15 Octobre,  2003

October 15, 2003

15 Oktňb,  2003

Vol. 21 No. 31
 
On eve of 200th anniversary of Haitian independence:
A history of U.S. embargoes

by Greg Dunkel

In 1806, Haiti was diplomatically isolated. It had audaciously declared independence two years before, after crushing Napoleon’s French army sent to re-enslave it. But no country in the world W recognized its independence. Certainly France, which had just suffered a major blow to its fortunes and prestige, refused. Spain still had its slave-based colonial empire in the Caribbean and Latin America. Great Britain, at that time the predominant world power, worried over its plantations in Jamaica, just 75 miles from Haiti, whose profits also depended on the brutal super-exploitation of enslaved Africans.

There was substantial trade between the United States and Haiti, even after the Haitian revolution ended slavery. Haiti sold coffee, molasses, sugar, cotton, hides and so on and bought dried cod, cloth, hardware and other bulk commodities. But Thomas Jefferson, the slave-owning, slave-selling president of the United States, was terrified by the successful slave rebellion and went so far as to call Toussaint Louverture’s army “cannibals.” Louverture was a leader of Haiti’s liberation struggle.

Jefferson gave backhanded support to the Haitian struggle when its successes led France to consider selling Louisiana. But that was just a temporary maneuver. He was implacably opposed to Haitian independence.

He tried hard to prevent any contact between the United States and Haiti. Jefferson called upon Congress, which his party controlled, to abolish trade between the two countries. France and Spain, two major colonial powers in the Caribbean at the time, were also enforcing boycotts of Haitian trade. Consequently, partially in 1805 and finally in 1806, trade between the United States and Haiti was formally shut down.

Trade still continued on an unofficial basis. U.S. ships could call at Haitian ports, but Haitian ships were excluded from U.S. ports. This decimated the Haitian economy, already weakened by 12 years of hard fighting and much colonial sabotage.

In the 1820s, South Carolina Sen. Robert V. Hayne made the U.S. position absolutely clear when he stated: “Our policy with regard to Haiti is plain. We never can acknowledge her independence “.

The embargo let U.S. merchants dictate the terms of trade between the two countries, establishing a neocolonial relationship. Jefferson and the other racist slave owners kept the United States from recognizing Haiti until the U.S. Civil War ended slavery here in 1863. Before that time the U.S. slave owners presented the racist argument that Haiti’s devastating economic decline was an example of what happens when Africans govern themselves. These slave owners did not mention that Haiti’s problems were caused by cruel and punishing neocolonial economic policies and actions.

Even in the midst of a civil war fought over the existence and expansion of slavery in the United States, outright racist actions were common in Washington. In April 1862, when Sen. Charles Sumner raised the issue of recognizing Haiti and Liberia, representatives of border states like Maryland and Kentucky objected to the presence of Black diplomats in Washington. (For more information, see “The Struggle for the Recognition of Haiti and Liberia as Independent Republics,” Charles H. Wesley, The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 2, Oct., 1917.)

French & European recognition

In the early 1800s, Haiti’s government still felt threatened by France even after it had crushed Napoleon’s army in 1802. In 1821 France offered internal self-rule under a French protectorate. This was essentially what Louverture thought he had won in 1801.

Haiti had given asylum and essential military and material help to Simón Bolívar in his struggle to free Latin America. But Spain still possessed Cuba and Puerto Rico, had claims over the eastern portion of the island of Hispaniola, now the Dominican Republic, and still profited from slavery. Furthermore, Haiti faced the hostility of the United States even from sectors like the Northern bourgeoisie, who weren’t tied to slavery but were still thoroughly racist.

In return for official recognition as an independent nation, President Jean-Pierre Boyer offered France 150 million gold francs indemnity and custom duties half that of any other nation. This was a tremendous sum, estimated by the present Haitian government to be some $21 billion in current dollars including interest. After a show of force by the French navy, Haiti swiftly borrowed 24 million francs to pay the first installment.

The money was earmarked to indemnify the slave owners and their heirs for their “losses” during Haiti’s revolution. For Haitians, the freedom they had won with their blood had to be also paid for in cash.

After France’s recognition, Great Britain and the other European powers quickly followed suit. But the United States refused.

France’s financial hold on Haiti continued until the first U.S. occupation in 1915. This hold was so complete that even when Haiti set up its Banque Nationale in the 1880s, it was done with French capital and French bank officers.

During the 1800s Haiti had two neocolonial overlords: France and the United States, both of which extracted as much as they could from the country, blaming its economic problems on what the Haitians were forced to do to survive.

Current U.S. boycott

In the 19th century, the United States and the European powers used Haiti’s extreme diplomatic isolation and the devastation resulting from its revolution against the French slave owners to control Haiti. In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, the United States uses Haiti’s dire poverty.

Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere by any measure.

Haiti’s debt was $302 million in 1980. In 1997 it was almost $1.1 billion, which is almost 40 percent of its Gross National Product. The value of its exports has fallen to 62 percent of 1987 levels. It should be listed as a severely indebted low-income country but the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have refused to do so.

More than 80% of the people in the countryside regularly don’t get enough to eat. Some 50% of the people are illiterate. Seventy percent are unemployed. Life expectancy is 56 years and falling. Infant mortality is more than double the Latin American and Caribbean average. (Figures from PAPDA – the Haitian Platform to Advocate for an Alternative Development.)