Haiti Jean-Claude Duvalier, 1971-86
Troops of the Leopards Corps in camouflage uniforms
Courtesy United States Department of Defense
When Jean-Claude Duvalier ("Baby Doc") came to power in
1971,
the country's security forces became less abusive, but
they still
used some brutality. During Jean-Claude's regime, the
balance
between the VSN and the armed forces changed. The new
regime
sought to realign these competing power bases, if only to
ensure
control over the nation's security apparatus. Furthermore,
JeanClaude 's half-hearted attempt to open Haiti to the outside
world
and to secure renewed foreign assistance from the United
States
suggested a need to restrain the abuses of the VSN, which
included more than 9,000 members and an informal circle of
thousands in early 1986.
The creation of the Leopards counterinsurgency unit,
with
United States' support, provided the regime with a
relatively
modern tool for responding to internal threats. The
Leopards also
provided Baby Doc with a new force, the capability and the
allegiance of which bridged the gap between the armed
forces and
the VSN. A reorganization integrated some senior VSN
members into
the army, effecting a partial merger of Haiti's two
security
institutions. In 1972 the Military Academy reopened, and a
politically well-connected class--the first since
1961--graduated
in 1973. The reopening of the academy represented a small
step
toward reprofessionalizing the military. Some
modernization of
army equipment was also undertaken during this period.
The armed forces entered the 1980s as a mere shadow of
the
powerful, disciplined, trained institution that had
existed forty
years earlier. Although the army successfully repelled a
number
of attempts against the regime, it ultimately failed to
prevent
Duvalier's fall under pressure from his own populace. With
lastminute assistance from the United States, the army's
senior
leadership provided the political transition required to
ease
Duvalier out of power in February 1986. A number of senior
officers pushed for Duvalier's abdication, despite strong
resistance from Jean-Claude and the senior leadership of
the VSN.
The army was interested in protecting itself from the
explosive
sociopolitical situation in Haiti in late 1985 and early
1986.
Nationalism and concern for the best interests of Haiti
exerted
only a secondary influence on the officers' actions.
The armed forces largely escaped the immediate wrath of
a
population clearly bent on putting an end to Duvalier
rule.
Popular violence had erupted in 1984, and it continued
into early
1986 in an expanding sequence of local revolts. In its
waning
days, the regime relied heavily on the VSN and on limited
local
police capabilities to curb violence. Many Haitians
detected the
fissures growing in the nation's security apparatus, and
some
rumors held that the army would move against Duvalier.
These
rumors, however, proved incorrect; still, Duvalier's
inability to
contain the widespread rioting through political measures
and the
VSN's failure to control the unrest placed the military in
a
pivotal position. Conscious of his precarious hold on
power,
Duvalier reshuffled the cabinet and the military
leadership in
the last days of 1985, but to no avail. Reports of brutal
excesses by the increasingly desperate VSN further
weakened
Duvalier's position.
The army became discontent with the crumbling regime.
In
several instances, troops refused to fire on
demonstrators, and
in a few cases, army personnel turned against the VSN.
According
to one account, several senior military figures threatened
Duvalier and his wife, Michèle Duvalier, at gunpoint.
Data as of December 1989
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