President Biden explains why US is only supporting Haiti mission led by Kenya

National
By Winfrey Owino | May 23, 2024
President William Ruto and his United Staes counterpart Joe Biden.

President of the United States of America Joe Biden has explained why his country will not be actively taking part in the Haiti mission but will play a supportive role.

He made the explanation at the White House in Washington DC on Thursday, during a joint press conference with his Kenyan counterpart William Ruto. Ruto is on a state visit to the US.

Biden was responding to a journalist who questioned why the US was ending most of its historical wars including Afghanistan but was pushing for Kenya to send troops to Haiti.

In his response, POTUS says the decision to keep off active involvement in the Haiti mission is to avoid what he termed as 'misrepresentation' by non-allies.

Therefore, he opted to offer support in terms of intelligence, weapons and other resources needed for the success of the mission.

"For the United States to deploy forces, it will raise questions that can be misrepresented on what we are trying to do by people who are considered our enemies. We set out to find partners to lead the exercise as we offer support services," Biden says.

"There will be no US forces on the ground but we are going to supply Kenya with logistics, equipment and intelligence support,".

Biden says the US Congress will give 360 million USD for equipment, adding that the first phase had already been dispatched.

On the other hand, President William Ruto was asked why he opted to send troops to Haiti, when the banditry situation in the North Rift region had not been resolved.

In his response, Ruto reiterated that his commitment is to ensure security and stability, referring to Somalia and DRC missions.

"I committed to sort out insecurity in North Rift. Right now, there are 3,000 military officers and 2,000 police officers in North Rift. We have renovated and reopened 20 schools and the exercise is still ongoing. We have made tremendous progress in making sure we have security at home," Ruto responded.

"We deployed 1,000 troops to DRC (a few years ago), we have 5,000 troops in Somalia and we have maintained the fight against banditry. So Haiti will not be an exception,"

President Ruto went to the US earlier this week, starting from Atlanta, Georgia before meeting President Biden in Washington.

Share this story
Concept behind new tyre technology shaping racing in Naivasha
This new tyre has been selected by 90 per cent of drivers from day one, having been engineered with an optimised compound that enhances low-temperature flexibility.
WRC 2026 Safari Rally: Speedster Leonardo Varese proves to be fans' favourite in Naivasha
The six-time 2WD national champion Leonardo Varese has plans to go for the jugular in the main WRC categories in the coming seasons.
Takamoto describes the Kedong' Two puncture as his worst in WRC Safari Rally
Japanese speedster Takamoto Katsuta has described the twin punctures he sustained on his two front wheels at Kedong' Two as his worst in his WRC Safari Rally career.
Why rain is a driver's worst nightmare at the WRC 2026 Safari Rally
Rain turns the 2026 Safari Rally into a grueling challenge, testing drivers’ skills on Kenya’s toughest WRC stages.
Leopards aim to close gap on leaders Gor Mahia
AFC Leopards will aim to narrow the gap on SportPesa Premier League leaders Gor Mahia when they face Mathare United at Nyayo Stadium on Saturday.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS