Ambassador James Foley begins to answer the “Why Haiti?” question by overseeing the fourth most expensive US Embassy complex in The World with his own spooky sensibilities to The Transformation of Diplomacy. Did KLA operatives train the putschists in the Dominican Republic with their brutal terrorist tactics, with the financial aid of NED’s IRI? photo: © Randall White
Kosovo Liberation Army
helps establish "protectorate" in Haiti
by anthony fenton
"No decision has yet been taken, but in French diplomatic circles...they
say that there has been talk of a sort of guardianship!= as in Kosovo...
Even if the United Nations doesn't want this kind of intervention leading
to military occupation, this might be inevitable until elections are
organized."
- Michel Vastel quoted in
Haiti-Progres, March 5, 2003.
In the almost nine months since Aristide was overthrown, this piece of
'foreshadowing' by Quebec reporter Michel Vastel has resurfaced many
times. Like the desire for genuine democracy in Haiti, it just won't seem
to go away.
Recent findings indicate that the United States Agency for International
Development (USAID) is employing suspected war criminals from the Kosovo
Liberation Army (KLA) in Haiti. The KLA is best known as a terrorist
organization with ties to the CIA, US State Department, and
narco-trafficking. This news was recently reported on by Flashpoints
Radio's Kevin Pina:
"All you have to do is look at their (USAID's) September document, which is published on their website, for the "Office of Transition Initiatives," (OTI) and what you will see in that document is that USAID is paying three consultants to help consult for the integration of the former brutal military into the current Haitian police force. And who are those three consultants? Those three consultants are members of the Kosovo Liberation Army."(Flashpoints interview, November 19, 2004, www.flashpoints.net)
In a separate interview, Pina states that a "source close to the U.S.
embassy confirmed that there are three members of the KLA on the ground in
Haiti."(1)
That they are employing KLA "training and management specialists" is
stated explicitly in the
USAID-OTI report cited by Pina:
"OTI continues to work closely with the U.S. Embassy and IOM to develop
options for a reintegration program for former combatants. Training and
management specialists of the Kosovo Protection Corps, a civilian response
unit consisting primarily of former Kosovo Liberation Army members, have
been brought to Haiti to assess how the Kosovo model might be applied
there. OTI and IOM have also closely followed the negotiations between the
former military and the IgoH (Interim Government of Haiti)."
Several news reports have indicated that members of the former army have
already begun
integration into the Haitian National Police. Other reports have
described how former military have been seen
collaborating with the United Nations in ex-military controlled areas
in Northern Haiti and elsewhere.
The connection between the KLA, the United States - in particular U.S.
Ambassador to Haiti James Foley and Haiti's paramilitaries/former military
- is not new. In an article published the day Aristide was ousted by the
U.S., Canada, and France-backed coup, Ottawa Professor Michel Chossudovsky
effectively
predicted the scenario that we are now seeing played out today.
Chossudovsky first describes the KLA in Kosovo:
"The KLA had been involved in similar targeted political assassinations
and killings of civilians, in the months leading up to the 1999 NATO
invasion as well as in its aftermath. Following the NATO led invasion and
occupation of Kosovo, the KLA was transformed into the Kosovo Protection
Force (KPF) under UN auspices. Rather than being disarmed to prevent the
massacres of civilians, a terrorist organization with links to organized
crime and the Balkans drug trade, was granted a legitimate political
status."
Chossudovsky also points out the connection between James Foley (appointed
ambassador to Haiti in September, 2003) and the KLA:
"At the time of the Kosovo war, the current ambassador to Haiti James
Foley was in charge of State Department briefings, working closely with
his NATO counterpart in Brussels, Jamie Shea. Barely two months before the
onslaught of the NATO led war on 24 March 1999, James Foley had called for
the "transformation" of the KLA into a respectable political organization:
"We want to develop a good relationship with them (the KLA) as they
transform themselves into a politically-oriented organization,' ..`(W)e
believe that we have a lot of advice and a lot of help that we can provide
to them if they become precisely the kind of political actor we would like
to see them become... "If we can help them and they want us to help them
in that effort of transformation, I think it's nothing that anybody can
argue with..' (quoted in the New York Times, 2 February 1999) "
As we consider the connection between this context and that of the
paramilitaries-cum-"liberators" in Haiti, led by Guy Philippe and Jodel
Chamblain, some further KLA context is essential. Writes Chossudovsky:
"The US State Department's position as conveyed in Foley's statement
was that the KLA would "not be allowed to continue as a military force but
would have the chance to move forward in their quest for self government
under a 'different context'" meaning the inauguration of a de facto
"narco-democracy" under NATO protection."
It's also important to note how Ambassador Foley is perceived by Haitians.
A Haitian lawyer who "asked not to be named" told the Ecumenical Program in Central America and the
Caribbean's delegation "What I see now is we're going right into a
dictatorship. U.S. Ambassador Foley is the real President of Haiti! Each
day I get more and more scared. It's the rewriting of 1915."(2)
The closest visible emulation of the "Kosovo Model' in Haiti, then, has
been through formation of Guy Philippe's political party, National
Reconstruction Front (FRN). Philippe has stated that his main priority if
elected president would be to officially reconstitute the Haitian army:
"This would be a
professional army, not the one we had," he says, reasoning that "(y)ou
can't have foreigners invest without security." USAID, in their most
recent
October report, provide some early campaigning for Philippe when they
state "Many Haitians feel U.N. peacekeepers are doing little to halt the
violence and want the interim government to formally reinstate the army
Aristide disbanded ten years ago." Never mind that this statement
contradicts the internationally recognized consensus in Haiti that
Aristide's disbanding of the military was universally supported.(3)
Philippe, it has been thoroughly established, has strong ties to the
"political opposition" Democratic Convergence, who "boycotted" the 2000
presidential elections that elected Aristide in a landslide and proceeded
- with the assistance of the National Endowment for Democracy financed
International Republican Institute - to destabilize Aristide and his
Lavalas government. One of the strongest established links has been that
between Philippe and self-styled "intellectual author" of the February
coup, Paul Arcelin, former Montreal Professor and brother-in-law of former
Canadian Member of Parliament Nicole Roy-Arcelin. Arcelin also has ties to
Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Pierre Pettigrew.
Arcelin admitted (Montreal Gazette, March 9th, 2004) days after the coup
that he and Philippe had spent at least two years trying to overthrow
Aristide. Arcelin was the Democratic Convergence's Dominican Republic
liaison. The Dominican Republic provided the staging ground for the
eventual CIA-led coup d'etat by housing, training, and clothing the
paramilitaries. Between October 2000 and February 2004, Philippe and
fellow paramilitaries staged several armed incursions into the Haitian
countryside and areas along the Haiti-DR border, killing several, but
always managing to escape authorities. Chossudovsky succinctly draws the
KLA-Philippe connection, "For the CIA and the State Department the FLRN
and Guy Philippe are to Haiti what the KLA and Hashim Thaci are to
Kosovo."
The way to apply the USAID/Ottawa Initiative on Haiti idea of the "Kosovo
Model" was described by Chossudovsky:
"In other words, Washington's design is "regime change": topple the
Lavalas administration and install a compliant US puppet regime...What is at
stake is an eventual power sharing arrangement between the various
Opposition groups and the CIA supported Rebels...A bogus (symbolic)
disarmament of the Rebels may be contemplated under international
supervision, as occurred with the KLA in Kosovo in 2000. The "former
terrorists" could then be integrated into the civilian police as well as
into the task of "rebuilding" the Haitian Armed forces under US (or
UN/RCMP) supervision. What this scenario suggests, is that the
Duvalier-era terrorist structures have been restored. A program of
civilian killings and political assassinations directed against Lavalas
supporter is in fact already underway."
There has not been, aside from extensive lip service paid to the idea, any
disarmament.(4) 'Sweeps' of poor neighborhoods known to be the heart of
Aristide support in Port au Prince (such as Bel Air, La Saline,
Martissant), have yielded hundreds of arbitrary arrests but few arms, as
the pro-Aristide resistance has strengthened. Members of the resistance
movement have stated that "we will no longer just stand like zombies and
let them kill us. We will continue to demand the return of our elected
president and we will defend ourselves against them when they come to kill
us. We are not animals, we are not bandits and we did not start this
killing. They did."
The killing began the moment Aristide was carted away on the American
airplane. The National Lawyers Guild reported that an estimated 1,000 bodies, as according to the director of the State Morgue, had been buried in
mass graves within one month of the coup. Several other human rights organizations have detailed and documented the targeting of Lavalas supporters, and several of the Lavalas leadership remain imprisoned on groundless (if any) charges. The resistance fighter cited above may be referring specifically to the new wave of violence that began on September 30th, when Haitian police fired into unarmed crowds of demonstrators, killing at least two according to admissions made later by puppet PM Gerard Latortue.
Only two weeks later, Pina reported that "The General Hospital had to call
the Ministry of Health today in order to demand emergency vehicles to
remove the more than 600 corpses
that have been stockpiled there, that have been coming in from the killing
over the last two weeks alone. That's how much killing that has been going
on here in the streets of Haiti that has not been/being reported and has
not talked about." Meanwhile, mainstream outlets cannot seem to get their
numbers straight, frequently omitting officially acknowledged numbers such
as those reported on by Pina, and even those reported on by USAID-funded
"human rights groups" such as the NCHR. Some mainstream outlets
have reported the
following:
"At least 170 people have been killed by gunfire in recent violence in
Haiti, most of them from slum strongholds of supporters of ousted
president Jean-Bertrand Aristide, a human rights group said on
Friday....Another 241 people have been wounded by gunshots in violence from
Sept. 1 to Oct. 26..."
These numbers alone demonstrate that Aristide supporters are being
targeted, with over 400 acknowledged gunshot victims in eight weeks.
As is made clear in the epigraph, talk of reconstituting Haiti's army
along the lines of Kosovo was first leaked out of official circles after
the January 2003 Ottawa Initiative on Haiti meeting, hosted by Canada's
secretary of state for Latin America, Denis Paradis.
Where Denis Paradis would
later deny having planned "regime change" in Haiti, this is really
only a matter of semantics, as he frequently employed the term
'responsibility to protect' in the context of what needed to be done in
Haiti. This doctrine, established by Jean Chretien at the request of UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan (5), is tantamount to an official
reformalization of imperialism, and is merely a new way to state what in
1902 John Atkinson Hobson described as "trusteeship" as a means of
managing the problem of the "lower races." According to Hobson, "The real
issue is whether, and under what circumstances, it is justifiable for
Western nations to use compulsory government for the control and education
in the arts of industrial and political civilization of the inhabitants of
tropical countries and other so-called lower races."
Hobson, like Paradis, was thinking of Haiti when pontificating towards the
most efficient and justifiable means of subjugating peoples deemed
inferior to the white race:
"If we look to the native social systems of the tropical East, the
primitive savagery of Central Africa...or the black republic of Hayti in the
present...the lesson seems everywhere the same; it is that there will be no
development of the resources of the tropics under native government." (6)
Equally, both Hobson and Paradis would argue that the "care and education
of a "lower race" as a trust" is based on the "friendly motives" of
imperial countries.
Where the Kosovo style trusteeship for Haiti was only theoretical in
January 2003, it is reaching real fruition by virtue of the most horrific
crimes perpetrated against Haiti's poor majority. Even the mainstream has
reported on the more than 30 execution-style killings of Haitian youths,
including women caught in the crossfire of UN-supported PNH incursions
into poor neighborhoods in recent weeks. With seasoned putschists and
terrorists such as USAID and KLA helping the increasingly militarised and
UN/RCMP backed Haitian police pacify supporters of democratic principles
in Haiti, the world is getting a look at the future of "humanitarian
intervention."
It's fitting that the Miami Herald has recently opined that "As Haiti descends deeper each day into anarchy, the time has come to consider some form of international protectorate to take temporary control of that beleaguered Caribbean country." Don Bohning further posits that "As unpalatable as it may be for the vast majority of Haitians, who spent 1915 to 1934 under a U.S. Marine occupation, ceding temporary sovereignty to an international body is one option slowly gathering momentum." This article as much as any indicates the level of fascistic pontification that will increasingly be allowable, buttressed no doubt by George Bush's re-election. Haiti's "protectorate status" would be overseen by "a Brazilian-led regional coalition."
Obviously Bohning is in denial over the fact that the "anarchy" to which
he refers was brought about largely by an internationally imposed economic
embargo combined with other tried and true destabilization efforts (eg.
The EU's funding the opposition, NED and IRI's funding, training the
paramilitaries, the ownership of private media by the opposition, etc.)
Haiti's "failure" has always had ready-made justification in the eyes of
"white supremacist terrorists" as against the "necessity" of colonial
occupation.
These recent discoveries make it clear that when James Foley came to Haiti
last September, the CIA's wheels were in serious motion, and Aristide and
democracy's days were numbered in Haiti. It should surprise no one that
Foley should enlist the efforts of his war criminal KLA friends, who
proved themselves so valuable to the NATO-led
"coalition of the killing" in 1999.(7)
With all of the "trustees" that it can handle, now as much as ever Haiti
needs a massive outpouring of international solidarity.
Notes:
(1) With the author, November 20, 2004.
(2) From the cover of "A People's Fact Finding Investigationto Haiti."
(3) "An internationally sponsored public opinion poll taken in March 1995 found that 72 percent of the sample approved the government's purges of the army," in Robert Maguire's "Demilitarising Public Order in a Predatory State: The Case of Haiti," North-South Agenda Papers, 1995, p. 12.
(4) In the section "Strengthening the operational capacity of the PNH," the World Bank/European Commission convened Haiti Interim Cooperation Framework calls for the expansion of the PNH from the current strength of 3000 "to 6000 in 2006...and to 20,000 in 2015." (p. 14, "republic of Haiti: Interim Cooperation Framework, 2004-2006, Summary Report) In the meantime, some 25,000 former military, termed "beneficiaries" will have been "provided assistance" with ICF funding. See: http://haiticci.undg.org/index.cfm?Module=ActiveWeb&Page=WebPage&s=introduction&NewLanguageID=en.
(5) This report is about the so-called "right of humanitarian intervention": the question of when, if ever, it is appropriate for states for take coercive - and in particular military - action, against another state for the purpose of protecting people at risk in that other state. See: http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/iciss-ciise/report-en.asp.
(6) Cited in Philip D. Curtin's "Imperialism," p. 319-337. (7) On the KLA, see Chossudovsky's Kosovo "Freedom
Fighters" Financed by Organized Crime". See also Znet's extensive Kosovo archives.
The author can be reached at afenton@riseup.net.
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