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22387: Spain: Zapatero willing to send troops to Haiti (fwd)



From: radtimes <resist@best.com>

Spain: Zapatero willing to send troops to Haiti

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/jun2004/spai-j16.shtml

By Keith Lee
16 June 2004


Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Zapatero said last week that he is willing
to send troops to Haiti, as part of a United Nations mission. Zapatero made
his remarks at the third European, Latin America and Caribbean Summit in
Mexico.

The political crisis in Haiti has drastically escalated since the
US-engineered coup in February that violently ousted President
Jean-Bertrand Astride, with the aid of former members of the CIA-backed
death squads and former Haitian army that had terrorised the people under
the earlier military dictatorship at the start of the 1990s.

By occupying Haiti, the Bush administration is seeking to safeguard the
interests of US imperalism as the main economic, military and geopolitical
power in the Caribbean by establishing its own puppet regime.

It has been aided in this by the Chirac government in Paris. Keen to shore
up its own imperialist interests in the region, the French government
supported the coup and has also despatched troops to Haiti.

The US and French military force has now been joined by Chilean troops, and
the Latin American nations Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay now have
a UN mandate to send 6,700 troops and 1,700 police officers. This force, if
it includes Spanish troops, will be commanded by Brazilian General Americo
Salvador de Olivier.

The UN in April described the situation in Haiti as "a threat to
international peace and stability." Recently, Haiti has seen large
demonstrations against the coup. One crowd, estimated by Reuters at more
than 10,000, marched on the US embassy in Port-au-Prince to denounce the
coup and demand the withdrawal of US and French troops from the Caribbean
island.

The demonstrators chanted "Bush terrorist" and urged that Aristide, who is
now in exile in the Central African Republic, be allowed to complete his
five-year presidential term. They further charged that the ex-Haitian army
personnel, death squad leaders and criminal gang members that Washington
used to oust Aristide—the so-called rebels—are inflicting terror on the
slums of Port-au-Prince

The Latin American governments and Spain have cloaked the sending of troops
as a mercy mission and as a force to uphold "democracy," but it is clear
that America's reckless intervention into Haiti is threatening to
destabilise an already volatile area. Any UN force sent to the country
would act to quell popular unrest. It would also act as an olive branch to
Washington, by easing the latter's military commitments, thereby enabling
it to concentrate on suppressing the national resistance movement against
its occupation in Iraq.

In terms of its long-term foreign policy, the Spanish government has said
that it would like to "act as as a bridge between the European bloc, Latin
America and the Caribbean."

Historically, the Spanish bourgeoisie, especially the Socialist Party, has
paid special attention to strengthening Spain's relations with Latin
America and the Caribbean, partly to increase its bargaining power with the
US and the other European powers. In the 1980s, the Socialist Party created
special assistance programmess in Latin America, through which it made
available tens of millions of US dollars that were used to hasten the
selling of state properties and their eventual privatisation.

In the 1990s, Spanish economic penetration of Latin America and the
Caribbean grew enormously. Spanish banks made substantial loans, including
about $34 billion to Argentina. They now control nearly 20 percent of Latin
America's banking sector. Spain's foreign direct investment (FDI) increased
from 1 percent of GDP to 10 percent. If Zapatero sends troops, it will be
to join the US and France in seeking to defend its own economic and
military interests in the region.

.