Why are US troops in Port-au-Prince?
While we all watch Hope for Haiti Now's telethon and make donations (if not there, then somewhere), let's take a moment to think about the situation and how it's being handled. Now, let me emphasize, this is not at all meant to discourage you from giving. Give - give as much as you can, whatever that is. But don't give blindly, and don't relax afterwards...
Over in Slate Ben Ehrenreich asks a disturbing question: Why Did We Focus on Securing Haiti Rather Than Helping Haitians?
The U.S. military did what the U.S. military does. Like a slow-witted, fearful giant, it built a wall around itself, commandeering the Port-au-Prince airport and constructing a mini-Green Zone. As thousands of tons of desperately needed food, water, and medical supplies piled up behind the airport fences—and thousands of corpses piled up outside them—Defense Secretary Robert Gates ruled out the possibility of using American aircraft to airdrop supplies: "An airdrop is simply going to lead to riots," he said. The military's first priority was to build a "structure for distribution" and "to provide security." (Four days and many deaths later, the United States began airdropping aid.)It's a good question. I don't like either of the answers. But I can't think of another...
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So what happened? Why the mad rush to command and control, with all its ultimately murderous consequences? Why the paranoid focus on security above saving lives? Clearly, President Obama failed to learn one of the basic lessons taught by Hurricane Katrina: You can't solve a humanitarian problem by throwing guns at it. Before the president had finished insisting that "my national security team understands that I will not put up with any excuses," Haiti's fate was sealed. National security teams prioritize national security, an amorphous and expensive notion that has little to do with keeping Haitian citizens alive.
This leaves the more disturbing question of why the Obama administration chose to respond as if they were there to confront an insurgency, rather than to clear rubble and distribute antibiotics and MREs. The beginning of an answer can be found in what Rebecca Solnit, author of A Paradise Built in Hell, calls "elite panic"—the conviction of the powerful that their own Hobbesian corporate ethic is innate in all of us, that in the absence of centralized authority, only cannibalism can reign.
But the danger of hunger-crazed mobs never came up after the 2004 Pacific tsunami, and no one mentions security when tornados and floods wipe out swaths of the American Midwest. This suggests two possibilities, neither of them flattering. The first is that the administration had strategic reasons for sending 10,000 troops that had little to do with disaster relief. This is the explanation favored by the Latin American left and, given the United States' history of invasion and occupation in Haiti (and in the Dominican Republic and Cuba and Nicaragua and Grenada and Panama), it is difficult to dismiss. Only time will tell what "reconstruction" means.
Another answer lies closer to home. New Orleans and Port-au-Prince have one obvious thing in common: The majority of both cities' residents are black and poor. White people who are not poor have been known, when confronted with black people who are, to start locking their car doors and muttering about their security. It doesn't matter what color our president is. Even when it is ostensibly doing good, the U.S. government can be racist, and, in an entirely civil and bureaucratic fashion, savagely cruel.
3 Comments:
Is it possible it's something to do with the tools available? The only kind of force the US has at hand to readily deploy overseas is military force. The government doesn't maintain a humanitarian aid force that can be deployed quickly outside of our borders. As noted, the military will act as the military is trained to act, but we as a nation don't seem interested in creating/maintaining any other sort of strike force.
That's reasonable. The problem is that once there, they act like an invasion force, not an humanitarian one.
It's reasonable, but it turns out I was proved wrong: FEMA has activated and sent teams to Haiti for this. I'm glad of that, but it's not as big a pool as the military to pull from.
I agree with you that the military acts like the military is trained to act. I wish we would create a true mobile force for aid. I'd like to see a buildup with that sort of mission and training, maybe even a draft for medical and humanitarian support locally and abroad. But I doubt ever seeing that in this climate.
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