame on Aristide
From correspondents in Washington
February 29, 2004

THE White House today directly blamed Haitian President Jean Bertrand Aristide for the current crisis in his country and questioned "his fitness to continue to govern".

"This long-simmering crisis is largely of Mr Aristide's making," White House press secretary Scott McClellan said in a written statement.

"His failure to adhere to democratic principles has contributed to the deep polarisation and violent unrest that we are witnessing in Haiti today.

"His own actions have called into question his fitness to continue to govern Haiti."

<snip>

http://www.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,4057,8827095%255E1702,00.html
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Baclava Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 07:14 PM
Response to Original message
11. The poor will suffer even more...
Corruption and brutality have been the norm there for the last 200 years. I'm afraid the slaughter will continue.

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DoYouEverWonder Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 08:04 PM
Response to Original message
15. Bu$h sent in 50 marines the other day
He is thinking about sending the 24th Marine Brigade(?, about 2000 troops, but hasn't made a decision yet. It they do go they have to send the ship to Camp LeJeune first to pick up the unit, hang out for a few days and then its a 2 day sail to Haiti. So another week at the earliest, if W feels like it. In the meantime he has sent a Coast Guard cutter to the area to prevent refugees from getting too far. There must be at least one cutter in the area already because they've already sent back one ship with about 500 refuges.

I guess the Haitian people don't deserve freedom and democracy, we're too busy spending billions pretending we are giving it to the Iraqi people.

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Tinoire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 08:19 PM
Response to Original message
16. More info on Haiti and why/how the Right hates Aristide
How did Aristide become president and what has he done?

Aristide, a populist, leftist, charismatic leader of the poor, was first elected president in 1991, by a landslide. Within a few months, he was deposed and replaced by a brutal military government, whose leaders now seek to return to power. In 1994, U.S. and U.N. forces restored Aristide to the presidency. Haiti had been the poorest country in the hemisphere before 1991. After the coup, its economy was further destroyed. Yet international economic aid, promised for Haiti's rebuilding, came in tiny trickles rather than in the needed flood.

When Aristide's first term ended, he acceded to the constitutional prohibition against consecutive presidential terms, even though he had lived in exile for most of his first term. The next president, also a candidate of Aristide's Lavalas party, was René Preval. During Preval's 1996-2001 term, the opposition continued to do what it does so well—to oppose any and all government initiatives and sabotage progress. In 2000, Aristide was again elected president, and he began his current five-year term in 2001.

Seizing upon the excuse offered by opposition criticism of the 2000 elections, the United States orchestrated a suspension of international aid. The small amounts of aid that have been doled out have been conditioned on adoption of neo-liberal economic measures, such as cutting education spending and ending fuel subsidies. These measures are anathema to Aristide's political base, and his reluctant acquiescence in them has alienated some of that base. Haiti remains divided between the desperately poor farmers and slum-dwellers and a small elite running export-import businesses and light industry.

<snip>

Where is the United States government in all of this?

The United States government has never been comfortable with the leftist, populist platform of Jean-Bertrand Aristide. The U.S. National Endowment for Democracy has consistently funded opposition groups in Haiti, including many members of the Democratic Convergence.

During the current violence, the U.S. position has fluctuated from day to day, and from official to official. Donald Rumsfeld, quoted on PBS News Hour February 16, gave perhaps the most accurate view of the currently unclear U.S. position: "Needless to say, everyone is hopeful that the situation, which tends to ebb and flow down there, will stay below a certain threshold, and that there's—we have no plans to do anything. By that, I don't mean we have no plans. Obviously, we have plans to do everything in the world that we can think of. But we—there's no intention at the present time, or no reason to believe, that any of the thinking that goes into these things year in and year out would have to be utilized."


Haiti Q & A. By Mary Turck. 2/23/04
==

Perhaps by now the rebels, led by former death squad leader Louis-Jodel Chamblain and coup plotter Jean-Baptiste Joseph, operating under the umbrella of the so-called opposition, will have taken Port au Prince and President Aristide will have left Haiti.

In retrospect, it was bound to happen. Mr Aristide must have been exceedingly naive, at the resumption of his presidency after his first overthrow, if he harboured a view that he would have been allowed to maintain his leadership with any degree of certainty. And the rest of us were gullible to expect that the opposition would have entertained a political and constitutional solution to Haiti's current crisis.

It is hardly coincidental that yesterday's capture, by the gunmen of Cap-Hatien, and the new push for Port-au-Prince, comes hard on the heels of Mr Aristide's second public embrace of a set of initiatives of which the United States has appropriated authorship, but which in fact was developed by Caribbean Community (Caricom) leaders at a meeting in Kingston last month.

<snip>
Haiti's Obscene Nightmare. Editorial, The Jamaica Observer, 2/23/04.

===
Haiti’s “armed opposition” launched its most lethal offensive yet last week, creating the civil strife that many suspect Washington seeks to justify foreign military intervention in the country. On Feb. 10, State Department officials gave their first public hints that they would favor President Jean-Bertrand Aristide’s resignation.

CARICOM representatives are flying to Washington this week to meet with Bush administration officials about the crisis in Haiti. A State Department official contacted by Haïti Progrès Feb. 10 would not comment on whether Aristide’s removal was on the meeting’s agenda. He would only repeat that “President Aristide is the democratically elected leader of his country.”

Meanwhile, in one of the largest mobilizations in recent years, hundreds of thousands of Haitians marched and rallied in Port-au-Prince on Feb. 7, the anniversary of the 1986 fall of the Duvalier dictatorship, to demand that Aristide fulfill his five-year term, which ends Feb. 6, 2006. Thousands more held similar anti-coup demonstrations in provincial cities. Pro-government popular organizations have begun setting up barricades and taking up arms in the capital and other cities like Jacmel, Cayes and Cap Haïtien to prevent the spread of the armed opposition’s attacks.

<snip>

In Washington, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher gave the first inkling that the Bush administration is preparing the ground for Aristide’s unconstitutional removal. “e recognize that reaching a political settlement will require some fairly thorough changes in the way Haiti is governed and how the security situation is maintained,” Boucher coyly responded when asked if Washington thought the elected president should remain in office until the end of his term.

<snip>

In any such scenario, the armed opposition or foreign troops would face a very hostile reception from an armed and angry Haitian people. “With President Aristide, the people began a real revolution,” said Pierre Antoine Lovinsky, head of the September 30 Foundation which champions victims of the 1991 coup. “And that revolution will not go backwards. The people will prove that.”

<snip>

As Contras Launch Major Offensive, Washington Suggests Aristide Removal. Haiti Progres, 2/11/04.

===

Part I

January 1, 1804--January 1, 2004:

This day is sacred.

It is the 200th anniversary of the Haitian Revolution.

Fought by Haitians.

Won for us all.

Between 1791 and 1804, hundreds of thousands of Africans enslaved in Haiti ignored the rivers, forests, precipices, swamps, mountains, gorges, bloodhounds, rifles, cannon, and whips that separated them and united to launch a massive, brilliantly executed, spectacular war of liberation that the armies of Spain, England, and France (with the help of the United States) all fought desperately--and failed absolutely--to crush.

The Haitian Revolution was no "lucky break" involving "a few unruly slaves."

This was no "plantation uprising."

St. Domingue (as Haiti was then called by the French) was at that time the most prosperous colonial possession of any European power. It created far greater wealth for France than the thirteen American colonies combined. Its massive wealth-generating capacity caused it to be known far and wide as "The Pearl of the Antilles" and its French owners had a clear and proven management strategy for profit maximization: push the slaves to their absolute physical limit, work them literally to death, and then quickly import replacement slaves from Africa who would, in turn, be worked to death. This, St. Domingue's plantocracy had discovered, controlled operating costs, kept the pace of economic activity at a highly efficient and productive pace, minimized slack and wastage, and produced massive, stupendous profits.

Two hundred years ago today, however, after a 13-year war of liberation, the slaves of St. Domingue celebrated their victory over France and other European powers by establishing the Republic of Haiti. They had wrested from Napoleon the engine of France's economic expansion, banished slavery from the land, and ended European domination of 10,000 square miles of fertile land and hundreds of thousands of slaves to work it.

They had shattered the myth of European invincibility.

"Most have assumed that (Haiti's) slaves had no military experience prior to the revolution," John K. Thornton explains in African Soldiers in the Haitian Revolution. "Many assume that they rose from agricultural labour to military prowess in an amazingly short time.... However, it is probably a mistake to see the slaves of St. Domingue as simply agricultural workers, like the peasants of Europe... ...A majority of St. Domingue's slaves, especially those who fought steadily in the revolution, were born in Africa... ...In fact, a great many... ...had served in African armies prior to their enslavement and arrival in Haiti... ...Sixty to seventy per cent of the adult slaves listed on (St. Domingue's) inventories in the late 1780's and 1790's were African born... ... ...(coming) overwhelmingly from just two areas of Africa: the Lower Guinea coast region of modern Benin, Togo and Nigeria (also known as the "Slave Coast"), and the Angola coast area....

"Where the African military background of the slaves counted most was in those areas, especially in the north (of St. Domingue), where slaves themselves led the revolution, both politically and militarily... ... ...These areas...threw up the powerful armies of Toussaint Louverture and Dessalines and eventually carried the revolution."

A successful revolution in Haiti, Thornton explains, "required the kind of skill and discipline that could be found in veteran soldiers, and it was these veterans, from wars in Africa, who made up the general will of the St. Domingue revolt... ...Kongolese armies contributed the most to St. Domingue rebel bands... ...(Their) tactical organization was very different from that of Europe... ...(and they) had learned to deal successfully with Portuguese armies and tactics in the years of struggle (in Africa), driving out invaders... ...No doubt these tactics could help those who found themselves in St. Domingue on the eve of the revolution.

"Kongolese armies seem to have been organized in...platoons...that struck at enemy advancing columns and sustained an engagement for a time before breaking off and retreating... ...They made use of cover, both from terrain and from woods and tall grass, in hiding their movements and directing their fire. When they fled it was not possible to follow them." Portuguese troops who had fought the Kongolese in Africa also reported that the Kongolese used "shocks--larger engagements involving massed Kongolese units. According to the Portuguese accounts, large bodies were assembled for shocks supported by artillery, sometimes they formed in extensive half moon formations which apparently sought partial envelopment of opposing forces, in other cases in columns of great depth along fronts of 15-20 soldiers....

"Their tactics showed a penchant for skirmishing attacks rather than the heavy assaults favoured by Europeans in the same era... ...Kongolese armies had a higher command structure that could mass troops quickly, and soldiers were also accustomed to forming effectively into larger units for major battles when the situation warranted.... ...Dahomey's armies included a fairly large professional force... ...Oyo relied heavily on cavalry forces, had relatively few foot soldiers and throughout the 1700's was the pre-eminent...military power in (west Africa)... ...Dahomey's troops... ...fought in close order using fire discipline quite similar to that of Europe... ...

"It was from these disparate 'arts of war' that the revolutionary African soldier of St. Domingue was trained... ...

"One can easily see, in the formation of the bands mentioned in the early descriptions of the (Haitian Revolution), the small platoons of the Kongolese armies, each under an independent commander and accustomed to considerable tactical decision making; or perhaps those small units characteristic of locally organized Dahomean units; the state armies of the Mahi country; or the coastal forces of the Slave Coast... ...

"In addition the pattern of attacks with small scale harassing maneuvers, short, sustained battles and then rapid withdrawals are also reminiscent of the campaign diaries of the Portuguese field commanders in Angola. Felix Carteau, an early observer of the war in the north of St. Domingue noted that the (slave revolutionaries) harassed French forces day and night. Usually, he commented, they were repelled, but each time, they dispersed so quickly, so completely in ditches, hedges and other areas of natural cover that real pursuit was impossible. However, rebel casualties were light in these attacks, so that the next day they reappeared with great numbers of people. They never mass in the open, wrote another witness, or wait in line to charge, but advance dispersed, so that they appear to be six times as numerous as they really are. Yet they were disciplined, since they might advance with great clamor and then suddenly and simultaneously fall silent....

"It was not long before observers noted that the rebels (in St. Domingue) had developed the sort of higher order tactics that was also characteristic of Kongolese forces, or those of the Slave Coast....

"In addition to these tactical similarities to African wars, especially in Kongo, there were other indications of the African ethos of the fighters... ...they marched, formed and attacked accompanied by the 'music peculiar to Negroes....' Their religious preparation, likewise, hearkened back to Africa....

"It is unlikely that many slaves would have learned equestrian skills as a part of their plantation labor... ...Since there was virtually no cavalry in Angola, one can speculate that rebels originating from Oyo might have provided at least some of the trained horsemen. Also, the Senegalese, though a minority, also came from an equestrian culture... ...

"African soldiers may well have provided the key element of the early success of the revolution. They might have enabled its survival when it was threatened by reinforced armies from Europe. Looking at the rebel slaves of Haiti as African veterans rather than as Haitian plantation workers may well prove to be the key that unlocks the mystery of the success of the largest slave revolt in history."

St. Domingue's policy of working its slaves to death and then quickly importing replacements from Africa proved to be the ultimate karmic boomerang. St. Domingue's African-born slaves not only were not yet broken psychologically, but they were also in possession of significant military training and experience gained on the other side of the Atlantic. And they combined with brilliant, indefatigable, St. Domingue-born blacks like Toussaint L'Ouverture and Dessalines to create a black revolutionary juggernaut the likes of which Europe and the United States had not seen before--or since.

The blacks of St. Domingue forced the world to see both them and the millions of other Africans enslaved throughout the Americas with new eyes. No longer could it be assumed that they could forever be brutalized into creating massive fortunes and building sprawling empires for the glory of Europe and America.

On January 1, 1804, hundreds of thousands of slave revolutionaries established an independent republic and named it Haiti in honor of the Amerindian people, long since killed off by European brutality and diseases, who had called the land Ayiti--Land of Many Mountains. They had banished slavery from their land and proclaimed it an official refuge for escaped slaves from anywhere in the world. They had defeated the mightiest of the mighty. They had shattered the myth of European invincibility.

Europe was livid. America, apoplectic. The blacks in St. Domingue had forgotten their place and would be made to pay. Dearly. For the next two hundred years.

Toussaint L'Ouverture, Dessalines, and their slave revolutionaries must forever live in our hearts as inspiring, authentic counterweights to the "yassuh-nosuh-scratch-where-ah-don'-itch-and-dance-tho-there -ain'-no-music" image of our forebears that Europe and the United States have drilled into our psyches.

And we must remember that history forgets, first, those who forget themselves. Via means direct and indirect, crass and subtle, there have been whispers and street corner shouts that "current conditions in Haiti" make our celebration of the Haitian Revolution "inappropriate" at this time.

We, whose souls and psyches have been bleached of everything prior to the Middle Passage are now being told that we must tear from our consciousness and rip from our hearts the most dramatic and triumphal assertion of forebears' dignity, worth, and perspicacity since the Middle Passage.

How diabolically contemptuous.

Not only must we not forget the Haitian Revolution, we must celebrate it. Today, through all of this its bicentennial year, and beyond.

And we must research, understand, and expose what happened to Haiti and in Haiti since the revolution. We must become fully conversant with the role of "the world's leading democracies" in Haiti between 1804 and today. We must develop a keen understanding of the repercussions of the 61-year economic embargo that the United States imposed on Haiti in response to its declaration of independence, and we must recognize the current-day consequences of France forcing Haiti to pay 90 million in gold francs (equivalent today to some $20 billion) in 1825 as "compensation" for Haiti declaring its independence--or be crushed militarily by France.

Today, "the world's leading democracies" cluck and gloat at their ongoing stranglehold--in the form of a crushing financial embargo--on today's descendants of Toussaint, Dessalines, and their freedom fighters. Throughout the Americas, we who benefited from the daring war waged by the slaves of St. Domingue, must reject the maneuverings of the world's most powerful nations in Haiti and find ways to build bridges to the Haitian people and the officials they choose--through the ballot--to lead them.

Just over two hundred years ago, after there had been a "cessation of hostilities" and the brilliant military strategist Toussaint L'Ouverture had already retired to a quiet life in the St. Domingue country-side, France decided, nonetheless, to arrest and ship him to a prison cell 3,000 feet up the Jura Mountains of France where he would freeze to death. As he stepped on board the boat that would forever take him away from St. Domingue, Toussaint issued a promise to his captors and a call to us all.

"In overthrowing me, you have cut down in St. Domingue only the trunk of the tree of liberty. It will spring up again by the roots for they are numerous and deep."

We are those roots.

The revolution was fought by Haitians, but won for us all.

Through our work and with our resources, in a spirit of self-respect and self-awareness, we must serve as counterweights to the powerful nations who deem the ballot box sacrosanct in their countries, but surreptitiously encourage and manipulate its rejection by "the opposition" in Haiti. We must serve as proponents of political civility and social justice in Haiti while "the world's leading democracies" slyly encourage recalcitrance, tumult, and division. We must reject being manipulated by the corporate media into embracing the notion that in France, Germany, the United States and other "civilized nations" elections are the only legitimate determinant of the will of the people, but in Haiti those street demonstrations specially selected by the corporate media for coverage tell us all we need to know about anybody's will. We must impress upon all Haitians the fact that the outside world does not distinguish between--and cares nothing about--Lavalas, Convergence, or any other political grouping. The world sees only "Haiti," "Haitians," and all the connotations that western media have attached thereto. Those nations that two hundred years ago failed desperately in their attempts to crush the Haitian Revolution today have a deep psychic need to "prove" Toussaint's progeny capable of nothing but disaster. We must reach out to and work with our Haitian brothers and sisters to prove these nations wrong.

Throughout the Diaspora, we must stand with and defend Haiti--on this the anniversary of the Haitian Revolution, throughout this bicentennial year, and for all time. For in so doing, we stand for and defend ourselves.

Part II

Haiti, Jessica, and WMD

America's foreign policy officials have perpetrated horrific untruths recently. Iraq's "weapons of mass destruction," Jessica Lynch's "battlefield heroism" and "abuse," and Aristide's "failure to deliver" in Haiti are cases in point.

Iraq's oil, the fear of war-triggered terrorism, and Iraq's antiquity have made us more aware, and less susceptible--though not immune--to media manipulation regarding Iraq. Similarly, American soldiers who have served in Iraq have American defenders who will not allow these soldiers' contributions to be overlooked while, for example, Jessica Lynch's truth is trampled and twisted to whip up "patriotism" and animus for "the bad guys."

Who, however, knows or cares anything about Haiti? How many Americans know that--in our names--American policy-makers have used our country's enormous power to block 8 million Haitians' access to approved loans for safe drinking water, literacy programs, and health services? How many know, when we read about "Haiti's steady slide," that powerful American policy-makers are massively responsible? These officials are holding the Haitian people, who desperately want to own their democracy, in a brutal economic death-grip. Is this the face that America intends to continue showing to the black and brown peoples of the world? Ordinary Americans can no longer afford indifference.

Our president says that we are terrorism targets because "they are jealous of us"; because "we love liberty and they do not"; because we represent "truth and justice."

Is it really our compassion and magnanimity that cause the rage in distant hearts to reduce Bali tourist spots to embers, Manhattan towers to dust, and our Nairobi embassy to rubble? If so, the Dali Lama is in great danger.

In these times, Americans must assess what our policies are doing to human beings beyond our shores. And we must realize that the same "information" machine that lied about WMD and Jessica Lynch lies about much more--including Aristide and Haiti.

The United States has had Haitian blood on its hands for a long time. Today, they are dripping.

In 2000, the year of our electoral meltdown, election observers in Haiti recommended that seven senate seats (out of a total of 7,500 positions filled nation-wide) go to a run-off. Haiti's electoral commission disagreed, creating the only international concern about the election. To avoid "the wrath of the mighty," these senators resigned. However, American officials who had vehemently opposed the restoration of Haiti's elected government in 1994, now seized on the run-off controversy to further demonize Aristide, break the Haitian people's spirit, and "prove" the Haitian Revolution a failure

Powerful Americans are crushing the Haitian people's dream of building their own democracy in their own image, and these officials blocking Haitians' access to safe drinking water tells us all we need to know. They loathe Aristide because he represents the poorer, blacker masses of Haitian society, whereas America's traditional allies have always been Haiti's moneyed, white or mulatto "elite." The parallels between America's policies toward Haiti and our policies towards apartheid South Africa have never been lost on me.

During my colleagues' and my battle to end America's long-standing collusion with South Africa's white supremacist government, highly respected U.S. government officials publicly asserted that Mandela and the African National Congress were terrorist and that the anti-apartheid movement was antithetical to U.S. interests. Aristide's government was restored in 1994 following a coup in which Haiti's US-allied army killed 5,000 civilians. And those American officials who had defended apartheid South Africa lost no time in turning their policy venom full bore on today's descendents of the most spectacular slave revolt in the history of all the Americas--and the man Haitians chose to lead them.

Aristide has not "failed to deliver." Powerful individuals from the most powerful nation on earth have placed a financial embargo on his country and made the strangulation of his government--and therefore his people--a priority. They are determined to render him incapable of delivering so that his people will, in time, tire of the excruciating hardships and tire of him.

At the dawn of this New Year, perhaps we should reflect on what we have done to Aristide, what we have done to the Haitian people, and on Thomas Jefferson's lament: "When I consider that God is just, I shudder for my country." The way we continue to treat weaker peoples and nations around the world will determine, for years to come, whether justice is something Americans have reason to welcome or something we have reason to dread.

Randall Robinson is founder and former president of TransAfrica. He is an author and lives in the Caribbean.

Honor Haiti, Honor Ourselves By Randall Robinson, 1/1/04, http://www.counterpunch.org/robinson01012004.html or http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=%22Honor+Haiti%2C+Honor+Ourselves%3B+Forget+Haiti%2C+Forget+Ourselves%22

Reprinted in its entirety with permission from Kathy at CounterPunch 1-800-840-3683


http://www.americas.org/index.php?cp=item&item_id=13760
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Tinoire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 08:34 PM
Response to Original message
17. Here's more, lots more
Edited on Sat Feb-28-04 08:35 PM by Tinoire
While U.S. Tries to Mask it's Role - Haitians resist coup attempt
By Deirdre Griswold
Feb 26, 2004, 14:01

February 26, 2004 - As heavily armed gangs led by paramilitary death-squad leaders from former dictatorships take over a broad swath of Haiti, vowing to topple the government of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and lynching scores of his supporters, the question being asked in the popular movements of the region is: What role is the U.S. imperialist government playing in all this?

Washington is being careful not to take credit for the coup attempt, which was launched on Feb. 5 in the northern port city of Gonaives. Secretary of State Colin Powell said on Feb. 17 that there was no "enthusiasm" in the Bush administration for intervention.

Not everyone in the State Department had gotten the word, however. An Australian newspaper, The Age, reported on Feb. 17 that "U.S. Ambassador James Foley today said Washington wants 'radical change,' even while Powell has said the United States does not support Aristide's ouster."

At this point, any open U.S. intervention would have to at least nominally be in support of the elected government against those whom even Powell acknowledges are "thugs and killers." Washington would probably prefer to let the death squads do their work of weakening the government and the popular resistance, and then come in posing as saviors--while in fact forcing Aristide to defer to figures like Marc Bazin, a former World Bank official whom Washington had picked to win the 1990 election. Bazin was defeated by Aristide in a landslide vote, to the imperialists' dismay.

this is fucking hilarious. Marc Bazin is a relative and I hope he rots in hell

The policy makers in Washington apparently believe they can force a "regime change" to their liking without sending in their own troops at this time. This could change, of course, especially if a rival imperialist power like France, which has troops on nearby Caribbean islands, makes a move.

No end to U.S. intervention

The truth is there has already been plenty of U.S. intervention, both covert and overt, aimed at replacing the Aristide government with one deemed more compliant by the big business interests that run U.S. foreign policy.

The U.S. has led an international conspiracy to deprive Haiti, the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, of any aid money. Haiti has been on the hit list of the major capitalist powers ever since its successful revolutionary war of 1804, which simultaneously liberated the country from French colonial rule and freed its population from chattel slavery. Its deep poverty comes from a two-centuries-old economic blockade.

This was reinforced after the election of 2000 when lending institutions controlled by the U.S. held up a $500-million loan Haiti desperately needed. The intent was clear: to put pressure on the Aristide government to either capitulate to the capitalist globalizers' demands or be ousted.

The stated U.S. diplomatic position has been to recognize the Aristide government while giving aid and comfort--and a significant amount of money--to groups Washington dubs the "democratic" opposition. There is another, more sinister history of U.S. intervention in Haiti, however.

The Haitian people, who are highly conscious of what goes on behind the scenes regarding their country, know that Washington has long had secret deals with their tormentors, beginning with the bloody Duvalier dynasty that ruled Haiti for 29 years.

They also know about the secret files that were spirited out of Haiti in 1994 by U.S. troops when they returned Aristide to office after he had been overthrown in a military coup. Those files are believed to contain information about the covert relations between the CIA and the Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti (FRAPH), a nice-sounding name for the death squads that operated during the 1991-94 military regime.

Towns 'liberated' by death squads

Members of FRAPH are now back in Haiti running the show in areas they claim to have "liberated." The U.S. forces who landed in 1994 and deposed the military dictatorship allowed them to safely leave Haiti, despite their many crimes against the people. Many wound up in comfortable exile in the United States and the Dominican Republic. Their leader, Emmanuel "Toto" Constant, spent the next 10 years living in an upscale community in Laurelton, Queens, in New York City. His house was frequently the site of picketing by the Brooklyn-based Haitian community.

To get back into the country, armed Haitian commandos recently shot their way through the Dominican border, killing two Dominican soldiers. (Associ ated Press, Feb. 14) With them were Guy Philippe, the former police chief of the northern city of Cap Haitien and also a former army officer, and Louis Jodel Chamblain, the head of the Duvalier death squad in the 1980s.

According to an authoritative article by Tom Reeves posted on ZNet on Feb. 17, Chamblain also was a leader of the FRAPH:

"A close associate of Chamblain, Emmanuel 'Toto' Constant, has admitted its CIA funding and direction. Chamblain was revealed in documents reviewed by the Center for Constitutional Rights in New York as one of those present during the planning, with a USA agent, of the assassination of the pro-Aristide minister of justice, Guy Malary, in 1993.

"The USA refuses to release documents it seized from FRAPH during the 1994 USA invasion--presumably to cover up the CIA ties to FRAPH. Philippe and Cham blain were among those from the Haitian opposition, recognized by the USA--the Convergence--who organized conferences in the Dominican Republic, funded and attended by USA operatives from the International Republican Institute."

Collusion of FRAPH, Convergence and U.S.

Although Secretary of State Powell pretends the death squads and the Convergence have nothing in common, the collusion between them has become clear with this invasion. One leader of the political opposition, sweatshop owner Andre Apaid, says he wants nothing to do with the armed gangs, but what "respected" gangland boss ever acknowledges his bloody-handed lieutenants?

A British observer, writing in The Independent of Feb. 17, reported that "The rebels are being manipulated and apparently taken over by disgruntled former army officers who, if left to their own devices, would probably return Haiti to the dictatorship and military terror of the Duvalier era. Although such a prospect is being publicly deplored, diplomatic sources in Port-au-Prince say Western governments are increasingly wondering if Haiti would be more stable--at least, from their point of view--under a dictatorship rather than Mr. Aristide's flawed version of democracy."

The Convergence, which includes many Haitian business leaders, has been agitating for Aristide to step down and organized several street protests, which received sympathetic coverage in the U.S. corporate media. Much larger demonstrations in support of the government, like one on Feb. 7 that drew hundreds of thousands in Port-au-Prince, are ignored by these same media.

After Aristide was returned to office in 1994 by the U.S., he disbanded the Haitian army. This move, which fit into his pacifist views, was supposed to allay the continuing threat of a military coup. But he did not set up any alternative system of defense, like a popular militia, so the government lacks a strong force to defend itself against the former militaries, who have now shown up with a surprising amount of coordination and weapons.

These trained assassins have taken over a number of cities north of the capital, where they immediately attacked police stations and city halls, killing police who were loyal to Aristide and seizing arms and ammunition. There are reports that they dragged corpses through the streets in order to terrorize the population.

According to the Miami Herald of Feb. 16, "Gonaives and St. Marc were wrested from the government as the rebels shot, burned and looted their way through cities and villages."

Haiti's entire police force--which now must do the work of an army--is only 5,000. By contrast, New York City, which has about 1 million fewer people than Haiti, has 32,000 cops, including heavily armed SWAT teams, who at any time could be reinforced by the National Guard.

In this crisis situation, however, the masses are finally being asked to intervene. According to the newspaper Haiti Progress of Feb. 11, "the population seems to have responded enthusiastically to Prime Minister Yvon Neptune's call on Feb. 8 for the Haitian people to assist the police in beating back 'the armed branch of the opposition.' On Feb. 8, popular organizations' militants, some armed, threw up barricades in the capital's Canapé Vert and Carrefour neighborhoods ... ."

This response, mostly by the workers and poor, has so far helped keep the fighting out of the capital, Port-au-Prince. It is the organized and, wherever possible, armed response of the people to the terrorism of the bosses and their imperialist backers that is Haiti's best hope.

(Copyright Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this document, but changing it is not allowed. For more information contact Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011; via email: ww@wwpublish.com. Subscribe wwnews-on@wwpublish.com. Unsubscribe wwnews-off@wwpublish.com. Support independent news http://www.workers.org/orders/donate.php)

http://www.axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/article_5359.shtml

Oh and I forgot. Rah, rah for the NED and the School of the Americas that certain people here have been trying to convince the rest of us are "ok".

:fuckyou:
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LoneStarLiberal Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 09:13 PM
Response to Reply #17
20. FRAPH, Tonton Macoutes, Aristide
Rah, rah for the NED and the School of the Americas that certain people here have been trying to convince the rest of us are "ok".

Not O.K., but rather they aren't right up there with the Illuminati, the Vatican, and the Elders of Zion and whoever else is running my life and is behind all the bad stuff that happens in the world.

Case in point...where is the NED or the school formerly known as the SOA mentioned anywhere here?

Oh yeah...it isn't.

Aristide nor any other elected leader should be overthrown by a revolution that is at least as much criminal as it is revolutionary. These former FRAPH and former Tonton Macoutes that make up the amazingly well-armed and well-dressed rebels in Haiti are a bunch of crooks...but unfortunately it's not quite so easy to give Aristide the thumbs up just because they are scumbags. Over time his government has grown to resemble the sultanic rewards system of the Duvaliers.

Two sides of the same shit sandwich with the Haitian people caught in the middle.
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Tinoire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 09:56 PM
Response to Reply #20
22. Yeah they are
Edited on Sat Feb-28-04 09:57 PM by Tinoire
I made other posts on their involvement. But, regardless, your good intentions are noted. I truly, TRULY wish I could believe what you do.

Just go a google on the 2 terms plus Haiti. It will break your heart. Imperialism doesn't come cheap- it comes with the blood & tears of others.

Peace

On edit: spelling
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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 10:12 PM
Response to Reply #22
23. Tinoire, though you'd lke to hear this
I talked to a friend of mine who lives in S.E. Cuba. Several boatloads of Haitians have landed there and more were escorted in by Cuban C.G. seeking asylum. Many thousands. The gov has been setting up some temporary housing for them (tents for now but solid housing is under way) for their immigration processing. The Cubans are shocked at their bad condition, the desperation, and the horror stories as seen on Cuban TV. Local charitable drives are up and running supplying clothing, hygiene. and such needed items The teachers union is setting up temporary schools for the children, and medical clinics are underway now.

The Cuban nation is made up of a charitable people. Viva Cuba!
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Tinoire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 10:21 PM
Response to Reply #23
24. Thanks! That makes me feel better! I have nothing against the
Cubans living in the US even if I ideologically disagree with many of them. That did my heart good. Thank you Mika!
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Mick Knox Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 09:01 PM
Response to Original message
18. Haiti is falling apart :(
I hope it gets squared away.. the UN needs to get in gear on this... it is chaos.
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bpilgrim Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 09:08 PM
Response to Original message
19. Bush to Aristide: Surrender power
WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration, concerned that armed groups in Haiti may seize power, believes the best hope for democracy is for President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to surrender power to his constitutional successor, a senior official said yesterday.

more...
http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=11040605&BRD=1697&PAG=461&dept_id=44551&rfi=6

peace
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JCMach1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-28-04 09:43 PM
Response to Original message
21. He will care when the boats reach Miami!
This is one of those nagging problems that won't go away.
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