Franklin D. Roosevelt on Haiti in 1928
Bob Corbett
I'm working on my library files these days, and today I came across an
article by Franklin D. Roosevelt from 1928. "Our Foreign Policy: A
Democratic View." In general this article is defending the U.S. from an
attack that Roosevelt says the rest of the world is launching that the U.S.
is irresponsibly isolationist.
Along the way he says this of the U.S. occupation of Haiti:
"In Haiti a worse situation faced us. That Republic was in chronic
trouble, and it as it is close to Cuba the bad influence was felt across
the water. Presidents were murdered, governments fled, several time a
year. [sic: he really said that!] We landed our marines and sailors only
when the unfortunate Chief Magistrate of the moment was dragged out of the
French Legation, cut into six pieces and thrown to the mob. Here again we
cleaned house, restored order, built public works and put governmental
operation on a sound and honest basis. We are still there. It is true,
however, that in Santo Domingo and especially in Haiti we seem to have
paid too little attention to making the citizens of these states more
capable of reassuming the control of their own governments. But we have
done a fine piece of material work, and the world ought to thank us." (p.
584)
Foreign Affairs, Vol. VI, 1928. Pp. 573-586.