U.S. troops in Dominican Republic
By
G. Dunkel
Published Apr 2, 2006 5:51 PM
The United States hoped sending a heavily armed
brigade of several thousand troops to Barahona, a small city on the southern
coast of the Dominican Republic 50 miles from the Haitian border, would go
unnoticed.
But the progressive movement in the Dominican Republic held a
series of demonstrations in late February exposing this potential threat to
Cuba, Venezuela, and Puerto Rico, to the elections scheduled for Haiti and to
progressives in the Dominican Republic itself.
The U.S. and the Dominican
army put out the cover story that the U.S. troops were there to provide medical
assistance. Oscar Moreta, a member of the Patriotic Anti-Imperialist Committee
of Barahona, told the Cuban News Agency Prensa Latina, “Those of us who
live in Barahona have been able to confirm that they have tanks, armored
vehicles, attack helicopters, radar and many weapons, and we understand that
those are not things used to build clinics.”
There are rumors
circulating in Bara hona that the troops are the advanced guard of an eventual
14,000, designed to pose a major threat to any U.S. opponents in the
region.
Although René Préval is Haiti’s
president-elect, after a massive popular struggle, he can’t take office
until the Haitian parliament is seated. The second round of parliamentary
elections is currently scheduled for April 21-23, which means that the votes
won’t be counted and the victors seated until some time in May.
The
danger to Haiti is that the U.S. troops in Barahona could intervene against
Préval, whom they see as an ally of deposed President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide.
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