Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Haiti is in chaos and no one knows what to do

- Daniel DePetris Daniel DePetris is a fellow at Defense Priorities and a foreign affairs columnist for the Chicago Tribune.

Incessant, round-the-clock violence. An impending famine. Mass displaceme­nt. A near total absence of state authority. Hundreds of thousands of civilians stranded with nowhere to go.You might think I’m describing Gaza.

But no, I’m referring to Haiti, the troubled republic roughly 600 miles to the south of Miami.

Country in chaos

It’s difficult to put into words just how chaotic Haiti is at the present time. The country is in a state of anarchy.

The most powerful figure in Haiti today is a gang leader nicknamed “Barbecue,” who once served as a police officer before being let go after he participat­ed in a horrific attack in a Port-auPrince slum that killed more than 70 people. Barbecue has since formed an alliance with other gangs in the Haitian capital.

Gangs have always been a problem in Haiti. The country’s politician­s have used criminal elements to do their dirty work — whether it’s to scare rivals, get their supporters to the polls or attack the political bases of other politician­s. But like the Frankenste­in monster who defied his creator, the gangs have long since escaped the thumb of the politician­s.

They are now an authority in their own right, outnumberi­ng and outgunning the Haitian National Police who can’t even protect themselves, let alone the Haitian population. Entire areas of Port-au-Prince are no-go zones for the police. Roughly 80% of the capital is controlled by the gangs, and the figure might even be higher.

All of the violence is having predictabl­e effects on the quality of life. The United Nations estimates that about half of Haitians are food insecure and close to 1 million are on the brink of starvation. Finding enough fuel to get around town or power a generator is a full-time job, a consequenc­e in part of the gangs’ blocking roads to exert their power. Hospitals are running short of supplies, and some hospitals have shut their doors altogether.

A familiar history

If all of this sounds familiar, that’s because it is. Haiti has witnessed multiple political tremors since the mid-1980s, when demonstrat­ors overthrew the despotic, ruling Duvalier family. In 1991, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Haiti’s first democratic­ally elected leader, was pushed aside by the Haitian military, which establishe­d a junta regime that ceded power only after President Bill Clinton’s administra­tion threatened a full-scale invasion of the country and dispatched two aircraft carriers near Haiti’s coastline.

U.S. troops entered Haiti unopposed and were tasked with setting the stage for a political transition back to Aristide. A decade later, in 2004, Aristide was gone, flying into exile aboard a U.S. aircraft after squanderin­g whatever goodwill he acquired.

A United Nations-led peacekeepi­ng mission became involved after Aristide’s exit in a bid to facilitate yet another political transition. That U.N. mission turned into a debacle, and peacekeepe­rs departed after 15 years under a cloud of scandal and after setting off a cholera epidemic that killed at least 10,000 people.

But that’s all history. Haiti’s situation is markedly worse today than it was back then, if only because state institutio­ns are simply not functionin­g adequately. Combine incompeten­ce and corruption with insecurity, and you get hopelessne­ss, despair and “Mad Max”-style fury, which is exactly what Haiti has become.

The United States and its partners in the Western Hemisphere know all this. Foreign-imposed solutions, however, are hard to find. Past foreign interventi­ons have at best kept Haiti on life support without treating the underlying illness.

President Joe Biden’s administra­tion isn’t stupid; officials can see that previous U.S. interventi­ons haven’t worked as expected, and they have no intention of ordering our Marines back into Port-au-Prince. The White House spent months trying to entice Canada to take the lead, but our friends to the north didn’t want to step up either.

Kenya of all places was gracious enough to volunteer, pledging 1,000 Kenyan police officers. Yet the mission was stopped before it even got off the ground, with Kenya’s high court ruling the deployment unconstitu­tional.

What Haiti needs

In the meantime, the U.S. is doing what it can to get its own people out of harm’s way. The Biden administra­tion has pledged to pick up most of the tab for the Kenyan-led stabilizat­ion mission if it become operationa­l. Meanwhile, Haiti’s neighbors in the Caribbean are attempting to convince the unelected and widely unpopular Prime Minister Henry to step aside or at the very least make room for a technocrat­ic transition­al government that could usher the country toward its the first elections in eight years.

In the end, Haiti’s problems will ultimately have to be solved by the Haitians themselves. That’s obviously easier said than done. But the alternativ­es — fullblown civil war or another fruitless, decade-long mission at the hands of foreigners — are even worse.

 ?? Clarens Siffroy/ AFP via Getty Images ?? A demonstrat­ion following the resignatio­n of Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry on March 12.
Clarens Siffroy/ AFP via Getty Images A demonstrat­ion following the resignatio­n of Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry on March 12.

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