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- <text id=94TT1408>
- <title>
- Oct. 17, 1994: Haiti:Cops for Democracy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 17, 1994 Sex in America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HAITI, Page 30
- Cops for Democracy
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The U.S. military tightens its hold to make the country safe
- for Aristide's return
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Nina Burleigh and Mark Thompson/Washington and Bernard
- Diederich and Marguerite Michaels/Port-au-Prince
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton did not claim mission accomplished, but he was
- eager to declare the U.S. occupation of Haiti a success. Aboard
- the newly returned aircraft carrier U.S.S. Eisenhower in Norfolk,
- Virginia, last week, the President told 1,500 sailors and officers
- that by landing in Haiti, they had "brought a new day to people
- who thought they would never get it." On behalf of the American
- people, he was delivering a "heartfelt thank you."
- </p>
- <p> A White House aide talked happily of "moving into the end game
- of the transition to the Aristide government" as if all the
- troops were about to come home. "We are at a point where the
- baton is ready to be passed." In fact, if anything was ending
- it was only the first--and easiest--phase of the operation.
- Now the U.S. faces the more difficult challenge of making Haiti
- safe for returning President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, expected
- to arrive by the end of the week. The U.S. had counted on leaving
- most of the dirty work of policing a volatile nation to rapidly
- reformed Haitian security forces. But as American military leaders
- realized by last week, they could not hope to preserve Haiti's
- army and police institutions while they arrested key leaders
- and took over their responsibilities. Nor could the U.S. avoid
- playing an ever larger role in the face of looting, renegade
- gunmen and chaos in the streets.
- </p>
- <p> In large measure, the White House enthusiasm was meant to persuade
- Congress there was no need to set a specific date for U.S. forces
- to withdraw. "We're on course for a rapid drawdown in our force,"
- Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Walter Slocombe told a House
- committee on Friday, hours after Congress approved nonbinding
- resolutions calling for American troops to return home "as soon
- as possible." The U.S. will reduce its troop level in Haiti
- to 6,000 within six months, he said, and hand over peacekeeping
- duties to the U.N. But setting a deadline would encourage Haiti's
- thugs to lie low until the U.S. departed.
- </p>
- <p> The optimistic messages were also intended to speed Aristide's
- return to Haiti. The U.S. military has not figured out precisely
- how to protect him from his enemies without at the same time
- becoming Haiti's palace guard. But ready or not, the figurative
- baton could be thrust into Aristide's hands as early as this
- Saturday, when the remaining military rulers, Lieut. General
- Raoul Cedras and Brigadier General Philippe Biamby, have agreed
- to step down. Last week the Haitian parliament approved an amnesty
- bill that will permit Aristide to grant the generals pardons
- as sweeping or narrow as he chooses, but they are obligated
- to resign no matter what he decides.
- </p>
- <p> While the political arrangements worked out by former President
- Jimmy Carter seemed to be running on schedule, the more complicated
- task of bringing calm to Haiti has required improvisation. The
- original agreement, which envisioned using the Haitian security
- forces to continue to police the country under the aegis of
- the U.S. Army, has fallen apart. "We really didn't figure,"
- a U.S. officer says, "that the Haitian police would evaporate
- the way they did."
- </p>
- <p> The police did not exactly evaporate: they were vanquished by
- an occupation force that grew heavier faster than they had foreseen.
- The military junta thought the deal they had struck with Carter
- really left them in charge of the streets, free to terrorize
- the populace as usual. The misconception was finally shattered
- last week after U.S. troops raided the headquarters of the paramilitary
- FRAPH organization. In the process, soldiers surrounded a police
- vehicle, hauled the officers out at gunpoint, held them down
- and handcuffed them.
- </p>
- <p> This public humiliation of officers on duty was a breaking point.
- Many policemen simply took off their uniforms and stayed at
- home. The much feared police chief of the capital district,
- Lieut. Colonel Michel Francois, fled across the border to the
- Dominican Republic, turning the former Big Three of dictators
- into a diminished two.
- </p>
- <p> It was inevitable that the 20,000 U.S. troops in Haiti would
- have to assume command. Now they are engaged in keeping the
- urban peace, closing down the offices of plainclothes militias,
- interning members of Cedras' security guard, searching for arms
- caches and running a wholesale disarmament effort.
- </p>
- <p> Since troops are policing the streets as they had vowed not
- to do, some Pentagon officials concede privately that "mission
- creep"--a term of deep opprobrium since Somalia--has occurred.
- But General John Shalikashvili, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
- of Staff, does not think so. "Our mission has not changed from
- the beginning," he insists. "We have just changed our capabilities
- and adjusted our procedures slightly, consistent with the changed
- circumstances on the ground." Retorts Senate Republican leader
- Bob Dole: "This is not just mission creep; it's mission leap."
- </p>
- <p> The next metamorphosis is already beginning. Haitians and Americans
- are rushing preparations for Aristide's arrival. Volunteers
- are working to repair the President's white, two-story residence,
- which police had stripped and looted even of window frames after
- he fled the country. In the capital, the presidential palace
- is also in bad shape, but no restoration work can be scheduled
- until the de facto president, Emile Jonassaint, is pushed out--possibly this week. Haitians say he is booby-trapping the
- palace with voodoo charms to thwart Aristide.
- </p>
- <p> More critical preparations are under way. TIME has learned that
- 21 former Delta Force commandos, U.S. Army Green Berets and
- Secret Service agents flew to Haiti Saturday to begin preparing
- for Aristide's arrival. The team will act as trainers and advisers
- to a 60-man Haitian bodyguard force whose job is to keep Aristide
- alive. As a form of foreign aid, the U.S. will send in armored
- vehicles, including "one suitable for presidential travel,"
- bulletproof vests and handguns at a cost of $2 million.
- </p>
- <p> The Pentagon is worried that Aristide's return could cause problems
- beyond his personal security. Officials fear the Haitian President
- may resume making the fiery speeches that ignited his mass movement,
- the Lavalas, or flash flood, in the past. Such rhetoric might,
- even unintentionally, trigger a popular uprising against the
- military and the country's rich elite--a vengeful burst of
- mob violence that could put the U.S. Army in the middle and
- in danger.
- </p>
- <p> Aristide's public pronouncements last week were soothing rather
- than provocative. At the U.N. he spoke glowingly of the virtues
- of reconciliation for "rich and poor, civilian and military."
- Administration officials got Aristide together with South African
- President Nelson Mandela to hear about the virtues of bringing
- all sectors of society together. Aristide made it clear that
- he would pardon the generals for the political crime of overthrowing
- him, but not for crimes against civilians.
- </p>
- <p> Once Aristide is safely at his desk in the national palace,
- the depth of his dedication to reconciliation will be tested.
- His security and his country's are linked to visible economic
- progress. With more than 80% of the work force unemployed and
- most of Haiti's factories shut down, poverty is more than ever
- the enemy of stability and democracy. But to repair his ravaged
- land, Aristide will need the cooperation of the local business
- community, his traditional enemies. If he believes in lifting
- his country out of its sad history, he will have to find a way
- to work with his foes.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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