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- <text id=94TT0665>
- <title>
- May 23, 1994: Haiti:Shadow Play
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 23, 1994 Cosmic Crash
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HAITI, Page 32
- Shadow Play
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> As the military strongmen try to outmaneuver him, Clinton weighs
- all the options: sanctions, negotiations, even invasion
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Cathy Booth/Port-au-Prince, Michael Kramer/New York
- and Ann M. Simmons and Mark Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The men who run Haiti are not afraid to defy the world. Last
- week junta leader Lieut. General Raoul Cedras, the army strongman
- blocking the return of democratically elected President Jean-Bertrand
- Aristide, cavalierly engineered the installation of an 81-year-old
- crony as the military's handpicked President, in direct challenge
- to the U.S. A minority of right-wing legislators, including
- eight elevated after irregular elections organized by the military
- last year, declared that under the constitution, Aristide's
- long absence left them no choice but to appoint a successor.
- As a 21-gun salute boomed over the capital, Supreme Court Justice
- Emile Jonassaint was sworn in, in a technical coup intended
- to prevent Aristide from ever coming back. Standing right by
- Jonassaint's shoulder was Cedras.
- </p>
- <p> The move left Bill Clinton fumbling for an effective retort
- just when he had adopted stern new measures himself. He had
- persuaded the United Nations to harden sanctions against Haiti's
- outlaw regime. He had announced a new asylum policy that would
- end the unpopular practice of forcibly repatriating Haitian
- refugees without a hearing. He had appointed William Gray III,
- head of the United Negro College Fund, as Washington's new Haiti
- czar. Now he dangled threats of a military invasion of the island
- nation.
- </p>
- <p> For their efforts, Haiti's junta leaders were condemned by governments
- around the world, which refused to recognize the newly seated
- puppet President. Yet Clinton was back where he started: in
- a fog of indecision, with the U.N., the Organization of American
- States and just about everyone else waiting for him to provide
- presidential vision. The breathing space he had hoped to give
- himself by tightening the economic embargo on Haiti--which
- will go into effect May 21--has already been undermined by
- his Administration's accelerated hints of possible military
- action. "The Administration is drifting toward intervention
- in some form," says Georges Fauriol, director of the Americas
- program at Washington's Center for Strategic and International
- Studies.
- </p>
- <p> The official White House line was a flat denial that an invasion
- is imminent, but the signals emanating from the Cabinet were
- more mixed. A report in Wednesday's Los Angeles Times, which
- stated that the U.S. was readying "600 heavily armed and protected
- troops" to purge the Haitian military, prompted Secretary of
- Defense William Perry to comment, "I didn't recognize it as
- any plan we're working on." The same report drew from Secretary
- of State Warren Christopher a less guarded response: "That's
- the kind of force that's being discussed." U.N. Ambassador Madeleine
- Albright weighed in with an ambiguous "We are not ruling anything
- in or out."
- </p>
- <p> Administration officials admit privately that the President
- does not know what move to make next. The prospect of tougher
- sanctions and the appointment of a new envoy revive the possibility
- of negotiations--but probably not until the bite of the embargo
- is felt months from now. While no one seems eager to invade,
- as National Security Adviser Anthony Lake said, "it is an option.
- We, of course, are looking at it."
- </p>
- <p> For all its seeming decisiveness, military intervention is fraught
- with long-term complications. Going in would be easy; getting
- out would be hard. Pacifying the Haitian military could be done
- quickly; disarming bands of antidemocratic thugs could be a
- nightmare. Restoring Aristide to power looks simple; re-establishing
- his authority might be impossible. Dismantling Haiti's junta
- should take just hours; erecting a democratic alternative could
- take years. "Conquering the Haitian army is not a serious military
- challenge," says a Navy officer who works with the Joint Chiefs
- of Staff. "The serious challenge is what we do after that. It's
- tough to come up with a good exit strategy."
- </p>
- <p> Officials familiar with Pentagon planning speculate that the
- U.S. could opt for what the military euphemistically calls a
- "nighttime insertion" along the lines of the 1989 invasion of
- Panama that toppled Manuel Noriega. Thousands of troops, mostly
- pulled from the Army's 82nd and 101st Airborne divisions and
- Marine forces, would sweep onto the island under cover of dark.
- They would detain Haiti's military leaders and disable their
- communications network. Little resistance would be anticipated
- since the Haitian army numbers only about 7,000 troops and its
- arsenal amounts to a handful of armored personnel carriers and
- five tanklike, armored reconnaissance vehicles. "We can finish
- up their military by dawn," says an official. That may be a
- bit optimistic. U.S. troops went plowing into Panama thinking
- they would seize Noriega within hours; the effort took more
- than a week. In Somalia American G.I.s lost 18 men trying unsuccessfully
- to capture warlord General Mohammed Farrah Aidid.
- </p>
- <p> Once in control, thousands more U.S. troops would fan out across
- the impoverished island to distribute food and medical supplies
- and pacify the countryside. Military officers predict that this
- part of the operation could involve something on the order of
- the 25,000 troops used in Panama. They reason that after the
- debacle of the U.S.S. Harlan County last October, when 193 U.S.
- soldiers retreated in the face of pier-side taunts from a few
- pistol-wielding thugs, Clinton would not want to leave any doubt
- about U.S. military strength. "Because we've got no credibility
- anymore," says a Pentagon officer, "we need more force than
- we might otherwise require." Meanwhile, airplanes would fly
- over Haiti, transmitting messages from Aristide to Haitian televisions,
- paving the way for his return.
- </p>
- <p> That could pose fresh problems. The country's elite and businessmen
- question whether Aristide truly aims to foster Haiti's democratic
- inclinations or merely intends to supplant military rule with
- another version of authoritarian command. They also fear that
- Aristide's supporters will seek to punish the business community--that is if the embargo doesn't ruin it first. Should tougher
- U.N. sanctions go into effect at week's end, Aristide may once
- again feel pressured to find a nonmilitary solution. "Aristide
- can't be a perpetual naysayer," says Larry Birns of the Washington-based
- Council for Hemispheric Affairs. "His popularity is fading on
- the island. He's now identified with the suffering going on."
- </p>
- <p> By returning in the wake of a U.S. invasion, Aristide would
- surely be perceived as an American puppet by many Haitians.
- At the same time, he continues to stir antipathy at the U.S.
- embassy in Port-au-Prince. Earlier this month officials leaked
- a confidential cable that had been sent to Washington charging
- that Aristide and his supporters "manipulate or even fabricate
- human-rights abuses as a propaganda tool." The deposed President's
- followers called for the ouster of several U.S. embassy diplomats--hardly auspicious for the partnership. Even if Aristide's
- return could be orchestrated smoothly, he would encounter a
- far different situation than existed when he was chased from
- power in 1991. The democratic institutions and grass-roots organizations
- that helped him secure the presidency have been dismantled,
- their leaders forced into hiding by promilitary gunmen who operate
- under the name of the Front for the Advancement and Progress
- of Haiti (FRAPH). The front's forces are unlikely to surrender,
- and can be expected to threaten Aristide supporters and U.S.
- troops alike. "They'll make it into a guerrilla war," warns
- a defense official.
- </p>
- <p> While Aristide would have plenty of foes to reckon with, he
- would have no democratic infrastructure to lean on, no community
- organizations to assist his restoration plans, no security apparatus
- to help enforce his authority. The only buttress against anarchy
- would be the presence of U.S. troops. That could make for a
- very long occupation--far longer than the U.S. Congress or
- the American and Haitian people have the patience to endure.
- </p>
- <p> Small wonder then that Clinton is finding little support for
- either unilateral or multilateral military action. Last Wednesday
- the OAS rejected the option of a U.S.-led intervention. France,
- which has stood beside Washington in championing Aristide's
- return, said it would not participate in such a move. The House
- Republican Policy Committee warned that intervention would be
- a "serious and costly mistake."
- </p>
- <p> As Clinton struggled to decide his next move, Haiti's henchmen
- were doing much the same. At week's end Jonassaint was desperately
- seeking people to join his Cabinet. According to Daniel Phillipe,
- who is slated to be chief of staff to the incoming President:
- "We are having trouble getting people to become ministers."
- He says prospective candidates have been frightened away by
- "people claiming to be calling for the U.S. embassy" who threaten
- CIA retribution or the revocation of U.S. visas. "We frankly
- don't know if these calls are really from U.S. officials, Aristide
- people or FRAPH," Phillipe says. But "already five people we
- thought would be ministers have said now they won't serve."
- </p>
- <p> Phillipe insists that Jonassaint will honor the Governors Island
- agreement signed by Aristide and Haiti's military leaders in
- New York last July--as the U.S. has long demanded--save
- one critical component: it will no longer accept Aristide's
- resumption of the presidency. The accord also requires the removal
- of military ruler Cedras. Phillipe claimed that talks have been
- opened with China in hopes of landing Cedras a face-saving ambassadorship.
- Zhao Hufei, the counselor at China's U.N. mission, confirmed
- that discussions were under way, saying, "Anything is possible
- if we have diplomatic relations with Haiti." Such relations
- do not exist because Aristide recognized rival Taiwan.
- </p>
- <p> With rumors spreading last Friday that Cedras intended to step
- down, Haiti's high command summoned provincial commanders to
- Port-au-Prince for a secret strategy meeting. The new rump government
- was expected to solve one of the military's top concerns, the
- diminishing supply of gourdes, the local currency. In the six
- months since the U.N. imposed an oil and arms embargo, millions
- of dollars worth of gourdes have gone to the Dominican Republic
- to pay for black-market gasoline, which has helped keep the
- regime in power. Without a functioning government to authorize
- a run of the money presses, the military and its black-market
- allies were beginning to worry about their bank accounts. Now,
- with Jonassaint in place to do their bidding, they will be laughing
- all the way to the bank again.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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