Haiti Needs Its Army Back (Part II)
There is a war going on in Haiti right now; it is NGOs, UN, and MINUSTAH against Haitians' hopes and ways of life but there is no standing armed force to stand against the enemies. So, it is a war Haiti will soon lose if Haitians from all over the world do not make haste to join the government in its efforts to reestablish the Haitian army.
Barbie (2001) reports there are about 19 countries with absolutely no government-sponsored military forces whose mission would have been to protect the interests of their people and their respective government.
However, all of these countries, except Haiti, have long standing agreements signed with their former occupying country to assure their defense if they were to be under attacks.
Furthermore, the countries, except Haiti, have and maintain each a highly trained national armed force with military duties and warfare capabilities.
Thus today, if Haiti were to be under attacks, in masses Haitians would have been killed within seconds because no foreign country would come to its defense and there is no trained force to protect lives and properties and to further domestic and foreign policies of the Haitian government.
Haiti needs the reestablishment of its army because the defense of the soil cannot be placed into the hands of the Haitian National Police paramilitary units (SWAT, CIMO, etc.) which are not properly trained in crowd control, warfare, terrorism awareness, survival, peacekeeping missions, national defense, border patrol, etc.
It is Unhaitian to not be all excessively joyful and overly proud about the reactivation of Haiti's national armed force; a reactivation susceptible of creating jobs, restoring moral values, protecting lives, properties, and the government's interests.
The next generation of Haitians will judge this current generation because they have stood there and do nothing while MINUSTAH soldiers are raping little boys, sexually exploited women, and impregnating underage girls, while NGOs shooting to take over the land and while the UN gearing toward driving Haitians back into slavery.
Were not the furious motivation of the Haitian army; today Haitians would have been still in shackles, there would have been no 18 November 1803 and there would not have been a Haitian flag.
Bobb Q Rousseau
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