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16572: Karshan: How the U.S. impoverished Haiti (San Francisco Bay View) (fwd)



From: MKarshan@aol.com

San Francisco Bay View

August 28, 2003

How the U.S. impoverished Haiti

by J. Damu

Though the demand by Haiti for reparations from France is just, it obscures
the role the United States played in the process to impoverish Haiti - a role
that continues to this day.

Today Haiti is a severely indebted country whose debt to export ratio is
nearly 300 percent, far above what is considered sustainable even by the
International Monetary Fund and World Bank. Both institutions are dominated by the U.S.

In 1980 Haiti’s debt was $302 million. Since then it has more than tripled to
$1.1 billion, approximately 40 percent of the nation’s gross national
product. Last year Haiti paid more in debt service than it did on medical services
for the people.

Haitian officials say nearly 80 percent of the current debt was accumulated
by the regimes of Francois and Jean-Claude Duvalier, Doc and Baby Doc. Both
regimes operated under the benign gaze of the United States that has had a long
and sordid history of keeping Haiti well within its sphere of economic and
political influence.

It is now well known that the primary source of Haiti’s chronic
impoverishment is the reparations it was forced to pay to the former plantation owners who
left following the 1804 revolution. Some of the white descendants of the
former plantation owners, who now live in New Orleans, still have the indemnity
coupons issued by France. So in fact, at least part of the reparations paid by
Haiti went toward the development of the United States.

In 1825 Haiti was forced to borrow 24 million francs from private French
banks to begin paying off the crippling indemnity debt. Haiti only acknowledged
this debt in exchange for French recognition of her independence, a principle
that would continue to characterize Haiti’s international relationships.

These indemnity payments caused continual financial emergencies and political
upheavals. In a 51-year period, Haiti had 16 different presidents - new
presidents often coming to power at the head of a rebel army.

Nevertheless, Haiti always made the indemnity payments - and, following
those, the bank loan payments - on time. The 1915 intervention by the Marines on
behalf of U.S. financial interests changed all of that, however.

The prelude to the 1915 U.S. intervention began in 1910 when the National
Bank of Haiti, founded in 1881 with French capital and entrusted from the start
with the administration of the Haitian treasury, disappeared. It was replaced
by the financial institution known as the National Bank of the Republic of
Haiti.

Part of the capital of the new national bank was subscribed by the National
City Bank of New York, signaling, for the first time, U.S. interest in the
financial affairs of Haiti.

The motivation for the original U.S. financial interest in Haiti was the
schemes of several U.S. corporations with ties to the National City Bank to build
a railroad system there. In order for these corporations - including the W.R.
Grace Corp. - to protect their investments, they pressured President Woodrow
Wilson and his secretary of state, William Jennings Bryan, to find ways to
stabilize the Haitian economy, namely by taking a controlling interest in the
Haitian custom houses, the main source of revenue for the government.

After Secretary of State Bryan was fully briefed on Haiti by his advisers, he
exclaimed, “Dear me, think of it! Niggers speaking French.”

Ironically, however, Bryan, a longtime anti-imperialist, was against any
exploitative relationship between the U.S. and Haiti or any other nation in the
Western Hemisphere. In fact he had long called for canceling the debts of
smaller nations as a means by which they could normally grow and develop. Not
surprisingly, Bryan’s views were not well received in Washington or on Wall Street.

Due to the near total ignorance at the State Department and in Washington
generally about Haiti, Bryan was forced to rely on anyone who had first hand
information. That person turned out to be Roger L. Farnham, one of the few people
thoroughly familiar with Haitian affairs.

Farnham was thoroughly familiar with Haitian affairs because he was
vice-president of the National City Bank of New York and of the new National Bank of
the Republic of Haiti and president of the National Railway of Haiti. In spite
of the secretary of state’s hostility to Wall Street and Farnham’s obvious
conflict of interest, Bryan leaned heavily on Farnham for information and advice.

As vice president of both National City Bank and the National Bank of the
Republic of Haiti, Farnham played a cat and mouse game with the Haitian
legislature and president. Alternately, he would threaten direct U.S. intervention or
to withhold government funds if they did not turn over control of the Haitian
custom houses to National City Bank. In defense of Haitian independence,
lawmakers refused at every juncture.

Finally, in 1914, with the outbreak of World War I, Farnham was able to
convince Washington that France and Germany posed direct threats to the U.S. by
their presence in Haiti. Each had a small colony of business people there.

In December of 1914, Farnham arranged for the U.S. Marines to come ashore at
Port Au Prince, march into the new National Bank of Haiti and steal two
strongboxes containing $500,000 in Haitian currency and sail to New York, where the
money was placed in New York City Bank. This made the Haitian government
totally dependent on Farnham for finances with which to operate.

The final and immediate decision to intervene in Haiti came in July of 1915
with yet another overthrow of a Haitian president, this time the bloody demise
of Vilbrun Guillaume Sam.

For the next 19 years, the U.S. Marine Corps wielded supreme authority
throughout Haiti, often dispensing medicines and food as mild forms of pacification.
Within several years, however, charges of massacres of Haitian peasants were
made against the military as Haitians revolted against the road building
programs that required forced labor.

In one such incident at Fort Reviere, the Marines killed 51 Haitians without
sustaining any casualties themselves. Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin
D. Roosevelt awarded Major Smedley D. Butler the Congressional Medal of
Honor. That’s not unlike the awarding of Medals of Honor to the “heroes” of the
massacre at Wounded Knee, in which hundreds of Sioux Native Americans were
slaughtered in 1890.

Reports of U.S. military abuses against the Haitians became so widespread
that NAACP official James Weldon Johnson headed a delegation to investigate the
charges, which they deemed to be true.

While the U.S. occupation was not without some successes - the health care
system was improved and the currency was stabilized - it was in other economic
spheres where the most damage was done. For the entire 19-year duration of the
intervention, maximum attention was given to paying off Haiti’s U.S.
creditors, with little to no attention given to developing the economy.

In 1922 former Marine Brigade Commander John Russell was named as High
Commissioner of Haiti, a post he held until the final days of the occupation. Under
Russell’s influence, all political dissent was stifled and revenue from the
custom houses was turned over, often months ahead of schedule, to Haiti’s U.S.
bond creditors, who had assumed loans originally extended to Haiti to pay off
the French plantation owners’ reparations!

By 1929, however, with the Western world’s economic depression and the
lowering of living standards throughout Haiti, serious student strikes and worker
revolts, combined with Wall Street’s inability to lure serious business
investors there, Washington decided it was time to end the military occupation. When
then President Franklin D. Roosevelt visited Haiti in 1934 to announce the
pullout, he was the first head of a foreign nation in Haiti’s history to extend a
visit.

Despite the American military pullout, U.S. financial administrators
continued to dominate the Haitian economy until the final debt on the earlier loans
was retired in 1947.

Soon after the U.S. withdrew from Haiti, a Black consciousness movement of
sorts took hold that was the precursor of the “negritude” movement popularized
by Aimee Cesaire and Leopold Senghor. Francois Duvalier, an early believer in
“negritude,” came to power in the late 1950s, popularizing ideas that
resonated with a population that had withstood a white foreign occupation for many
years.

By the time Duvalier grabbed the presidency of the world’s first Black
republic established by formerly enslaved peoples, Haiti had experienced more than
150 years of chronic impoverishment and discriminatory lending policies by the
world’s leading financial institutions and powers. The economic forecast for
Haiti has not improved, even with the democratic election of Jean Bertrand
Aristide, since he has been consistently demonized in the U.S. and world press.

It is now time to do the obvious. Accede to Haiti’s demands for reparations
and cancel her debt.

J. Damu chairs the California Coalition for HR 40 and is the acting western
regional coordinator for N’COBRA. He can be contacted at jdamu@sbcgloabal.net
or (415) 931-3530.

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