PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived Thursday in Haiti to reaffirm the U.S. government's commitment to a multinational mission to fight gangs in the Caribbean country and push for long-awaited general elections as he supported consideration of a peacekeeping operation.
Some 400 Kenyan police have been deployed to Haiti to lead a U.N.-backed mission to quell gang violence in the Haitian capital and beyond, but concerns have grown that the mission lacks resources.
''At this critical moment, we do need more funding, we do need more personnel to sustain and carry out the objectives of this mission,'' Blinken told reporters.
He added that the U.S. is working to renew the mission, ''but we also want to make sure that we have something that's reliable, that's sustainable. We'll look at every option to do that. A peacekeeping operation would be one such option.''
On Wednesday, Brian Nichols, U.S. assistant secretary for Western Hemisphere affairs, confirmed the U.S. government is considering a U.N. peacekeeping operation as one way to secure money and resources to fight gangs that control 80% of Haiti's capital.
Many Haitians have rejected the proposal of another peacekeeping operation, given the introduction of cholera and sexual abuse cases that occurred when U.N. troops were last in Haiti.
Blinken arrived a day after Haiti's government extended a state of emergency to the entire country. It had been imposed earlier in the year in the capital and surrounding areas in an attempt to stem the ongoing violence.
Blinken met with Haitian Prime Minister Garry Conille and a nine-member transitional presidential council that was created after former Prime Minister Ariel Henry resigned. He also met with unspecified political party leaders, the head of the multinational mission and the chief of Haiti's National Police.