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BRAZIL:
Route to Security Council Runs Through Haiti - Analysts
Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO, (IPS) - Sending Brazilian troops to take part in the U.N.
stabilisation force in Haiti will pose military and political risks, but that is
a price that must be paid by Brasilia if it aspires to a permanent seat on the
U.N. Security Council, said analysts interviewed by IPS.
That was the response to a question about the damages Brazil's Latin American
leadership role could suffer from the decision to help consolidate a situation
that deposed Haitian president Jean Bertrand Aristide describes as a breach of
international law, and into which the Caribbean nations are demanding an
investigation.
On Feb. 29, Aristide left Haiti after weeks of violence and disturbances in
which dozens of Haitians were killed, and after the capital was surrounded by
armed rebel groups.
According to Aristide, U.S. diplomatic and military personnel forced him to
leave his post and the country, after warning that if he stayed, they would be
unable to guarantee his safety.
Just hours after his departure, the U.N. Security Council ordered a
multinational force into the Caribbean island nation to restore order and ensure
a swift three-month transition.
The United Nations based its decision on a purported letter of resignation from
Aristide, which he denies having signed. The Brazilian government has pledged to
send 1,300 troops as part of the force that will be involved in the second stage
of the U.N. stabilisation operation in Haiti.
The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) has urged the Security Council to launch an
independent investigation into the question of Aristide's supposed resignation.
Brazil -- which is governed by the leftist Workers Party -- could play an even
stronger role than merely sending troops if reports are confirmed that it will
lead the U.N. peacekeeping force.
But disputing a permanent seat on the Security Council requires ''running
risks'' even greater than those that Brazil might face in Haiti, said Geraldo
Cavagnari, a researcher at the University of Campinas Strategic Studies
department.
Brazilians are going to participate in a peacekeeping action, but ''the most
complex missions, with the greatest likelihood of combat and casualties, are
peace-making missions, which involve intervening between groups in conflict,''
or ''military occupations, like in Afghanistan and Iraq,'' said Cavagnari, a
retired army colonel.
A leadership role is only gained by ''actively participating in solving
international problems,'' which requires ''money and weapons,'' he underlined,
adding that he did not believe the Caribbean nations, ''with the exception of
Cuba,'' would react negatively to a Brazilian military presence in Haiti.
The rest of the countries in that region -- the members of CARICOM -- ''tend to
follow the United States,'' he argued.
But if it is found that Aristide's departure from power violated the
Organisation of American States (OAS) Democratic Charter, Brazil's image would
be hurt, said Clovis Brigagao, director of the Centre for Studies on the
Americas at a private Rio de Janeiro university.
However, everything will be done under the U.N. banner, he stressed. The
''multilateral mandate (to send troops) came in response to an intolerable lack
of governance in Haiti. Aristide had lost command of his country.''
In addition, the analyst said there was a possibility of tension with CARICOM,
especially if Aristide's version of events, according to which he was overthrown
in a coup promoted and organised by the United States and France, gains
credence.
''There is a grey area'' in which any active role is dangerous, said Brigagao.
But ''Brazilians must get used to criticism, and to taking political and
military risks,'' because ''leadership, greater participation in the Security
Council, and an active voice in regional and international questions have their
costs,'' he maintained.
Leading the stabilisation force in Haiti while new national institutions are
being built up in that country could amount to a more complex challenge, he
said, if the saying ''it is easy to win a war, but difficult to build peace'' --
as demonstrated by the situation in Iraq -- is true.
In Iraq, which the United States and Britain invaded in March 2003, armed
resistance to the occupation has led to continuous attacks on foreign military
targets and Iraqi civilians.
But Professor of International Relations Argemiro Procopio, at the University of
Brasilia, in the capital, criticised Brazil's decision.
''We must remember the unhappy precedent of the Dominican Republic,'' he said,
referring to the 1965 U.S.-led intervention in that Caribbean nation which
''kept a democratic government'' from regaining power.
He pointed out that Brazilian troops also took part on that occasion, although
the intervention occurred ''in a different framework,'' because Brazil was at
that time ruled by a military dictatorship.
But the scenario is the same: the Caribbean island of Hispaniola -- which is
shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic -- was invaded 39 years ago under a
multilateral mandate from the OAS, and today by a multinational force authorised
by the U.N., said Procopio.
Perhaps Brasilia's decision to send troops to Haiti ''is a major shift to the
right in the foreign policy of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva,'' said
Procopio, adding that it would be more in line with the conservative economic
policies followed by the government.
Besides the possible negative international repercussions, the sight of
Brazilian soldiers on Haitian soil might become ''a publicity coup that could
backfire,'' and that might even ''irritate'' the Brazilian public which, while
suffering from high levels of insecurity fuelled by rising crime rates and
widespread poverty, would watch as sorely needed funds are spent on a foreign
country, he warned.
''Sending 1,300 Brazilian troops to bring peace to Port-au-Prince while our own
country is burning in a bloody urban revolution reflects, at the very least, a
lack of sensitivity,'' protested veteran journalist Silvio Ferraz in an article
published Friday by the conservative daily O Globo.
In Chile there have also been protests over Santiago's decision to send more
than 300 soldiers to Haiti, where they are to remain until May, under the Feb.
29 U.N. Security Council resolution.
Chilean President Ricardo Lagos announced that troops would be sent, even before
Congress had authorised the move, as required by the constitution. And although
parliament gave Lagos a green light, the move drew loud criticism, and a number
of lawmakers, including members of the ruling coalition, voted against it.
''This is the second time that Chile is supporting a coup d'etat in the
region,'' said journalist Ernesto Carmona, with the alternative press agency
Argenpress.
Carmona, one of the heads of the Chilean Association of Journalists, recalled
the haste with which Santiago recognised the fall of Venezuelan President Hugo
Chávez when he was briefly overthrown -- for two days -- in April 2002.
The military expedition to Haiti in which Chile is taking part along with the
United States, France and Canada ''confirmed the political death of the OAS
Democratic Charter,'' according to Carmona.
No Latin American country has called an OAS meeting to ''activate'' the
democracy charter in the case of Haiti, where a democratically elected president
was toppled.
A source at the Brazilian Foreign Ministry told IPS that the country is acting
in line with the U.N. Security Council resolution, which constitutes the ''legal
foundation'' for sending peacekeeping troops to Haiti.
It is impossible to react on the basis of a ''hypothesis,'' like the
investigation demanded by the CARICOM nations, the Foreign Ministry source
added.
* Gustavo González in Chile contributed to this report.
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