WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Thursday expressed deep appreciation to Kenyan President William Ruto for the coming deployment of Kenyan police forces to help quell gang violence in Haiti and he defended his decision to withhold American forces from the mission in the beleaguered Caribbean nation.
The United States has agreed to contribute $300 million to a multinational force that will include 1,000 Kenyan police officers, but Biden argued that an American troop presence in Haiti would raise ''all kinds of questions that can easily be misrepresented."
The Democrat came into office in 2021 pledging to end U.S. involvement in so-called endless wars in the aftermath of 20 years of conflict in Afghanistan and Iraq.
''Haiti is in an area of the Caribbean that is a very volatile,'' Biden said at a news conference with Ruto, who was in Washington for the first state visit to the U.S. by an African leader since 2008. ''There's a lot going on in this hemisphere. So we're in a situation where we want to do all we can without us looking like America once again is stepping over and deciding this is what must be done.''
Ruto, who was honored by Biden with a fancy state dinner on the White House grounds in the evening, also gave a climate policy address and met with former President Barack Obama.
Ruto is facing legal challenges in Nairobi over the decision to commit Kenyan forces to a conflict thousands of miles from home when his own country has no shortage of economic and security challenges. He said that Kenya, as a democracy, has a duty to help.
''Kenya believes that the responsibility of peace and security anywhere in the world, including in Haiti, is the collective responsibility of all nations and all people who believe in freedom, self-determination, democracy and justice," Ruto said. "And it is the reason why Kenya took up this responsibility.''
Some analysts say his move could run afoul of a Kenyan High Court ruling in January that found the deployment unconstitutional because of a lack of reciprocal agreements between Kenya and Haiti. A deal was signed in March, before Ariel Henry resigned as Haiti's prime minister, to try to salvage the plan.