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- <text id=94TT1354>
- <link 94TO0204>
- <title>
- Oct. 03, 1994: Cover:Road to Haiti
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 03, 1994 Blinksmanship
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 32
- Road to Haiti
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> With Clinton's blessing, Carter cuts a deal with the junta,
- avoiding an invasion and much bloodshed. Now the problem will
- be getting out
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Sam Allis, Cathy Booth, Nina Burleigh and Bernard
- Diederich/Port-au-Prince, and James Carney, J.F.O. McAllister
- and Mark Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. special forces troops removed their helmets and flak
- jackets to show they were not in combat mode but were officially
- cooperating with the Haitian army. Even so, Haitian officers
- watched sullenly in the compound of Camp d'Application last
- week as the Americans dismantled Haiti's only arsenal of heavy
- weapons. Church bells joyfully tolled noon as U.S. vehicles
- towed the few Haitian armored cars and artillery pieces through
- the camp's wide iron gates, past a mural proclaiming HONNEUR,
- DISCIPLINE, COMPETENCE. Along the road leading to Port-au-Prince,
- a crowd of civilians applauded and cheered.
- </p>
- <p> Camp d'Application is the Haitian army's training center, but
- its far greater importance is as the base for the heavy weapons.
- The guns and armored vehicles stored there have for years been
- the military's coupmaking tools, equipment that can surround
- administrative buildings and oust governments. Three years ago,
- Port-au-Prince police chief Michel Francois, then an unknown
- police major, seized control of the heavy weapons and rolled
- into the capital to overthrow Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the country's
- first democratically elected President. The hardware is now
- under guard inside the U.S. base at the airport--and Aristide
- will be coming back.
- </p>
- <p> Those few hours of work symbolize the way U.S. troops have begun
- to take control of Haiti and neutralize its army and police.
- For the first day or two it was far from certain they would
- be able to do the job. The Americans were unprepared for the
- kind of arrival that was negotiated for them at the final hour.
- They stalled temporarily, confused by their rules of engagement
- and their orders to establish general security without becoming
- street cops. As a result, they could only look on in frustration
- as the capital's security forces viciously attacked pro-Aristide
- crowds gathered to watch the Americans arrive. The liberators
- seemed to have become collaborators.
- </p>
- <p> Then the big U.S. military machine shifted gears again. As its
- troop levels reached 12,000 on the way up to 15,000, its power
- began to spread across Haiti and through the capital. The U.S.
- commander, Lieut. General Henry Hugh Shelton, a big, jut-jawed
- Ranger, told the Haitian leaders there would be no more police
- violence--or else. Haiti's military chief, Lieut. General
- Raoul Cedras, quickly agreed. American military police took
- to the streets, patrolling and even directing traffic, while
- U.S. troops neutralized Haitian army and police posts. There
- were perils: Marines engaged Haitians in a firefight in Cap
- Haitien, killing at least nine.
- </p>
- <p> If the U.S. public heaved an enormous sigh of relief at the
- relative smoothness of the operation, many found the manner
- and the content of the deal that had forestalled an invasion
- distasteful. To get out of a jam, the current President had
- lent his authority to a failed former President. The terms of
- Jimmy Carter's arrangement to remove Haiti's brutal junta were
- so much less than Clinton had promised only days before. The
- agreement did not require the dictators to leave Haiti after
- their retirement, and they did not even sign it. It implied
- they and their followers were entitled to a "general amnesty"
- for the acts of repression that had left more than 3,000 dead
- since the 1991 coup. It treated men denounced as thugs as "honorable"
- officials worthy of "mutual respect." The blithe spirit that
- obliterated previous animosities even accorded a measure of
- legitimacy to de facto president Emile Jonassaint, 81, caricatured
- as the spineless puppet of the junta. No less than the President
- of the United States said, "I had the absolutely incorrect impression
- that Jonassaint was a figurehead." If Jonassaint is sanitized,
- indeed laureled, is there need for Aristide? While avoiding
- bloodshed, the agreement has raised contentious questions.
- </p>
- <p> Culled from interviews with the principals and other reports,
- the details of how the deal was wrought are melodramatic, sometimes
- outlandish, with images of a marionette severing its strings,
- of a wife for whom honor is more important than life, of diplomacy
- being improvised as time runs out.
- </p>
- <p> At 5:45 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 18, the order to launch the invasion
- went out from the Pentagon. An hour later, planes loaded with
- American paratroopers were in the air, heading south. Warships
- closed in on Haiti, and Navy SEALs stole toward shore. Then,
- almost two hours later, the invasion was abruptly canceled.
- U.S. troops were told they would go ashore Monday to "cooperate"
- with the Haitian soldiers they had been ready to kill the day
- before.
- </p>
- <p> What changed the military plan was the work of former President
- Carter, Senator Sam Nunn and retired General Colin Powell. All
- along, Bill Clinton had intended to deliver an ultimatum: the
- military dictators had to step down or an invasion would follow
- at once. But two months before, Carter on his own had been trying
- to establish contact with Cedras, consulting with Congressman
- Bill Richardson, who had just been to see the Haitian leaders.
- Meanwhile, Cedras had been trying to find an American intermediary
- to step in and negotiate a settlement with Washington. As an
- invasion date loomed, Carter went so far as to recruit Powell
- and Nunn, who agreed to give it a try if Clinton approved. Carter,
- as he has in the past, lobbied Clinton for the diplomatic assignment.
- The President finally gave it to him, mainly because he and
- Cedras appeared to have developed a relationship.
- </p>
- <p> Just what his instructions were still seems a matter of confusion.
- "The only thing Carter was authorized to discuss on behalf of
- Clinton," said a senior official last week, "was the modalities
- of departure." But, the same official conceded, "it was clearly
- understood that he wasn't going to be restricted from raising
- anything that was on his mind."
- </p>
- <p> It turned out there was plenty on Carter's mind. As soon as
- he boarded the Air Force plane carrying his delegation to Port-au-Prince,
- he pulled out a laptop computer and continued work on a draft
- agreement to present to Cedras and the other junta leaders--Chief of Staff Brigadier General Philippe Biamby and Lieut.
- Colonel Francois, the capital district commander. But the Carter
- team's most important piece of strategic advice would come to
- them after they reached Haiti. According to Nunn, a former World
- Bank official urged "very strongly that a key to getting General
- Cedras to be willing to step down was his wife. He strongly
- suggested that we meet as soon as possible with Mrs. Cedras."
- </p>
- <p> Arriving in Port-au-Prince at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 17,
- the three Americans went into negotiations with various sets
- of Haitian officials that lasted almost continuously until 8
- p.m. the next day. It fell to Powell, the former Chairman of
- the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to open the talks by describing in
- detail the wave of firepower that would envelop Haiti if Cedras
- and his fellow officers did not step down. Powell ticked off
- the naval, air and ground troops, the unstoppable fighting forces
- and machines. When Powell had finished, Cedras leaned back in
- his chair and stared at him. "Well," Cedras finally said, "after
- all that arrives, we will no longer be a militarily weak nation."
- </p>
- <p> That brought a laugh, easing some of the tension. Subsequent
- sessions, Nunn said later, were cordial and respectful. "General
- Powell and President Carter," he said, "appealed to their sense
- of honor, their sense of dignity, their sense of obligation,
- their sense of wanting to protect their country." Still, Cedras
- made it clear he thought he would be assassinated if he tried
- to flee. "I would rather take an American bullet in the chest,"
- he told the Carter team, "than a Haitian bullet in the back."
- </p>
- <p> The first day of talks went on until 1:45 a.m. Sunday, and Clinton
- had given his negotiators a deadline of noon. As Carter was
- leaving the room, he told Cedras he would like to meet the general's
- family. In the middle of the night, Carter says, he called Cedras'
- brother to set up a meeting. The next morning, Cedras invited
- the team to his house, where they finally met Cedras' wife Yanick,
- a woman Nunn described as "very attractive, very smart and very
- tough."
- </p>
- <p> He added, "The first thing that she said to us was that when
- her husband got home the previous night, she had gone and gotten
- her three children--a 17-year-old son, a 14-year-old daughter
- and a 10-year-old son--to come get in bed with them and spend
- the night with them, because that was going to be their last
- night of life." Unless Carter, Powell and Nunn could persuade
- her, there looked to be no deal. In French, she told the Americans
- she knew she and her children had been targeted by U.S. special-operations
- forces and they had made a pact to die together. "We will die
- before we leave Haiti," she said, "and my husband will do the
- same." She spoke proudly of her own family's military heritage
- and insisted they would never accept the "insult" of a foreign
- invasion. "When she finished," said Carter, "we were stunned.
- We thought our mission had failed."
- </p>
- <p> As the session continued, a U.S. aide informed the Carter team
- that Clinton was on the secure telephone in the next room and
- wanted to speak with one of them. Powell left the room for a
- 15- to 20-minute talk with the President. His absence rattled
- Cedras, says Nunn: "General Cedras immediately looked like he
- had been stricken--he looked like it was a terrible thing
- for him. He was increasingly nervous as he waited for General
- Powell. Finally, he got up and went to the door twice. It became
- very apparent to me then that he was relying on Colin Powell
- to convince his wife that it was not the duty of the general
- and his family to die."
- </p>
- <p> Powell proved convincing. He responded to the concerns of Cedras
- and his wife with a heartfelt plea to military honor: when a
- mission became impossible, the duty of a commander was to protect
- the soldiers serving under him and not get them killed. Cedras
- and his wife listened intently. It was, said Nunn, "a very strong
- and, I think, decisive argument."
- </p>
- <p> Things turned sour again before Cedras finally capitulated.
- Well past Clinton's original noon deadline, Biamby burst into
- the room to report that he had received a fax and two phone
- calls from the U.S. informing him that American airborne troops
- had taken off and the invasion was about to begin. "He concluded
- we were part of a trap," says Nunn. Biamby told Cedras to go
- into hiding instantly and warned Nunn that he would commit suicide
- before he would flee the country. Nunn said he feared "it was
- over, we weren't going to get any agreement." Cedras said he
- had to consult his president, meaning Emile Jonassaint, the
- former Supreme Court Justice who had been installed by the military
- in May.
- </p>
- <p> The two delegations drove over to the Presidential Palace. Carter
- and Nunn went in one car, and Powell rode with Cedras, straddling
- a pile of rifle grenades. And then came the final standoff.
- Jonassaint convened the Cabinet, and the agreement was on the
- table. Said Nunn: "It became very apparent that General Cedras
- was not going to ever say, `I agree.'" Then Carter dramatically
- reached out and signed the agreement himself. Would the Haitians
- respond? Who among them would sign?
- </p>
- <p> Jonassaint went around the room consulting the Cabinet. The
- defense and information ministers objected to the deal. Nevertheless,
- Jonassaint said, "I will sign. I will not let my people experience
- this tragedy. Our back is against the wall." Said Nunn: "We
- were in one heck of a fix because President Clinton had told
- us that we could not get the signature of president Jonassaint,
- whom we didn't recognize. Cedras said it was a court-martial
- offense for him to sign for the government because he wasn't
- the government." Nunn turned to Carter. "We can't do this unless
- we call Clinton. I'm for signing this, but..." Carter and
- Powell then left and got Clinton to agree on the phone.
- </p>
- <p> With Clinton's approval in hand, Jonassaint signed the agreement.
- The Defense Minister quit on the spot. Cedras sat mute. Then
- Powell asked him point-blank if he would accept the agreement.
- Cedras stood erect and pledged his word of honor that he would
- "obey the command of my president."
- </p>
- <p> "I told President Clinton that we had an agreement," said Carter,
- "and he turned the planes around."
- </p>
- <p> Almost immediately the loud and public reappraisals began. Why
- were the junta members being allowed to remain in Haiti? Why
- had Francois, who is blamed for police attacks on Aristide supporters
- in the first days of last week, not participated in the negotiations?
- Why did the agreement provide for a "general amnesty" and speak
- of "honorable retirement" for dictators and U.S. military cooperation
- with the Haitian armed forces? None of that sounded like the
- clean sweep of the monsters that Clinton had promised just a
- few days before.
- </p>
- <p> In Clinton's defense, Administration officials offered two basic
- arguments: the great virtue of a bloodless landing in Haiti
- outweighs the other details of the agreement, and now that U.S.
- troops are ashore in overwhelming force, they can make the unpalatable
- details irrelevant. In the view of U.S. officials, after the
- junta members leave office they will decide to go abroad, no
- matter what they say now. When Aristide is running the country
- and foreign troops are everywhere, in this view, the generals
- will find it unhealthy to remain. Says an American official
- in Port-au-Prince: "Somebody's going to kill ((Cedras)) if he
- decides to stay."
- </p>
- <p> Biamby is considered tougher than Cedras, but also an America
- hater, so he could decide either to leave or stay and fight.
- Francois was originally reported to be in hiding but in fact
- is working at his office in police headquarters. He held at
- least two meetings last week with U.S. officers to discuss "liaison"
- arrangements. Haitian officials say Francois offered weeks ago
- to do whatever would help the situation--resign, leave the
- country, be exiled or even be shot.
- </p>
- <p> The amnesty issue has already become a major problem. If it
- is not voted by Parliament before Oct. 15, the junta leaders
- could later be arrested and tried by Aristide's government.
- While Aristide can grant the army and police amnesty for political
- crimes--mainly the coup--his supporters are, for the most
- part, opposed to any parliamentary attempt to forgive what they
- call "blood crimes" like murder and rape. American officials
- say this is a domestic Haitian issue and the shape any amnesty
- finally takes--or fails to take--does not matter. Cedras,
- Biamby and Francois are obliged to resign anyway, and 15,000
- U.S. troops will be on hand to make sure they do.
- </p>
- <p> Aristide's reconstruction plan will cut the Haitian army from
- 7,000 to 1,500 and create a professional civilian police force.
- But first the thugs have to be purged. Aristide's aides are
- preparing lists of good guys and bad guys. Known abusers of
- human rights will be dismissed or arrested. Those who are not
- arrested but are not needed in the army or police are to be
- put into job retraining programs and helped to find work as
- civilians.
- </p>
- <p> A few U.S. forces are now billeted with Haitian troops and may
- start sharing patrols with them. The Americans were to begin
- collecting ammunition from the Haitian army and have started
- addressing the problem of the irregular attaches the army used
- as neighborhood enforcers. To encourage them to give up their
- guns, the U.S. will pay the attaches $50 for each weapon turned
- in. One American official characterizes this process of remaking
- the military as "arms control, not disarmament."
- </p>
- <p> Reforming the Haitian armed forces and taming the country's
- violent politics will take many months, if not years. But the
- U.S. military intervention may not have that long. The American
- troops will come under pressure to become more and more involved
- in the reform process, humanitarian aid, economic development.
- At the same time, in Congress and in U.S. public opinion, the
- pressure will build the opposite way, toward bringing the troops
- home without delay.
- </p>
- <p> Which way will Clinton lean? The Administration is talking about
- keeping U.S. soldiers in Haiti four to six months, or long enough
- to make the country secure for a U.N. force of about 6,000--which will include as many as 3,000 Americans. In Washington
- the House Foreign Affairs Committee is looking at the timetable
- this week. It is likely to produce a bill that will set March
- 1, 1995, as the pullout deadline.
- </p>
- <p> The best Bill Clinton can hope for from the Haiti policy his
- negotiators brokered for him is that the military phase will
- end quickly, that there will be no loss of American life and
- that he will have given Haiti a chance at some sort of democracy.
- That outcome would be an enormous accomplishment and would be
- worthy of praise indeed. But whatever happens, Bill Clinton
- is never likely to get much praise for his foray into the forlorn
- little nation of Haiti, and should the widely invoked quagmire
- scenario come to pass, he will be hard pressed to escape the
- blame.
- </p>
- <p>THAT WAS THEN; THIS IS NOW
- </p>
- <p> Nature of the Regime
- </p>
- <p> PRESIDENT CLINTON, address to the nation Thursday, Sept 1.:
- </p>
- <p> "Haiti's dictators, led by General Raoul Cedras, control the
- most violent regime in our hemisphere. Cedras and his armed
- thugs have conducted a reign of terror, executing children,
- raping women, killing priests."
- </p>
- <p> JIMMY CARTER, Monday, Sept. 19, as Clinton stood by:
- </p>
- <p> "I don't know who's responsible for the atrocities in Haiti.
- This has been a violent society and the division are extreme."
- </p>
- <p> Fate of the Regime
- </p>
- <p> PRESIDENT CLINTON, Thursday, Sept. 15:
- </p>
- <p> "Your time is up. Leave now or we will force you from power."
- </p>
- <p> HAITI AGREEMENT, Sunday, Sept. 18:
- </p>
- <p> "Certain military officers of the Haitian armed forces are willing
- to consent to an early and honorable retirement...when a general
- amnesty will be voted into law by the Haitian Parliment or Oct.
- 15, 1994, whichever is earlier."
- </p>
- <p> Leaving the Country
- </p>
- <p> WARREN CHRISTOPHER, Sunday morning, Sept. 18:
- </p>
- <p> "For all practical purposes, they must leave the country."
- </p>
- <p> CARTER, Monday, Sept. 19:
- </p>
- <p> "This was not part of the requirement...It's a serious violation
- of inherent human rights for a citizen to be forced into exile."
- </p>
- <p> Characterization of Emile Jonassaint's government
- </p>
- <p> WILLIAM GRAY, Clinton's special envoy on Haiti, Tuesday, June
- 28:
- </p>
- <p> "(It) is a puppet government. We do not recognize its pronouncements
- and find that they are unconstitutional and illegal."
- </p>
- <p> JIMMY CARTER, Friday, Sept. 9:
- </p>
- <p> "President Jonassaint, we have been led to believe, was a figurehead.
- This proved to be absolutley incorrect."
- </p>
- <p> Rules of Engagement
- </p>
- <p> GENERAL JOHN SHALIKASHVILI, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman,
- Tuesday Sept. 20:
- </p>
- <p> "Order in Haiti is the responsibility of the Haitian police
- force and the Haitian military. We are not in the business of
- doing the day-to-day law and order."
- </p>
- <p> U.S. MILITARY SPOKESMAN, Wednesday, Sept. 21:
- </p>
- <p> "The presence of U.S. troops is intended to be an intimidating,
- deterring factor. Nobody is going to sit on a seawall anymore
- and just watch violence proceed."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-