Rice, Powell Both Ill-Serve Latin America
Condoleezza Rice In, Colin Powell Out: Both Ill-Serve Latin America
• When it comes to Latin America, Condoleezza Rice has barely uttered a word, other than to praise hard-right ideologue Otto Reich and to denounce Jamaican Prime Minister P.J. Patterson’s decision to provide brief refuge for Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide after U.S. subterfuge resulted in Aristide’s exile.
• As Secretary of State, Colin Powell’s egregious stance on Haiti will forever mar his record on Latin America.
By belatedly
introducing U.S. and foreign forces into Haiti following the
February 29 ousting of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide,
Washington has guaranteed that Haiti’s deeply scarred
society is unlikely to easily recuperate from the wounds
inflicted on it by foreign and domestic villains, including
current interim Prime Minister Gerard Latortue’s government.
Of all those who played a role in bringing down Aristide’s
constitutional rule, outgoing Secretary of State Colin
Powell’s reputation is most likely to be tarnished. In
effect, he willingly became the captive of the Bush
administration’s obsessive right-wing ideologues—the fateful
sons of former Senator Jesse Helms—led by Assistant
Secretary of State Roger Noriega, Deputy Assistant Secretary
Dan Fisk, and former White House aide Otto Reich.
Powell, who earlier hurt his highly-regarded reputation by assuring the American public of the reliability of what turned out to be either fake or exaggerated intelligence findings that provided the justification for the U.S. invasion of Iraq, at least occasionally addressed hemispheric issues. One cannot say the same of his announced successor, National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice. A search of her public statements on Latin American issues produces very thin gruel. In what may very well have been her most profound statement involving hemispheric issues, Rice chided Jamaican Prime Minister P.J. Patterson for admitting the exiled Aristide into his country so he could reunite with his family.
Aside from superficial barrages aimed at the regional “bad boys,” Castro and Chávez, Rice has shown neither a substantial interest nor a particular competence regarding the region. She almost certainly will use her Cold War-bred intellectual credentials to hunt down any leftwing manifestations in the region. What less ideological eyes would see as a new generation of populist leaders, in Rice’s hawkish vision the current leaders of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil and Uruguay appear as potential leftist enemies who pose a threat to vital U.S. national interests. Be it extending the perimeter of the White House’s anti-terrorism war or expanding U.S. Southern Command’s sphere of operation, under Rice’s jurisdiction, the Cold War could soon be brought to Latin America.
Powell’s End
Game
Powell’s Haitian policy, dazzlingly inept to the
very end, will cause a particular blot on his tenure as
Secretary of State. Recalling that only days before
Aristide’s ouster, which the State Department ordered and
arranged, the Secretary repeatedly acknowledged the
legitimacy of Aristide’s rule and denounced the “thugs”
among the violent opposition. Powell also insisted that the
opposition should not be allowed to shoot their way to
power, nor would Aristide be asked to resign. As he became
more engaged in the issue, Powell called upon the
anti-Aristide opposition to negotiate with the government
and reaffirmed that Washington would not sanction regime
change or insist upon Aristide’s forced ouster. Yet,
scarcely twenty-four hours before Aristide’s induced flight
into exile, Powell reversed his previous decisions,
announcing that aid would not be sent to Aristide unless the
opposition agreed to it, which of course the rebels would
never do. By then ignoring Haiti’s constitution, which
stipulated that a president can only convey his resignation
to the country’s legislature and not to some
self-denominated Washington viceroy, the Secretary helped
implement the script to oust Aristide from power.
Aristide had done nothing to justify the U.S.’s complete reversal. While Powell’s rhetoric at the time appeared to represent the high road on the issue, he continuously was being undermined by Noriega and Reich in their off-the-record briefings to journalists and other interested parties. In contrast to Powell’s line, these background press sessions given by his aides implied that regime change was very much an option, and that Aristide could be muscled aside in any negotiation process.
Powell must now accept that on the eve of his departure from office, his protracted honeymoon with the public is now at an end, and his moral fiber seen as little different to that of Noriega or Reich. In reality, Powell already had given himself away several months ago when he demanded that the presidents of Mexico and Chile sack their UN ambassadors for having the audacity to vote against the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
Today, Haiti is admittedly a horrific mess, but this should not be solely attributed to President Aristide’s “flawed performance,” as the Secretary of State all too facilely maintains. If Aristide was flawed, it was largely due to the impossible conditions laid down by Washington for him to rule.
A
Bankrupt Policy
There is simply no disputing the fact
that the extremism and mean-spirited nature of Washington’s
Haitian policy prevented democratic practices from taking
root on the island. In the end, Powell must be condemned for
sponsoring a policy that was superficial, illogical,
narrowly conceptualized and damaging both to U.S. national
interests and Haiti’s most basic human needs. Any hope that
the kind of human misery that has propelled thousands of
Haitians over the past decade to risk their lives trying to
reach Florida can be assuaged by throwing the country open
to a demented political process must be seen as one of
Powell’s illusions and another example of his huge
disservice to Latin America.
This analysis was prepared by the Council on Hemispheric Affairs Director Larry Birns with the assistance of COHA Research Associates David R. Kolker and Jenna Michelle Liut. Additional research provided by COHA Research Associate Jill Shelly.