That we can consider something from the CIA archives is telling.
― Skottie, Saturday, 28 February 2004 16:45 (twenty-two years ago)
I did not. I simply said that you were wrong to intervene in the first place and continue to be wrong to intervene now.
If you think that various administrations start from scratch with their military and foreign policies, consider this chain of events:
Colin Powell had laid military contingency plans to deal with Iraq prior to the first Gulf War. Regime change was argued for by Bush's Deputy Secretary of Defense as early as 1992. Regime change in Iraq was policy in the Clinton administration. And in a report written in 1999 by a group including Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Perle, it was stated that American military intervention in Iraq for regime change could not get popular support in the States unless there was "a catastrophic and catalyzing event, like a new Pearl Harbor". They got one and then all their planning came into action.
Provide some evidence that the elections were fair and not rigged.
America has no right to such evidence after the way that Bush got in. But either way, this is typical muscular American foreign policy: find a minority group who dispute the government of a foreign state that isn't towing the US line and back them. If the minority claim that the elections weren't fair then all the better. It is just an excuse for American muscle.
By the way, I'm not a knee-jerk anti-American. I agree with you about Britain's imperialist policies. My points are never against America as such. However, when I think that America is wrong, I will say so. By calling this knee-jerk you are either trying to ridicule opposition or you actually believe, slavishly, that opposition to American good sense is always ridiculous. That's quite sad.
― run it off (run it off), Saturday, 28 February 2004 16:50 (twenty-two years ago)
Oh, I like this one. Pure ideology!
The argument - if there was one, rather than this assertion - would be something like this: America is an open society and here is the proof, the CIA opens its archive so that we can see what awful things it got up to destabilising countries all over the world. Forget about what the CIA were doing in these countries. If only the societies that the CIA is fucking up were as open as the US then the CIA would not need to covertly undermine them.
A bullying open society is justified in bullying the world because it is open, is it? It is the bullying that is the problem and using the open society to justify it is to fail to justify it. Basically, there is no justification for imperial bullying, so what imperial powers do is defend it by referring to the superiority of their culture instead.
― run it off (run it off), Saturday, 28 February 2004 16:56 (twenty-two years ago)
― cybele (cybele), Saturday, 28 February 2004 17:40 (twenty-two years ago)
Scales falling from eyes! Well yes, of course. And?
Cute closing note of moral superiority. Very Joe Lieberman.
I do believe that you are a knee-jerk anti-American at least in the sense that you are unwilling to regard "America" as anything other than an entity that acts outside its borders, whether or not it acts with the support or even knowledge of its people, or to distinguish between different American administrations or between administrations and America's people.
I don't think we can talk about whether American intervention here is justified, because there is no American intervention here. I am readily willing to concede that Haitian expatriates in the US, the CIA, Republicans outside of government, Republicans in government, or any combination of these, may be involved in what's going on now. The US is not, as a matter of formal policy, although concededly it is officially taking at least a hands-off approach and may be well aware of what's really happening.
Suppose for the sake of argument that the Bush administration, and/or some other part of the government is involved at least indirectly. I am arguing against your opposition to such involvement (even if I might agree with such opposition; I'm not informed enough to take a position one way or the other) because I perceive the opposition to be based simply on the fact of American involvement, as well as on the assumption - not necessarily wrong, but without evidence that you have examined the facts - that Aristide is good or popular and that an American-approved alternative would be bad or unpopular. I don't necessarily assume the opposite, and having looked around more I am more skeptical about the stories of Aristide's undemocratic tendencies (though, as is always true in attempting to prove a negative, I haven't seen hard evidence either). But if I have bought into "propaganda" about Aristide, so has Isabel Hilton.
The argument - if there was one, rather than this assertion - would be something like this: America is an open society and here is the proof, the CIA opens its archive so that we can see what awful things it got up to destabilising countries all over the world. Forget about what the CIA were doing in these countries.
I'm not going to back up Skottie's point here, but I don't think that you understood it.
― gabbneb (gabbneb), Saturday, 28 February 2004 17:53 (twenty-two years ago)
I can't tell if you're kneejerk anti-american or not, doesn't matter. You do seem to be kneejerk anti-interventionist, however. And a touch paranoid. The problem with government conspiracy theories are many, not least among them, governments can't keep secrets, and there isn't longterm continuity among the players powerful enough to try. There just isn't.
It seems unlikely that the vast, vast revenues generated by Haitian purchases of American rice would justify military intervention. What are the components of the Haitian "market" anyway. They buy rice from the U.S. with IMF loans financed by the U.S.? Or with direct aid grants from the U.S.? Come on.
Leave Haiti alone to work out its problems until there are no more Haitians standing. Then there won't be any more problems. That was the European policy in the Balkans, of course.
― Skottie, Saturday, 28 February 2004 18:41 (twenty-two years ago)
Which is not to say I think you're hugely misguided or anything, and for the record it's not like I know loads and loads about Haiti -- it's just that I think the traditional U.S.-interests analysis you're pushing isn't particularly effective here. Because the U.S. interest is, in this case, quite likely very simple: the goal, as always, is to sort of screw the ideological specifics and just get this county to a state where we can safely mostly-ignore it.
And there are perfectly good reasons to criticize that, which is the one place where i can semi-agree with you. As in, let's go over a list of reasons why we wouldn't take a hand-off approach to Haiti -- reasons I'm not necessarily advancing or defending but just offering up as surely the ones in operation: (a) refugees, (b) Haitian-American voters, (c) even worse chaos and violence that eventually shames the "uncaring" U.S. into stepping in anyway, eventually, plus of course (d) inclination to stabilize the thing you know and can live with rather than open the door to something even non-ideologues couldn't stomach. And it's that last point, sensible as it is, that I think you're trying to hammer at, right? Because it's Not Our Place to be stomaching or not-stomaching the government of another nation, right? And I semi-agree with you on that one, but not universally, because that logic, carried to its extreme, means abandoning even our more worthwhile principles.
And you'd have to say more than you're currently saying to convince me that Haiti is a situation that deserves that kind of neglect.
― nabiscothingy, Sunday, 29 February 2004 00:28 (twenty-two years ago)
American interest in keeping Aristide in power isn't necessarily due to apathy or just an interest in keeping things calm. Right now there is no one to fill the Aristide's position if he's deposed. However ineffectual Aristide is, The Cannibal Army (I'm sorry, "The Gonaives Resistance Front") is a lot less prepared (and less willing) to try and rebuiled Haiti.
― Colin Beckett (Colin Beckett), Sunday, 29 February 2004 00:51 (twenty-two years ago)
― Skottie, Sunday, 29 February 2004 01:24 (twenty-two years ago)
I try not to get involved in political threads anymore (I get in them, then don't go back for a few days, and lose all interest in debate), but here I gotta say Skottie's OTM. Prime Example:
"and until then, you will simply believe all the propaganda you get in favour of American intervention?"
― Alan Conceicao, Sunday, 29 February 2004 02:44 (twenty-two years ago)
Stomaching and not-stomaching other governments, when it is backed with the military - ie imposing stomach-able governments on other nations - is problematic, I agree. And yes, that's is my main gripe with Americans contemplating what they should do about the situation in Haiti.
In run it off's weltanschauung, the U.S. is always either in "uncaring" or "meddling imperialistic" mode. This binary status is convenient because whatever the situation, the U.S. is always wrong.
Show me where I did this. I haven't once talked about the US being uncaring and I don't think the US would be uncaring if it kept out of other nation's democratic business. And, to reiterate, I am not limiting my anti-imperialism to the US.
By the way, this is not pacifism. If there is good reason to go to war - against an aggressive Fascism, say - then I think all governments should fight for their principles against that fascism. I'm not a pacifist, I'm anti-imperlialist. If America is flexing its imperialist muscles a lot lately, I don't consider that my fault and so my opposition to it will naturally mean arguing against American foreign policy. That doesn't make me anti-American. It makes me anti-imperialist.
― run it off (run it off), Sunday, 29 February 2004 09:53 (twenty-two years ago)
Gabbneb, after being told about the strong links between administrations and the foreign policy that is common between them: Scales falling from eyes! Well yes, of course. And?
― run it off (run it off), Sunday, 29 February 2004 11:41 (twenty-two years ago)
― run it off (run it off), Sunday, 29 February 2004 11:55 (twenty-two years ago)
― hstencil, Sunday, 29 February 2004 20:56 (twenty-two years ago)
― cybele (cybele), Sunday, 29 February 2004 21:06 (twenty-two years ago)
― dyson (dyson), Monday, 1 March 2004 06:20 (twenty-two years ago)
Also, Run it Off's commentary is definitely OTM.
― maypang (maypang), Monday, 1 March 2004 06:34 (twenty-two years ago)
― dyson (dyson), Monday, 1 March 2004 06:44 (twenty-two years ago)
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=589&e=1&u=/ap/20040301/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/haiti_uprising
― maypang (maypang), Monday, 1 March 2004 06:46 (twenty-two years ago)
― dyson (dyson), Monday, 1 March 2004 06:49 (twenty-two years ago)
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040301/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/un_haiti_10
― maypang (maypang), Monday, 1 March 2004 06:55 (twenty-two years ago)
― dyson (dyson), Monday, 1 March 2004 07:08 (twenty-two years ago)
― run it off (run it off), Monday, 1 March 2004 09:15 (twenty-two years ago)
i think it's mostly a matter of the us not wanting to be embarrassed by a bloodbath in their backyard but otherwise ignoring the situation as best they can, or simply managing it for maximum quiet, whatever that happens to mean
― amateur!st (amateurist), Monday, 1 March 2004 09:35 (twenty-two years ago)
i don't know much about this; can you point me to an article that goes into detail?
i'm skeptical only because this is the "line" on so many other countries and it begins to sound overfamiliar, but you may be right.
― amateur!st (amateurist), Monday, 1 March 2004 09:37 (twenty-two years ago)
Here’s an article about the history of America’s intervention in Haiti
― run it off (run it off), Monday, 1 March 2004 09:52 (twenty-two years ago)
Haiti is the poorest country in the western hemisphere, so you are right that America has nothing to worry about from Haiti or any Haitian leader directly. However, America insists that the countries in its 'backyard' comply with American interests. The force of this insistence can take military form, or simply be tied to aid and loan packages. When one of these countries, or their leaders, resists Washington in some way, the American government becomes nervous. There seems to be a bad-apple-mentality in the Pentagon that fears middle and southern American mutiny. So, it is not Haiti itself which is a threat to the states, but there is a perception that if the poorest nation in the western hemisphere can flout American demands that that is an unacceptable situation and a bad example. America does not demand that human rights be upheld as a precondition for aid in these countries (Colombia, for instance) only that they comply with and actively support American interests.
― run it off (run it off), Monday, 1 March 2004 11:59 (twenty-two years ago)
http://www.exile.ru/184/war_nerd.html
relevant quote:
"In a way, the only sad thing about Haiti is the way we keep trying to make it into Ohio. Because it never will be, and only looks ridiculous trying, giving the local killers fancy democratic names. If we just let Haiti be Haiti—a crazy, gory voodoo kingdom—people might learn to respect the place."
― loik, Monday, 1 March 2004 12:17 (twenty-two years ago)
― amateur!st (amateurist), Monday, 1 March 2004 12:33 (twenty-two years ago)
oh that helps!
Isn't that quite close to the way the British empire described India before deciding India would be better off in under British rule?
― run it off (run it off), Monday, 1 March 2004 12:36 (twenty-two years ago)
― run it off (run it off), Monday, 1 March 2004 12:42 (twenty-two years ago)
Chavez is so next. Again.
― maypang (maypang), Monday, 1 March 2004 15:21 (twenty-two years ago)
― Kerry (dymaxia), Monday, 1 March 2004 17:12 (twenty-two years ago)
― Colin Beckett (Colin Beckett), Monday, 1 March 2004 19:08 (twenty-two years ago)
― run it off (run it off), Monday, 1 March 2004 20:42 (twenty-two years ago)
America has certainly pushed for Aristide's removal, but I don't think anyone was in favor of the Cannibal Army uprising. But, you're right, the most important step is yet to come and hopefully the Bush administration will surprise us.
― Colin Beckett (Colin Beckett), Monday, 1 March 2004 21:03 (twenty-two years ago)
― Dickerson Pike (Dickerson Pike), Monday, 1 March 2004 23:18 (twenty-two years ago)
Where have you gone, Jesse Helms.
― Dickerson Pike (Dickerson Pike), Monday, 1 March 2004 23:21 (twenty-two years ago)
― badgerminor (badgerminor), Tuesday, 2 March 2004 02:28 (twenty-two years ago)
― maypang (maypang), Tuesday, 2 March 2004 02:33 (twenty-two years ago)
― dyson (dyson), Tuesday, 2 March 2004 03:11 (twenty-two years ago)
You call the line "Regime change in Iraq was policy in the Clinton administration" a "strong link[] between administrations and the foreign policy that is common between them"?! Please. What does this example have to do with Allende, the original subject? And when exactly did the Clinton administration put into effect its policy of regime change in Iraq?
I don't think I've been cynical at all. I've tried to point out America's involvement in the problem while most other people on this thread have thought only of America's intervention as a solution.
I have not posited American intervention as a solution once on this thread. Nor, I think, has anyone else.
Why'd I take flack for my statement in the first entry again?
Perhaps because the implication of the statement is that Saddam Hussein was a democratically-elected leader?
You were right, clearly, about our involvement in Aristide's removal. Apparently, it took John Kerry to fully point this out to me - even if there were no covert involvement, as an official matter, in attempting to broker a peace between Aristide and the rebels, we (and France and Canada) effectively gave the rebels a veto power that allowed the situation to develop.
― gabbneb (gabbneb), Tuesday, 2 March 2004 04:13 (twenty-two years ago)
― badgerminor (badgerminor), Tuesday, 2 March 2004 12:46 (twenty-two years ago)
Really? See below.
Nabiscobiscuit: I could very well be wrong, but it seems to me that our main "interests" there are -- if we wrap them up in one package -- to prevent refugee situations (and keep Haitian-American voters non-angry) by ensuring stability
Here the intervention as solution argument is qualified, but it stands.
dyson: well, hopefully whatever guns do make it there will help stabilize things.
Here intervention is 'hoped' for as a positive solution.
Colin Beckett: leaving Haiti alone to eat itself is no more humane a solution that engineering a puppet government.
Here intervention is proposed in the form of a fallacious opposition between doing something and doing nothing.
― run it off (run it off), Tuesday, 2 March 2004 14:03 (twenty-two years ago)
Clinton didn't put this policy into effect. Acting on a policy is different from having the policy. Often governments have policies that they feel, for whatever reason, that they can't get away with. Clinton had the policy nonetheless.
― run it off (run it off), Tuesday, 2 March 2004 14:05 (twenty-two years ago)
― badgerminor (badgerminor), Tuesday, 2 March 2004 18:01 (twenty-two years ago)
― gabbneb (gabbneb), Tuesday, 2 March 2004 18:17 (twenty-two years ago)
― maypang (maypang), Tuesday, 2 March 2004 18:32 (twenty-two years ago)
― Colin Beckett (Colin Beckett), Wednesday, 3 March 2004 02:28 (twenty-two years ago)
And what does the Nixon administration have to do with the Clinton administration, more than 20 years later?
When I brought up Iraq and Allende, this was not in order to prove that all these events are actually the same or even that they have strong links or anything to do with Aristide. The point I was making, and you know it, is that the transference of power between one administration and the next does not mean abandoning foreign policies, but more often than not sees a continuation of foreign policy. So, it is entirely possible for Nixon and Clinton to share specific aims in foreign policy.
When you laugh at the idea that Clinton might have a policy that he doesn't or can't put into effect, is very naive. YOu seem to think that Presidents of the United States are subject to no external obstructions or opposition. The quote about needing another Pearl Harbor, up thread, is a good example of the restraints placed on government. That's why I referred to it! And yet, you haven't mentioned it once in all your cynical, arrogant jibes against me. Tell me I'm wrong about reading this quote from Rumsfeld's (et al's) report as an admission of (1) a policy that is not put into effect because (2) the policy would be popularly opposed.
― run it off (run it off), Wednesday, 3 March 2004 09:21 (twenty-two years ago)
A “commando group with Spanish-speaking elements” being blamed.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/07/haiti-president-jovenel-moise-reportedly-assassinated
This has the potential to be very bad if the US tries to pin it on Venezuela.
― Scampo di tutti i Scampi (ShariVari), Wednesday, 7 July 2021 11:27 (four years ago)
Official line from the government is that they were mercenaries.
― Scampo di tutti i Scampi (ShariVari), Wednesday, 7 July 2021 11:42 (four years ago)
The Colombian government has apparently confirmed that some of the mercs arrested are former soldiers.
― Scampo di tutti i Scampi (ShariVari), Friday, 9 July 2021 10:41 (four years ago)
https://amp.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/09/colombia-haiti-guns-for-hire-assassination?
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 10 July 2021 07:34 (four years ago)
There are claims in the Colombian press that the ex-soldiers were hired by Moise because he didn’t trust his guards and some only arrived after the assassination had taken place.
― Scampo di tutti i Scampi (ShariVari), Saturday, 10 July 2021 16:28 (four years ago)
The plot to assassinate Haitian President Jovenel Moïse ran through South Florida, according to statements of captured Colombians who said they were hired by a Miami-area security firm.https://t.co/551RqWIm7s— Miami Herald (@MiamiHerald) July 10, 2021
― Joe Bombin (milo z), Saturday, 10 July 2021 20:58 (four years ago)
Relevant commentary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZ55CEm6wpY
― Glower, Disruption & Pies (kingfish), Thursday, 27 October 2022 06:25 (three years ago)
Just be grateful you don't live in Haiti right now.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cp3zw2dpqgpo
― if you like this you might like my brothers music. his name is Stu Morr (Tom D.), Monday, 9 December 2024 16:17 (one year ago)