Its latest round of instability runs the risk of exacerbating an already dire crisis for its citizens and neighbors.
Its latest round of instability runs the risk of exacerbating an already dire crisis for its citizens and neighbors.
There are lessons in Haiti's collapse that seem starkly relevant to the "larger" foreign-policy issues of our day, particularly postwar Iraq and Afghanistan. These lessons should reduce partisan finger-pointing and remind us that the secret to success in U.S. overseas interventions is mustering the will to stay until the job is done right.