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¡¥UDN¡¦ sees an evil US plot in Haiti
By J. Michael Cole ±FÁıN
Thursday, Jan 28, 2010, Page 8
In a commentary on Jan. 19 on the role of the US in relief efforts in
quake-devastated Haiti, the Chinese-language United Daily News went on the
offensive on what it claimed were signs of US imperialistic machinations in the
impoverished country.
The opening sets the tone for the article: ¡§[A]n international dispute broke out
as the Haitian International Airport in Port-au-Prince has been put under the
control of the US Armed Forces and the US has prioritized the evacuation of its
own citizens,¡¨ UDN wrote. ¡§Rescue airplanes from around the world have even been
refused clearance to land. According to a foreign news report, France has lodged
a formal protest to the US Department of State.¡¨
It continues: ¡§The US acting as the world¡¦s sole superpower is nothing new.
Given Haiti¡¦s proximity to the US, Washington¡¦s bossy attitude is also no
surprise. [US] President [Barack] Obama promptly pledged a donation of US$100
million in relief assistance after the earthquake struck. No other country can
match such an enormous donation. However, the US Air Force putting the Haitian
airport under its virtual control is a unilateral act too aggressive in the eyes
of other nations.¡¨
¡§The US extends its influence into other countries using not only its military
might and economic strengths, but also its pervasive media network. This time,
CNN conducted a ¡¥Quick Vote¡¦ on its website, asking whether the US should accept
Haitian immigrants in the earthquake¡¦s aftermath,¡¨ it wrote.
The article then incongruously ties US behavior in Haiti and CNN polls with
Taiwan: ¡§CNN had also conducted a ¡¥Quick Vote¡¦ while reporting on the disaster
in Taiwan in the aftermath of Typhoon Morakot last August. CNN asked its
viewers, ¡¥Should Taiwan¡¦s leader step down over the slow rescue and relief
efforts?¡¦ Such push polling caused quite a stir among the local media in Taiwan
when all viewers pointed their fingers at the [President] Ma Ying-jeou [°¨^¤E]
administration.¡¨
¡§However, CNN represents the view of the US, and it has indeed caused a lot of
trouble by trying to play a leading role in shaping people¡¦s worldviews [¡K] In
the past, China was disliked by Western countries just because its national
designation, the Middle Kingdom, implied that it was ¡¥the center of the world.¡¦
Now looking at what the US has been doing in Haiti, the US has seemingly come to
regard itself as the true ¡¥Middle Kingdom,¡¦¡¨ it wrote.
Nowhere in the commentary does the author ask who could, or should, ensure
security and order in Haiti, a country with a long history of political
instability and warlordism. The only other military presence in the country with
enough knowledge of the place to make a difference in ensuring the safety of
humanitarian delivery is Canada, which is already overstretched in Afghanistan
and could not deploy anything nearly as sizable ¡X and as rapidly ¡X as the US. No
country in the region, not even the Chinese UN contingent, has the means to do
this, period.
Was the world supposed to stand by, out of political politeness, while things
fell apart in Haiti? Whoever wrote the commentary clearly had no understanding
whatsoever of Haiti¡¦s domestic situation, history, and the need for
Civilian-Military cooperation (CIMIC) during humanitarian emergencies (if one
country has experience in and has encouraged CIMIC in recent years, it is the
US)
The author chose to look at the deployment through the prism of politics rather
than as necessary action that undoubtedly saved hundreds, if not thousands, of
lives.
The US was a natural leader to deal with the aftermath of this catastrophe, and
it has substantial experience operating in the ever-unstable Haiti that goes
back to at least former US president George H.W. Bush. Amid growing political
instability in Port-au-Prince, in September 1994 then-president Bill Clinton
ordered the launch of Operation Uphold Democracy, while the UN Security Council
passed Resolution 940, which ¡§under Chapter VII of the Charter of the United
Nations, authorize[d] Member States to form a multinational force under unified
command and control and ... to use all necessary means [including force] to
facilitate the departure from Haiti of the military leadership ¡K and to
establish and maintain a secure and stable environment that will permit
implementation of the Governors Island Agreement.¡¨
What prompted the US into action then was not imperial designs on the Western
hemisphere¡¦s poorest country, but rather fear of domestic instability and a
humanitarian crisis as thousands of Haitian boat people sought refuge in the US.
Between October 1991 (a month after president Jean-Bertrand Aristide was
overthrown by a military coup) and June 1992, a total of 36,594 Haitian refugees
were intercepted (under a program initiated by former US president Ronald
Reagan) by US special forces as they attempted to flee their country and seek
asylum in the US. Between 1994 (when Aristide returned in office) and 1995, a
total of 21,638 Haitians were relocated to camps at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and
fed, housed and clothed under the US-led Operation Sea Signal.
Then, after the November 2000 elections, which the Haitian opposition boycotted,
US and other international forces mandated by the UN once again were deployed to
ensure stability, and the situation simmered until 2004, when a rebellion, which
resulted in numerous deaths, forced Aristide to once again flee the country and
brought President Andre Preval back to power (he served as president from 1996
until 2000). Violence continued, however, which once again created the need for
UN peacekeepers and foreign police forces.
Given all this, added to the fact that existing socio-political pressures were
bound to be exacerbated by the collapse of the central government following the
earthquake, accusing the US of seeing itself as the Middle Kingdom, as the piece
argues, is invidious.
Discussing the situation in Haiti, Taiwanese rescue teams have said that the
situation there is ¡§logistical chaos¡¨ ¡X hence the need for foreign troops to
support aid efforts and ensure that deliveries of medical and humanitarian aid
are not slowed down ¡X or even seized ¡X by criminal gangs. As past humanitarian
crises like Somalia have shown us, the participation of the military, though
perhaps not always welcome by the people in need and humanitarian workers, is
often a necessary evil. Such was the case in Haiti.
As for denying some aircraft to land at the airport in Port-au-Prince, many
reports show that the airport is far too small to accommodate the sudden
increase in traffic, and many countries (not just France) have had to reroute
their deliveries to neighboring Dominican Republic, whence humanitarian goods
are transported by land across the border. Unlike what UDN alleges, there was no
evil plot by the US military to seize the airport.
The article¡¦s criticism of the US prioritizing the evacuation of Americans in
Haiti is also unfair. It is the responsibility of every government to ensure the
safe passage of their citizens in emergencies. France did that in Rwanda in
1994, for example, just as close to 1 million Rwandan Tutsis were about to be
exterminated, and many countries did the same when Israel invaded Lebanon in
2006.
The parallel with CNN polls, meanwhile, is just risible. Since when does CNN
represent ¡§the view of the US,¡¨ as the piece argues? At best, CNN represents ¡§a
view¡¨ among a plurality of contending views. It is doubtful, as well, that
Haitians, who are struggling to rescue (or bury) loves ones and rebuild their
lives, sit down at night to have their minds ¡§poisoned¡¨ by CNN propaganda, which
is what the commentary is implying.
This commentary is strident anti-Americanism of the type that conservative
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) members, as well as Beijing, will likely exploit
to widen the rift between Taipei and Washington. It should be noted that the
English version of the commentary, which sounds ominously like something that
would appear in the Beijing-controlled People¡¦s Daily, was carried on the
official KMT Web site.
J. Michael Cole is an editor at the Taipei Times.
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