Biden taps experienced career diplomat to serve as US ambassador to Haiti
President Joe Biden is nominating a career diplomat with nearly four decades of experience in some of the world’s toughest postings to be U.S. ambassador in Haiti.
Dennis B. Hankins, who has worked in Sudan and Congo and served as ambassador in Mali and Guinea, is currently a foreign policy adviser in the National Guard Bureau at the Pentagon. He has been in the U.S. foreign service for 38 years.
Hankins’ nomination, which needs Senate confirmation, comes 19 months after the country’s last ambassador, Michele Sison, ended her tour of duty in October 2021 after three years. The U.S. embassy has been headed by charge d’affaires Eric Stromayer, a Haitian-Creole speaking former ambassador to the Togolese Republic who worked in Port-au-Prince early in his career.
The fact that Haiti has not had an ambassador approved by Congress has been of concern given the country’s escalating gang violence, political paralysis and deepening humanitarian crisis. It has also raised concerns as the White House has struggled to get countries in the international community to support a U.N. resolution, penned by the United States, supporting the rapid deployment of an international force to Haiti to assist the Haiti National Police combat deadly gangs.
Some members of Congress have called on President Biden to reappoint a special envoy for the country following the 2021 resignation of Daniel Foote, a senior U.S. diplomat who disagreed with what he called the Biden administration’s “inhumane” deportation policy on Haiti.
Foote, who has since retired from the foreign service, has remained an active critic of both the White House and of interim Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry, taking to Twitter to demand Henry’s