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- <text id=94TT0934>
- <title>
- Jul. 18, 1994: Haiti:Policy at Sea
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jul. 18, 1994 Attention Deficit Disorder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HAITI, Page 20
- Policy at Sea
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> As the refugees keep pouring out and Clinton continues to flounder,
- the U.S. moves closer to a military solution
- </p>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by Edward Barnes/St. Marc, Cathy Booth/Petit-Bourg
- du Borgne, James Carney with Clinton, Bernard Diederich/Port-au-Prince
- and Ann M. Simmons/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Presidents who travel overseas know they can never entirely
- leave their problems back home. But for Bill Clinton, on a seven-day
- trip to Europe for the G-7 economic summit, the crisis in Haiti
- pursued him like a bad nightmare. Throughout the week, refugees
- continued to risk their lives and take to the seas by the thousands,
- undeterred by the Administration's newly enunciated policy of
- diverting the boat people to other Caribbean countries rather
- than the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Then, about 45 minutes after leaving Warsaw on Air Force One
- Thursday night, Clinton got word from Washington that Panamanian
- President Guillermo Endara was having second thoughts about
- his decision to make space in his country for 10,000 refugees.
- After the plane landed in Naples, Clinton stayed on board to
- wait for one more call from Vice President Al Gore while members
- of the reception committee made small talk on the tarmac. The
- news was bad: Panama had backed out.
- </p>
- <p> The President and his advisers tried to downplay the blow. While
- "sharply disappointed," his aides said, Clinton was not angry.
- Other Caribbean countries, they promised, would be found to
- replace Panama; Grenada, for instance, had agreed "in principle"
- to provide a haven for at least some of the refugees. But the
- sudden change of heart by Panama only deepened the impression
- that the Administration was practicing a kind of voodoo diplomacy
- toward Haiti, lurching from headline to headline and hoping
- that somehow the country's leaders would magically change their
- ways or disappear.
- </p>
- <p> Thus the floundering seemed to increase the likelihood of Clinton's
- pursuing the one option that would make him look the most decisive:
- a full-fledged invasion of Haiti. All week there were signals
- that plans for military action were being accelerated. On Thursday,
- the Defense Department dispatched four amphibious warships carrying
- 2,000 combat-ready Marines to the waters off the coast of Haiti.
- The Pentagon revealed that three weeks ago Army Rangers and
- Navy Seals had conducted practice runs for an invasion of Haiti:
- staging a mock attack on an isolated airfield at Eglin Air Force
- Base in Florida and "capturing" a port along the Gulf coast.
- The exercise, which one military expert described as a "final
- rehearsal," was similar to maneuvers conducted just before the
- U.S. invaded Panama in December of 1989 to overthrow Manuel
- Noriega.
- </p>
- <p> Just how imminent the invasion might be remained vague. The
- refugee crisis has increased the urgency for some sort of action
- to end the oppressive military rule in Haiti, and there is a
- sense that the Administration is backing into an invasion almost
- out of desperation. "No doubt about it," said one senior Pentagon
- official, "the stakes have gone up because of Panama's decision.
- We need to get ourselves into position." On Friday, Clinton
- issued another veiled warning to the military clique that ousted
- President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in September 1991. "I think
- the conduct of the military leaders will have more than anything
- else to do with what options are considered when," said Clinton.
- "And their conduct has not been good."
- </p>
- <p> Though Clinton aides are confident that U.S. troops could oust
- Lieut. General Raoul Cedras and his cronies fairly swiftly,
- it is a prospect that few in the Administration relish. As in
- Somalia, an invasion of Haiti would trap the U.S. in the role
- of enforcer, saddled with the job of first establishing and
- then upholding law and order in a country that lacks the institutions
- of a democratic civil society. White House and State Department
- officials still retain a hope that saber rattling might be enough
- to induce the military leaders to abandon the country before
- any shots are fired. "The sense that there's a possibility of
- an immediate military intervention--that is not our way of
- thinking," said one senior official. "That's not where our heads
- are now."
- </p>
- <p> Just where the Administration's heads are on the matter of Haiti
- has been a major puzzle for weeks. After enduring intense criticism
- from human-rights activists and others over its policy of repatriating
- any Haitian refugees picked up at sea, Clinton announced a major
- shift on May 8. Rather than automatically send boat people back
- to Haiti, the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service said,
- it would conduct seagoing interviews and admit to the U.S. refugees
- judged to be fleeing repression.
- </p>
- <p> Since the policy took effect on June 16, more than 17,500 refugees
- have poured out of Haiti on frail and often overloaded boats,
- driven out by political repression as well as a U.S.-led trade
- embargo that has left the poorest country in the western hemisphere
- isolated and destitute. Tragedies at sea have mounted. Two weeks
- ago, a boat disaster near the village of Baie du Mesle left
- at least 65 people dead. Last Monday, when more than 400 people
- swarmed aboard a small craft moored at a remote spot five miles
- north of the smuggling port of St. Marc, the overloaded boat
- listed violently, then keeled over, trapping passengers under
- the deck. Dozens drowned.
- </p>
- <p> Horrific scenes like that perhaps did less to persuade the Administration
- to take action than did the sight of Coast Guard cutters being
- overwhelmed by Haitian refugees. At a meeting of Clinton advisers
- on July 1, serious consideration was given to re-adopting the
- policy of summary repatriation. Secretary of State Warren Christopher--who earlier opposed the liberalized policy, warning that
- it would result in an upsurge in refugees--argued now that
- going back to the old policy would be a devastating turnabout.
- His advice was heeded this time, but a compromise was struck:
- rather than being promised asylum in the U.S., the refugees
- would be sent to other countries. This, it was hoped, would
- cool the fervor of Haitians to leave. "If you take a new boat,"
- warned a radio message broadcast in Creole over Haitian radio
- by the U.S. embassy, "one thing is certain: You won't get to
- the United States."
- </p>
- <p> Last week's policy shift left Administration critics fuming.
- Ernest Preeg, who served as U.S. ambassador to Haiti from 1981
- to 1983, contended that the new repatriation policy has "an
- element of desperate groping." Kweisi Mfume, the Maryland Democrat
- who is head of the Congressional Black Caucus, denounced the
- Administration's "policy of anarchy." Said he: "We cannot continue
- a back-and-forth, up-and-down, in-and-out policy on Haiti and
- expect to have any measure of respect in the world community."
- </p>
- <p> Nor has the switch, so far at least, improved the situation
- in Haiti. Refugees were continuing to flee at the rate of 2,000
- a day. Ad-hoc refugee camps at Guantanamo naval base and elsewhere
- were jammed to capacity, and Coast Guard cutters were nearly
- overwhelmed. In the Haitian countryside, many villages are being
- depopulated by the exodus; once bustling main streets are now
- virtually deserted, and more homes seem to be boarded up than
- inhabited.
- </p>
- <p> The military's campaign of violence against political opponents,
- meanwhile, has been revived with new viciousness. Nowhere is
- this more evident than the coffee-rich area in the Bourg Mountains,
- where some 300 soldiers have spent the past four months hunting
- down peasant supporters of exiled President Aristide. Those
- who have escaped the region claim the army has conducted a scorched-earth
- policy in an attempt to deprive Aristide's allies of their food
- and livelihood. "They took everything we possessed," says Wilna
- Nelta Joseph, whose home in the town of Petit-Bourg was looted
- in April. "They left me with two empty hands." One farmer describes
- the destruction wrought by the army in the village of Petite-Riviere
- on April 25: "They burned down houses with everything in them.
- They cut down the banana trees, fruit trees, coconut trees.
- They shot cows, goats, pigs, cattle. They didn't leave anything,"
- he says, tears in his eyes. "If only you could see the things
- they did, you wouldn't believe it."
- </p>
- <p> The economic embargo has hurt as well. There is no electricity
- along most of the northern coast, even in major towns like Cap
- Haitien. At night women sell their wares by the light of kerosene
- lanterns and candles. Because most Haitians are now so poor
- that they cannot even afford the batteries for their transistor
- radios, few actually heard the brief Creole-language spots aired
- last week by the American embassy on local radio, which warned
- listeners that "the U.S. is not a land with streets paved with
- gold."
- </p>
- <p> A poignant index of the economy's collapse is found at La Providence
- Hospital in Gonaives, where 163 beds serve a region with 700,000
- people. A third of those beds are now without mattresses. There
- is no ambulance, and the hospital pickup truck has no tires.
- Moreover, despite the sicknesses that ravage the region, only
- 20 of the facility's beds are filled. "People can't come anymore
- because gas is so expensive," explains administrator Claudette
- Munro. "If they arrive here, it's to die." In the hospital's
- morgue, Munro pulls open a drawer holding the bodies of eight
- children. A newborn lies on top, still clad in pink knit baby
- booties. Next to him is the body of a young boy, whose ribs
- are so clearly visible they can be counted through the dead
- skin. "His father brought him in yesterday," explains Munro.
- "We gave him an IV. He opened his eyes finally--and died."
- </p>
- <p> Amid all this, the Haitian military seems to have embraced a
- surreal attitude halfway between apathy and stubborn denial.
- On Thursday morning, 200 green-uniformed soldiers, some carrying
- bazookas, marched through downtown Port-au-Prince in a show
- of force, occasionally breaking into a spirited goose step.
- On Friday, top military officials gathered in the parking lot
- next to the General Quarters to celebrate Cedras' 45th birthday.
- On the menu: croissants, Teem and sugary schadec juice, made
- with Haitian grapefruits.
- </p>
- <p> According to military sources, the Haitian leaders have virtually
- no plan for defending themselves from an invasion. Some soldiers
- have openly admitted their intention to drop their weapons at
- the first sign of trouble. Indeed, when an American helicopter
- recently flew over the town of Jeremie on surveillance, the
- local army unit thought the invasion had begun and simply ran
- away. The paramilitary units that aid the army in terrorizing
- ordinary Haitians have announced that their response to an invasion
- will be to "evaporate" into the civilian population and begin
- a guerrilla war. The clandestine campaign, they say, will involve
- poisoning water supplies, spreading diseases among the invaders
- and employing voodoo powders to "incinerate the skins" of enemy
- troops. "We have been told to fire on civilians when the Americans
- come," says a member of the paramilitary group FRAPH, "and then
- disappear in the panic."
- </p>
- <p> Despite indications that Haitian resistance would be negligible,
- Clinton's aides insist that the President still has not made
- up his mind about an invasion. Yet by rattling the saber so
- loudly last week, Clinton has left himself little alternative
- but to invade. If he does nothing, he risks looking even weaker
- and more indecisive than he already appears. And that is a scenario
- the Administration relishes even less than the prospect of military
- action.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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