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- <text id=93TT0483>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1993: With Friends Like These
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 08, 1993 Cloning Humans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HAITI, Page 44
- With Friends Like These
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A host of shadowy figures is helping Haiti's military rulers
- hatch a plot to sideline Aristide permanently
- </p>
- <p>By JILL SMOLOWE--Reported by Edward Barnes, Cathy Booth and Bernard Diederich/Port-au-Prince,
- Michael Kramer/Miami, J.F.O. McAllister and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Impish and paunchy, with a shock of white hair and the rumpled
- look of a blanc manan (white man) who has lived in the tropics
- too long, Lynn Garrison describes himself simply, if cryptically,
- as "a friend of Haiti." But this is a "friend" with unusual
- connections. Frequently Garrison can be spotted scampering along
- the colonnaded balcony of military headquarters in Port-au-Prince
- before slipping into the office of Lieut. General Raoul Cedras,
- Haiti's military ruler. Even when the Haitian military was bracing
- for a U.S. Marine landing last month, harried and grim-faced
- senior commanders still paused in their duties to shake hands
- with the tiny Canadian. When the action is less tense, Garrison
- skin dives with Cedras and schmoozes on the phone with staffers
- of U.S. Senators Jesse Helms and Bob Dole, offering insider
- tidbits about Haiti's political situation. "Everything the U.S.
- Senate knows," boasts Garrison, "comes from me."
- </p>
- <p> Rumors about Garrison abound. It is believed that the native
- of Calgary carries a U.S. green card and has a home in Los Angeles.
- He is credited with--or blamed for--masterminding a propaganda
- campaign against the exiled President that was allegedly responsible,
- at least in part, for the recent CIA charges that Aristide is
- a manic depressive. Aristide calls such allegations "garbage."
- His sympathizers in Miami claim Garrison is the CIA's designated
- handler for Cedras. Garrison says he is not CIA, but he claims
- to have longstanding contacts within both the Central and Defense
- Intelligence Agencies. He says that in 1970 he worked "with
- the Americans" to overthrow the Libyan regime of Muammar Gaddafi.
- </p>
- <p> The former Canadian air force officer denies that he either
- holds any position in the Haitian government or accepts any
- pay for his services, but a source close to the junta describes
- Garrison as a "major strategist." And one of Garrison's claims,
- if true, suggests that such a top post would be redundant. Asked
- by TIME last week about the military's intransigent stance against
- Aristide's return, he responded, "It is my doing," then added,
- "The Haitians are just too nice. I am the mean son of a bitch
- around here."
- </p>
- <p> In a country where rumors and braggadocio provide the only diversion
- from the steady spray of bullets, the truth of such talk is
- hard to gauge. So, too, are the claims of a cast of shadowy
- players, some of them veterans of previous U.S. capers in the
- region, who are lending their skills to the Haitian military's
- attempt to form a "reconciliation government." But plainly something
- is afoot.
- </p>
- <p> In a radio interview last Friday, Cedras said that the U.N.
- agreement brokered in July was dead if Aristide did not return
- as planned the next day, and would not be revived unless both
- he and Aristide decide otherwise. Anti-Aristide sources said
- last week that with the U.N. accord now technically expired,
- the junta is planning to invoke Article 149 of the Haitian constitution,
- which calls for the chief justice of the Supreme Court to assume
- the presidency. Haiti's bogus Parliament, which was elected
- last January under military rule, will then be called into session
- to ratify the change. After that, the new President will call
- for the establishment of a "reconciliation government" that
- includes all major players, save Aristide. Ninety days later,
- elections will be held--leaving the U.N. to choose between
- two "elected" Presidents. Supporting those claims is a communique
- issued last Saturday by 12 political parties and movements.
- It stated that if Aristide did not resign by 3 p.m. Sunday,
- they would announce plans to replace him.
- </p>
- <p> Garrison claims that during a visit to Washington last month,
- he was told by officials (whom he declines to identify) that
- the way out of the Haitian logjam involves three steps: discrediting
- Aristide, removing him from the presidency, then proposing and
- implementing a new government. Garrison says further that these
- American officials asserted that a primary U.S. objective was
- to maintain the integrity of the Haitian military because it
- is the only stable social structure in the tropical disasterland.
- While Garrison may know officials who believe this, the U.S.
- Administration remains officially committed to Aristide's return.
- </p>
- <p> The idea of an interim presidency, however, is hardly far-fetched.
- Since seizing power in 1991, Cedras and the two other members
- of Haiti's reigning troika--Lieut. Colonel Joseph Michel Francois,
- the police chief, and army chief of staff Philippe Biamby--have tried repeatedly to set such a scheme in motion. Now, emboldened
- by the military-staged thug-fest that turned back the troopship
- U.S.S. Harlan County from Port-au-Prince on Oct. 11, the triumvirate
- is ready for its end game.
- </p>
- <p> Last Friday, U.N. special envoy Dante Caputo warned the military
- government specifically not to try to appoint an interim President.
- Caputo insisted that the U.N. plan "remains fully in force."
- He added that representatives of Aristide and the military would
- soon be invited to meet in Haiti to continue discussing plans
- for the ousted President's return and an amnesty for the 1991
- coup leaders.
- </p>
- <p> In Washington the Clinton Administration tried to walk the fine
- line between encouraging negotiations with the military leaders
- while not seeming to hand them a political victory. In private,
- Clinton has spoken of his decision not to send any American
- troops to Haiti. Instead he plans to create a "duststorm" of
- diversions, foremost among them a tightening of the international
- arms and oil embargo. Publicly the President warned Haiti's
- military leaders that if they thwarted "democracy's return,"
- they would be "making a grave mistake." But he also spoke of
- "America's commitment to finding a negotiated settlement."
- </p>
- <p> Washington's continued willingness to negotiate with Haiti's
- military leaders stuns Aristide supporters. "Apparently," marvels
- Robert White, a former U.S. ambassador to El Salvador and an
- unpaid adviser to Aristide, "nothing will shake the touching
- faith the Clinton Administration has in the Haitian military's
- bona fides."
- </p>
- <p> Aristide supporters charge that such faith reflects long and
- continuing relations between Haiti's top commanders and their
- U.S. counterparts. They claim that Cedras and Francois both
- trained at Fort Benning, Georgia. Although U.S. officials deny
- connections between the CIA and the Cedras-Francois axis, it
- is hardly a secret that the CIA often recruits foreign soldiers
- training under U.S. command for intelligence duties in their
- home countries.
- </p>
- <p> Washington's newly emerging willingness to distinguish Cedras
- from Francois does little to dispel suspicions that the U.S.
- attitude toward some of Haiti's henchmen is not as hostile as
- American rhetoric would indicate. "Francois is really the major
- problem," says a Pentagon analyst. Cedras, he says, is "somebody
- we can deal with." Last week at a press conference Clinton singled
- out only Francois by name for criticism, not Cedras.
- </p>
- <p> While it is unclear if the U.S. strategy is to divide and conquer
- or divide and coax, Haiti's junta is prepared either way. Boasts
- a member of the high command: "We can play with that nicely."
- Indeed, Haiti's strongmen appear to enjoy "playing" with the
- Clinton brigades. A Cedras adviser claims that when the military
- agreed to negotiate with Aristide at Governors Island in New
- York last July, "the whole thing was a smokescreen." He continues,
- "We wanted to get the sanctions lifted. That's why we went along.
- But we never had any intention of really agreeing to Governors
- Island, as I'm sure everyone can now figure out for themselves.
- We were playing for time." (Aristide himself never liked the
- U.N. plan, which grants amnesty to those who mounted the coup
- against him. Three weeks ago, he told TIME the U.S. had pressured
- him to sign.)
- </p>
- <p> At first the junta wasn't sure what time would buy them. "We
- read Clinton in two different ways," says an adviser to Francois.
- "Somalia told us Clinton didn't have the stomach to fight, but
- we were worried that, precisely because of Somalia, he might
- feel he had to stand up somewhere and that we could be his target.
- That's why, a few weeks ago, we made noises about accommodation.
- But after the information about Aristide got out from our friends
- in the CIA, and Congress started talking about how bad he is,
- we figured the chances of an invasion were gone."
- </p>
- <p> According to this source, there was an interim plan for Cedras
- to resign as a way to lure Aristide back into the country. Once
- Aristide arrived, he says, "he would be killed." Max Paul, who
- directs Haiti's ports, through which the military allegedly
- allows at least one ton of cocaine to pass each month on its
- way from Colombia to the U.S., dismissed such a scenario with
- a chuckle. Actually, he told TIME, the military leadership realized
- that if Aristide returned, "we likely would have been killed
- in a bloody civil war. Or we could have done what we have done:
- tell Clinton to get lost. We thought we had a fifty-fifty chance
- that he'd run away, which is what he's done. Our strategy worked."
- </p>
- <p> If the Clinton Administration's gambit is to set Francois up
- for a fall, Haiti's chief of repression is not playing. Clinton
- is determined to avoid a U.S. military intervention and will
- revisit that decision only if harm comes to any of the thousand
- or so Americans still in Haiti. "We know that," says an adviser
- to Francois, "and that's why our No. 1 priority is to protect
- the Americans here." The military is concentrating now on its
- Haitian solution to sideline Aristide permanently while keeping
- U.S. troops at bay. To effect that, they are relying on the
- advice of some players used by past U.S. administrations.
- </p>
- <p> The shadowy Garrison, who is constantly at Cedras' side, has
- flown in Kevin Kattke, a former Macy's department-store maintenance
- engineer who has had his finger in more than one American intelligence
- pie. In 1983 Kattke helped Oliver North prepare the 1983 U.S.
- invasion of Grenada. He was also on hand in Haiti in 1986 when
- Baby Doc Duvalier was ousted. (Raymond Burghardt, who oversaw
- Latin American affairs for the National Security Council at
- the time, credits Kattke with "knowing that Baby Doc would be
- toppled before the U.S. embassy did.")
- </p>
- <p> Kattke claims to be helping the Haitians fashion a "reconciliation
- government that can pass muster." To help promote the idea that
- the military's plan represents a "Latin way out of this," he
- has enlisted Rafael Pantaleon, a former Dominican Republic ambassador
- to the U.N. Pantaleon is operating with the "complete knowledge
- and approval" of Dominican President Joaquin Balaguer, says
- Kattke, adding that Balaguer "hates Aristide from way back."
- Also in the Garrison-Kattke loop is Norman Bailey, chief economist
- for the National Security Council during the Reagan years, who
- explains, "We want to get Haiti back on track economically."
- </p>
- <p> Another retread from past U.S. foreign adventures is Henry Womack,
- who helped oversee construction of the base that the Reagan
- Administration-backed contras used to stage attacks against
- the Sandinista government in Nicaragua. By day Womack tends
- his southern Florida storm-shutter business. At night he hunkers
- down in an eight-bedroom yellow stucco house in South Miami
- with Francois' sister Elsie and her husband Charles Joseph.
- Their aim is to assist Haiti's military in presenting a "fresh
- face" to the world. Womack says he offers Haiti's rulers "a
- white man's thinking." Joseph has paid visits to the offices
- of Republican Senators Larry Pressler and Jesse Helms, as well
- as various Congressmen, to sell the idea of manipulating Article
- 149 to seat a new President in Haiti.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the doings of this Miami trio border on the farcical.
- Womack complains that his phone has been temporarily disconnected
- because of his constant calls to Port-au-Prince. "I can't get
- reimbursed for the $3,000 I owe the phone company," he says.
- Although firmly supportive of Haiti's military regime, Womack
- says he "got involved with these folks initially last spring
- to do business." He details an elaborate plan to tap U.S. aid
- funds for low-interest loans that would be used to transport
- New York City garbage to Haiti, where it would be processed
- into mulch to fertilize plants bioengineered to provide high-quality
- paper pulp. "We could collect $38 a ton for the garbage," claims
- Womack. "We'd make a bundle, and the government could get enough
- to pay the whole army's salaries."
- </p>
- <p> The more serious scheme to install an interim President hinges
- on the not unreasonable assumption that Clinton may at some
- point have to cut a deal with the military, declare a victory
- and retreat home to resume training his laser on domestic issues.
- It also requires continued accord within Haiti's reigning troika.
- Biamby and Cedras have been close friends since the early 1970s
- when they both attended Haiti's military academy. They show
- no inclination to part ways.
- </p>
- <p> As for Cedras and Francois, the signals are mixed. "Their fates
- are completely linked," insists Francois's sister Elsie. "They're
- together all the time. Their wives are very close. They go to
- church together. They play volleyball together, and they're
- in this together to the end."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps. But Francois has been known to call Cedras cocopol
- (chicken s) behind his back. And a military source in Haiti
- reports that Francois is miffed that the recent assassination
- of Justice Minister Guy Malary was handled by the army but carried
- out by Francois's men--without his prior knowledge. Some Haitians
- see in this an army attempt to reduce Francois's power. A military
- officer who watches Francois closely says Haiti's top cop has
- woven his own power structure and manages it with considerable
- skill. Whether in league with Cedras or not, Francois plainly
- intends to stay at the helm. "The military controls Haiti,"
- he asserted recently, "and it always will." As yet, there is
- little reason to believe that will change anytime soon.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-