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- <text id=94TT0644>
- <title>
- May 16, 1994: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 16, 1994 "There are no devils...":Rwanda
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 47
- Haiti: The Case for a Bigger Stick
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> At the time last Thursday when Al Gore was preparing to lead
- the U.S. delegation to Nelson Mandela's inauguration, the American
- most deserving of that trip lay in a Washington hospital. Randall
- Robinson, who spent years mobilizing the opposition to South
- Africa's oppressive regime, was in the midst of a hunger strike
- protesting the Clinton Administration's policy of sending Haitian
- refugees back to their misery.
- </p>
- <p> If the President's feckless Bosnia policy represents a sin of
- omission--an unwillingness or inability to rally the world
- against Serbia's aggression--then, argued Robinson, Clinton's
- Haiti stance reflected an even more reprehensible sin of commission.
- "To interdict people and then turn them back to be killed without
- granting them ((asylum hearings))," he said, "makes the President
- complicit in the killing of those people."
- </p>
- <p> At first Clinton lamely agreed. "I understand and respect what
- he's doing," the President said. "We need to change our policy.
- It hasn't worked." Then, finally, Clinton moved. Two days of
- intensive discussions produced a change of policy last Saturday,
- confirmed a senior Administration official. Beginning sometime
- in the next few weeks, those Haitians who take to the seas will
- be welcomed aboard U.S. ships. Their claims for political asylum
- will be heard either on board those vessels or at third-country
- processing centers if the U.S. can negotiate their creation.
- Although the White House insists it has been debating a new
- course for some time, it's clear that the news coverage of Robinson's
- fast and the sight of members of Congress being arrested for
- protesting the President's policy in front of the White House
- without a permit had become a major embarrassment.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's alteration of George Bush's repatriation program,
- which he had blasted as "immoral" during the campaign, will
- quiet the President's critics and save Florida from a wave of
- unwanted immigrants. But the military thugs who rule Haiti will
- remain in power, and Clinton's promise to "restore democracy"--and Jean-Bertrand Aristide--will remain unfulfilled unless
- more is done. To that end, says the President, anything is possible,
- including force. For now, though, Clinton favors the sanctions
- endorsed by the U.N. Security Council last Friday, a set of
- measures certain only to further harm the average Haitian while
- the ruling elite escapes their full impact.
- </p>
- <p> In the end, it may be that only military pressure can break
- the Haitian stalemate, but a truly rigorous set of smarter sanctions
- should be tried first. These actions just might work:
- </p>
- <p> 1) Freeze the foreign bank accounts and property assets of all
- Haitians, not merely those of the estimated 600 army officers
- and coup supporters expressly targeted by the new U.N. sanctions.
- Haiti's poor, with nothing to save or invest, would be unaffected.
- But the oligarchs, the rich civilians without whose support
- the military's murderous clique couldn't rule, would be hit
- in their wallets--perhaps the only action capable of persuading
- them to invite Aristide back.
- </p>
- <p> 2) Deny visas to everyone and ban all but emergency aviation
- to and from Haiti. The latest sanctions again exempt commercial
- flights. Thus the army's wealthy supporting cast can leave at
- will to do business abroad--and some of that business is conducted
- for the benefit of the guys with the guns. Those who have helped
- create the horror should be forced to remain in its vicinity.
- </p>
- <p> 3) Put the screws to the Dominican Republic. Any trade embargo,
- no matter how tough on paper, can't work if Santo Domingo's
- rulers continue winking at the cross-border smuggling that sustains
- the Haitian usurpers. Sugar exports to the U.S. account for
- most of the Dominican Republic's wealth, which isn't much. Serious
- sanctions would threaten an end to that trade if the Dominicans
- didn't close the border.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton could impose each of these measures unilaterally, but
- there's no evidence yet that he is even considering such actions.
- Assuming, then, that the latest tepid sanctions fail, Clinton
- will face two other choices. He could do nothing, which would
- allow the carnage to continue. Or he could invade.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Haiti's military, emboldened by their success at turning
- away the shipload of American military trainers aboard the Harlan
- County last October, believe that the U.S. lacks the guts for
- a sustained occupation. "It'd be just like Somalia," says a
- senior Haitian officer. "Clinton will run away when the first
- U.S. soldier is returned in a body bag." A military intervention,
- however, need not be open-ended. To limit the commitment, Clinton
- could embrace Canada's proposal to train expatriate Haitians
- to serve as the core of a force designed to protect the returned,
- legitimate government. Together with the estimated two-thirds
- of the current Haitian army the U.S. thinks would shift their
- allegiance to Aristide (about 4,500 troops), that should be
- enough to secure the exiled President's return to power. What
- happened then would be up to the Haitians. Clinton would have
- redeemed his pledge to restore Aristide. If Aristide then condoned
- a wave of retribution...well, there is only so much the
- outside world can do.
- </p>
- <p> At some point, someone somewhere will seriously test Clinton's
- stomach for sending Americans in harm's way. Invading Haiti,
- which could be a relatively swift affair if properly executed,
- could demonstrate Clinton's ability to use force for a good
- cause, and help assure that the thousands of Haitians eager
- for freedom stay put--a twofold accomplishment.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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