Haiti–United States relations (1800–1914) Then-U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
Alexander Hamilton and other Federalists supported
Toussaint Louverture's revolution against France in
Haiti, revolution fought by enslaved Africans. Hamilton's suggestions helped shape the
Haitian Constitution. In 1804 Haiti became the Western Hemisphere's first independent state with a majority Black population. Hamilton urged closer economic and diplomatic ties. Adams sent Stevens to Haiti with instructions to establish a relationship with Toussaint and express support for his regime. The Federalist administration hoped to incite a movement toward Haitian independence, but Louverture maintained a colonial relationship with France. Stevens's title, consul, suggested a diplomat attached to a country not a colony, reflecting the Adams administration's view of the Haitian situation. Following his arrival in Haiti in April 1799, Stevens succeeded in accomplishing several of his objectives, including: the suppression of
privateers operating out of the colony, protections for American lives and property, and right of entry for American vessels. On June 13, 1799, he signed a convention which resulted in an armistice and gave protections to American merchantmen from Haitian privateers, in addition to allowing U.S. ships to enter Haiti and engage in
free trade. Following the Federalist Party's defeat in the
1800 United States presidential election, the United States under President
Jefferson (a Virginia slaveowner who only supported manumission of African-Americans from slavery on the condition of voluntary removal to Africa) withdrew diplomatic recognition from Toussaint's autonomous government and worked to curry favor with the government of
Napoleon Bonaparte. Pro-slavery southerners in the United States aided in delaying the United States' recognition of Haiti's independence. President
Abraham Lincoln spoke in favor of recognizing both Haiti and
Liberia at the opening of the
37th United States Congress in 1861. Senator
Charles Sumner introduced a bill to extend recognition to both countries on February 4, 1862, and it eventually passed and was signed into law by Lincoln. The United States recognized the independence of Haiti, which was achieved in
1804, on July 12, 1862, with
Benjamin F. Whidden as its first representative. President Andrew Johnson suggested annexing the island to secure influence over Europe in the Caribbean. The occupation impacted the nation's economy as well as the people's self-image and independence. Ultimately, Haitians united in resistance of the US occupation, and US forces left in 1934. Left behind was a newly trained Haitian Army, the Garde, with mostly black soldiers and mulatto officers, who dominated political office until 1947. The Reagan administration forced Baby Doc to leave in 1986, and when a repressive military dictatorship arose, Reagan suspended aid. The George H.W. Bush administration also embargoed and then blockaded Haiti, suspending all but humanitarian aid. In 2010, US President
Bill Clinton apologized for his role in demanding for Haiti to drop tariffs on the importation of subsidized US rice, which had a negative effect on Northern Haitian rice farmers. On May 24, 2010, the Haiti Economic Lift Program (HELP) was signed into US law, ensuring preferential tariffs for Haitian-produced garments. On October 22, 2012, acting US Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton gave the keynote speech for the opening of the controversial
Caracol industrial park. In 2011, WikiLeaks leaked info that showed the Obama administration fought to keep Haitian wages at 31 cents an hour when the Haiti government passed a law raising its
minimum wage to 61 cents an hour. In November 2019, US Ambassador to the United Nations
Kelly Craft met with President of Haiti
Jovenel Moïse at the
Haiti National Palace about ways to implement a consensual resolution of Haiti's political crisis through inclusive dialogue. Craft later met with political leaders from other Haitian parties, listened to their different views, and urged an inclusive solution with Moïse. She also urged the Haitian government to fight corruption, investigate and prosecute human rights abusers, and combat narcotics and human trafficking. During 2024 escalation of
the Gang war in Haiti, the US flew in forces to help evacuate nonessential personnel. Later in March, an anti-terrorism security team, FAST, was deployed to reinforce the American Embassy. On March 2, 2025,
UN Secretary-General António Guterres called for urgent international support, proposing a UN Support Office to assist the
Kenya-led
Multinational Security Support Mission. Over 5,600 people were killed in gang violence in 2024, with major massacres in
Port-au-Prince and
Pont-Sondé. The
International Crisis Group warned that rushed elections, planned for November 2025, could worsen instability. Meanwhile, Haiti’s healthcare system is collapsing, with over 1 million internally displaced and half the population facing food insecurity.
United States Special Envoy for Haiti The
United States special envoy for Haiti was a diplomatic position within the
United States Department of State created after the
assassination of Jovenel Moïse. The special envoy coordinates efforts between
Haiti and the
United States to promote peace and stability in the country. The inaugural special envoy was
Daniel Lewis Foote, who served from July to September 2021. Foote resigned following frustrations that his "recommendations [had] been ignored and dismissed". In August 2022, four members of Congress called on
President Biden to name a new special envoy. ==U.S. economic and development assistance to Haiti==