Haïti face à elle-même : le test de la volonté nationale
Haiti facing itself: the test of national will By Patrick Prézeau Stephenson* (Le Français suit) In a recent essay, a Haitian policy voice argued that the country should build a 10,000-soldier force, framing it not as nostalgia but as arithmetic: sovereignty costs money , insecurity costs more . A former Haitian military officer offered an even bolder vision — recruit 50,000 young men and women across all departments, finance security through diaspora-backed instruments, deploy thousands of customs agents to choke off weapons flows, and force diplomacy to serve a national plan rather than foreign timetables. Read emotionally, the proposal feels like a lifeline. Read operationally, it is a state-building project of extraordinary difficulty. The appeal is obvious. Haiti’s security vacuum is no abstraction; it is measured in blocked roads, shuttered schools, extorted commerce, and neighborhoods abandoned at dusk. In that landscape, the officer’s argument lands with force: on...