In keeping with the theme of Trump’s “America First” foreign policy agenda, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio sketched a vision of Haiti’s future that dovetails into US economic success.
He proposed that Haiti could be a platform for US “nearshoring”, the process of moving foreign manufacturing to neighbouring countries, to shorten the supply chain.
“There’s a real opportunity for Haiti to grow into a hub of nearshore manufacturing — of nearshore light manufacturing,” Rubio said at a news conference in the Dominican Republic on Thursday.
“That presence already exists there now. That can be expanded. They have a young and strong, vibrant workforce.”
Haiti currently is in the midst of an ongoing security crisis, with gang violence costing thousands of lives.
However, the Trump administration has been criticised for advancing self-serving plans for conflict-torn areas, including Gaza, where the US president proposed displacing residents and constructing a “Riviera of the Middle East”.
The United Nations has reported that, like in Gaza, displacement is an urgent concern. An estimated 1,041,000 Haitians have faced internal displacement as the result of widespread gang violence.
Rubio added that, just as the US is restricting asylum seekers, it would not expect Haiti’s neighbour, the Dominican Republic, to accept displaced people.
“I think it’s also important to be clear we cannot and will not ask the Dominican Republic to accept — or be expected of them to accept — an uncontrolled migratory wave,” Rubio said.
“No country in the world should be asked to do that, and this country should not either, and we will not be asking for that.”