US troop deployment sparks protests in Dominican Republic
brian | 17.02.2006 05:03
By Bill Van Auken
16 February 2006
Use this version to print | Send this link by email | Email the author
The landing of hundreds of US troops at a port city in the Dominican Republic, barely 80 miles from the Haitian border, sparked protests and warnings that Washington may be preparing another military intervention aimed at quelling the popular unrest that has erupted in Haiti over attempts to rig the presidential election.
Some 800 US troops have disembarked at the Dominican port of Barahona as part of the “New Horizons” military exercise that is to extend for several months and will reportedly involve as many as 14,000 military personnel. The city is the closest major port in the Dominican Republic to the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince.
Hundreds of demonstrators marched on the US Embassy in Santo Domingo as well as on the US military camp in Barahona, approximately 120 miles southwest of the capital.
Demonstrators representing leftist, union and student groups presented a statement to a US Embassy official demanding the immediate withdrawal of the US troops.
“For Dominicans, the presence of foreign military troops on our soil is unacceptable ... even more so when these troops are from a nation that has invaded us militarily on two occasions on the pretext of ‘saving lives,’ with the result of thousands of deaths,” the statement read.
The Dominican Republic was invaded and occupied by US Marines in 1916, a year after they landed in Haiti. The Dominican occupation lasted for eight years, while the US forces stayed in Haiti until 1934.
Washington again invaded with some 23,000 troops in 1965 after fomenting a military coup to deny an election victory to left nationalist leader Juan Bosch. After killing, wounding and imprisoning thousands of Dominicans, the US forces turned power over to the right-wing dictatorship of Joaquín Balaguer, which carried out a reign of terror over the next decade.
...
News of the discarded ballots sparked fresh protests, with barricades going up in various parts of the Haitian capital. The streets of the city are reportedly controlled by groups of demonstrators, with neither the police nor UN troops in evidence. It is widely believed in Haiti that the election results have been manipulated—with the connivance of Washington—to deny Preval a victory in the first round of balloting.
Haiti and the Dominican Republic share a 180-mile border that bisects the island of Hispaniola. The political crisis in Haiti has prompted the Dominican armed forces to build up its troops on the border. “We are maintaining a more active vigilance to guard our border from the situation of confusion that exists in Haiti as a result of the elections,” an army intelligence officer told the Spanish news agency EFE.
The “New Horizons” exercise is billed as a humanitarian aid mission that includes the building of clinics and schools. Dominican opponents of the deployment, however, pointed out that the troops have come equipped with tanks, weapons and other combat gear. “If they want to build schools, let them do it in New Orleans,” the demonstrators chanted as they marched outside the camp in Barahona.
A statement posted on the web site of US SOUTHCOM, the military command covering Latin America and the Caribbean, noted that the Pentagon “uses these humanitarian exercises as a vehicle to train US forces.... These exercises also provide valuable mobilization and deployment experience. They require units to conduct the numerous training objectives that include logistical operations to support the deployments to remote regions.”
A precondition for this “humanitarian deployment” was the Dominican government’s signing of a waiver granting US troops immunity from prosecution for war crimes or other offenses before the International Criminal Court, a servile gesture that provoked widespread anger within the Dominican population.
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/feb2006/domi-f16.shtml
Note that last paragraph: US has every intention of using this 'humanitarian' mission to commit war crimes. the Dominican Rep should not feel bound by the oaths to war criminals.
brian
Comments
Display the following 3 comments