In the last century, the United States mounted
two major interventions in Haiti, both expensive failures. Before
sending thousands of troops on another dubious errand, Congress and
the White House would do well to ponder some lessons learned.
The first is don't do everything yourself.
In 1915, President Woodrow Wilson sent U.S. Marines to put down an
uprising. They stayed for 19 years and largely ran the government.
They paid off Haiti's debts, paved streets and developed Haiti's
public health infrastructure. Haitian leaders largely served as
figureheads. The second lesson is don't neglect cultivating a
democratic political class.
In 1957, Haitians elected a country doctor - Francois "Papa Doc"
Duvalier - who replaced professional troops with loyal followers.
They became the dreaded Tontons Macoutes who ravaged Haiti's rural
villages. When Dr. Duvalier died in 1971, his son, Jean-Claude,
became president for life - until the army toppled him.
After the ouster of "Baby Doc," the Reagan administration
encouraged Haitians to adopt a democratic constitution but
neglected to put much effort into cultivating an educated political
class. In 1990, they elected a former parish priest, Jean-Bertrand
Aristide, as president. Having participated in Dr. Duvalier's
ouster, Mr. Aristide was wildly popular.
Like the Duvaliers, Mr. Aristide had little political or
administrative experience. Instead of building institutions to
support a newly adopted democratic constitution, he encouraged
street gangs to silence critics. His presidency lapsed into chaos.
Within months, his security chief, Gen. Raoul Cedras, deposed him
and named a governing junta.
Mr. Aristide fled to the United States and drew on frozen Haitian
bank accounts. Prodded by Congress and Mr. Aristide's lobbying, the
Clinton administration abandoned negotiations and restored him by
invading Haiti - committing about $3 billion and 20,000 U.S. troops
in the process. In doing so, U.S. officials made another mistake -
they promoted a demagogue over rebuilding political
institutions.
Freshly reinstalled, Mr. Aristide made himself the center of
attention. While foreign advisers and aid workers worried about
rebuilding the police and judiciary, he renewed ties to partisan
gangs. He even had to be talked out of staying beyond his
constitutional term to allow his elected successor and
protégé, Rene Preval, to take office in December
1995.
Out of office, Mr. Aristide ruled through the pliant Mr. Preval.
Haiti was without an elected parliament for two years, succeeding
elections were marred by fraud and progress on the police and
judiciary was undone by Mr. Aristide's political appointments to
those institutions. The United States and multilateral donors
curtailed direct assistance to the government.
Returning to office through controversial elections in 2000, Mr.
Aristide continued to disappoint. To restore aid, he promised
President Bill Clinton to correct flawed elections, improve respect
for human rights and include members of the growing political
opposition in his administration. He gave similar assurances to the
Organization of American States but never followed through.
Suspicious of his record, the growing democratic opposition was
reluctant to cooperate with him.
With Mr. Aristide's departure, another intervention is under way.
This time, the United States and its allies have shown remarkable
restraint - refusing to take sides until it was necessary to avoid
violence against the president and his family. Moreover, they have
refused to take over. They seem to have learned the first
lesson.
Haiti's interim leaders need to forge a new peace on their own,
without excessive advice and conflicting signals from interested
foreign powers. This is Haiti's fight. For now, help should come in
the form of peacekeepers and good offices.
Further, Haiti needs an educated political class. But that doesn't
mean polishing existing elites. Haiti should have a broad base of
educated citizens who can practice democratic government from their
neighborhoods to the national level. Citizens should know their
rights as well as responsibilities and be able to measure the
performance of those who serve them in office. After public order
is established, promoting education and the development of civil
society must become support priorities.
Moreover, the United States and the international community should
avoid placing faith in demagogues. Mr. Aristide used the Haitian
and U.S. governments to get rich while polarizing and destabilizing
his nation. This sad experience should teach us not to back a
figure so personally ever again.
First appeared in the Baltimore Sun