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Plunging into Haiti: Clinton, Aristide, and the Defeat of Diplomacy Hardcover – May 22, 2006
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For much of the early 1990s, Haiti held the world's attention. A fiery populist priest, Jean Bertrand Aristide, was elected president and deposed a year later in a military coup. Soon thousands of desperately poor Haitians started to arrive in makeshift boats on the shores of Florida. In early 1993, the newly elected Clinton administration pledged to make the restoration of President Aristide one of the cornerstones of its foreign policy. But that fall the U.S. let supporters of Haiti's ruling military junta intimidate America into ordering the USS Harlan County and its cargo of UN peacekeeping troops to scotch plans and return to port. Less than a year later, for the first time in U.S. history, a deposed president of another country prevailed on the United States to use its military might to return him to office.
These extraordinary events provide the backdrop for Plunging into Haiti: Clinton, Aristide, and the Defeat of Diplomacy--Ralph Pezzullo's detailed account of the international diplomatic effort to resolve the political crisis. Through his father, Lawrence Pezzullo, who served as the U.S. special envoy to Haiti, Ralph Pezzullo gained access to important players on all sides. He tells the story of talented, committed men and women from the United States, France, Argentina, and Haiti who dedicated themselves to creating an outcome that would benefit Haiti and the rest of the world. With the energy of a political thriller, Plunging into Haiti fleshes out the central political struggle with threads of Haitian history and will engage readers with a general interest in Haiti as well as students of foreign policy. Using his unique perspective and access, Ralph Pezzullo covers the aftermath of the Clinton administration's diplomatic maneuvers to show an island still in turmoil.
- Print length312 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherUniversity Press of Mississippi
- Publication dateMay 22, 2006
- Dimensions6.25 x 1.5 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101578068606
- ISBN-13978-1578068609
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Editorial Reviews
Book Description
An inside account of the backroom negotiations that entangled the United States in the sufferings of its island neighbor
From the Publisher
--- Provides an insiders perspective on how U.S. foreign policy failedthe author, son of one of the key U.S. diplomats involved in the crisis, had direct access to the primary sources involved
--- Demonstrates the strengths and weaknesses of U.S. diplomatic and military efforts via close study of a specific crisis
--- Tells the story of modern Haiti and reveals the ongoing and difficult relationship between the U.S. and Haiti
--- Places U.S. diplomatic efforts in a larger context of actions taken by the U.N. and other international organizations
--- Expands our cooperation with ADST-DACOR
From the Inside Flap
About the Author
Ralph Pezzullo is an award-winning playwright, screenwriter, novelist, poet, and journalist. He is the author of several books including Jawbreaker and At the Fall of Somoza and has written articles for the Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, the Washington Post, Sports Illustrated, Connoisseur, GQ, USA Weekend, the Miami Herald, and other publications.
Product details
- Publisher : University Press of Mississippi (May 22, 2006)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 312 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1578068606
- ISBN-13 : 978-1578068609
- Item Weight : 1.4 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.25 x 1.5 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #7,713,034 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #673 in Haiti Caribbean & West Indies History
- #5,763 in International Diplomacy (Books)
- #6,463 in Caribbean & Latin American Politics
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Ralph Pezzullo is a New York Times and international bestselling author whose books have sold millions of copies worldwide.
Ralph is the host of Heroes Behind the Headlines, one of the top documentary podcasts, where listeners get to hear the stories of the headlines you know, told by the heroes you don’t. They are first-hand stories from the people on the front lines, who have lived the news we’ve consumed for the last half-century.
Literally born into the world of geopolitics, Ralph is the son of a legendary United States Diplomat who brokered the 1979 resignation of Nicaragua’s strongman dictator Anastasio Somoza Debayle.
When Ralph was five his father joined the Foreign Service of the State Department. His job took him to Washington, DC, Mexico, South Vietnam, Bolivia, Colombia, Guatemala, Uruguay, Haiti and Nicaragua. Because of his father’s career in diplomacy, Ralph was present for some of the most formative events in world geopolitics, including living in Saigon during the Tonkin Gulf Incident, the overthrow of Diem, several other coups d’etats, and almost daily Vietcong terrorist attacks against Americans. He then survived three years gasping for air at 13,000 feet in La Paz, Bolivia, when Che Guevarra was trying to build a guerrilla base in that country. In 1980 Ralph found himself in Nicaragua debating politics with guys like Tomas Borge and the Ortega brothers and witnessing the first days of the Sandinista Revolution (the subject of the non-fiction book At the Fall of Somoza, which he wrote with his father).
After receiving a Master's Degree in International Affairs, he worked on Capitol Hill and later as a correspondent for Associated Press covering assignments in Latin America, and creating relationships with other diplomats, CIA agents, and military attaches across the world.
Ralph has written screenplays for all the major film studios and has worked with award-winning directors like Oliver Stone and Antoine Fuqua. His most recent book, Saigon, is a story told in a time of war, living as a boy in Vietnam from 1963-1965. The protagonist is a sensitive, intelligent thirteen-year-old with a self-centered, domineering father who serves as a diplomat with the US Embassy. Eager to engage his exotic new environment, he befriends locals working at the Embassy maintenance shop and serves as a batboy for the US Special Forces softball team. Over time, he develops a unique perspective of the political crisis gripping the country and the role of the US.
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- Reviewed in the United States on August 28, 2016It is a very book and every Haitian should read it.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 13, 2015Blech
- Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2006I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in Haiti, U.S. foreign policy making, diplomacy and multinational negotiations.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 29, 2007The name Pezzullo, for those concerned with Haiti, is infinitely divisive. Ralph Pezzullo is the son of Lawrence Pezzullo, one of the State Department's special diplomats whom the Clinton Administration contracted to force both the Cedras regime and the exiled Aristide administration to settle their dispute and come to some compromise where Aristide would return to power after his ouster in the early 1990s. Lawrence Pezzullo was likened to a devil by advocates of Aristide and far-left-leaning protesters in the United States for forcing Aristide to compromise with the Haitian military which they accused of being mass-killers.
"Plunging into Haiti" is essentially about the operations of the Clinton Administration that eventually led to the 1994 US Intervation and restoration of Aristide. I thoroughly enjoyed Ralph Pezzullo's book because it tells the same old story from the fresh, different point of view of Lawrence Pezzullo. Before reading this book the maddening indecisiveness and awkward behavior of the Clinton Administration made little sense to me. I was surprised how frustrated Pezzullo was with his fellow State Department officials, and by the discord and chaos within the US Administration itself. Perhaps this book should have been named "Plunging into the US State Department."
Needless to say, this book is blatantly one-sided and biased in favor of Lawrence Pezzullo. So: this book is only valuable if you read it with others that tell the story from different points of view. I suggest reading Paul Farmer's "Uses of Haiti" together with this book for a mind-expanding debate. Farmer slams the Clinton Administration for forcing Aristide to compromise with Cedras; while, Pezzullo feels that Aristide as a president in exile had no right to complain about US tactics to restore him to power.
Also, I really disliked how each chapter is interrupted by condensed introductory summaries of the history of Haiti. Ralph Pezzullo intended this book to serve training diplomats--BAD IDEA; because this topic is too complex, too divisive--this book is only one side of the story. This book should NOT be your introduction to Haiti. But it should definately be on your list if you are familiar with Haiti's history and have already considered different points of view.
