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BAP Backgrounder: U.S. Racist Immigration Policy Toward Haiti Reinforces Imperialism and Weakens Popular Sovereignty

BAP Backgrounder: U.S. Racist Immigration Policy Toward Haiti Reinforces Imperialism and Weakens Popular Sovereignty

BAP Backgrounder: U.S. Racist Immigration Policy Toward Haiti Reinforces Imperialism and Weakens Popular Sovereignty

By: Black Alliance for Peace Haiti/Americas Team

U.S. immigration policy is the domestic arm of its foreign policy. The attack on Haitian migrants is a direct consequence of Washington's ongoing war on Haiti's sovereignty, making their defense a central anti-imperialist struggle.

On November 26th 2025, the Trump administration terminated Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti using nearly identical language to the TPS cancellations earlier this year for displaced Venezuelans and affecting upward of 353,000 Haitian migrants. In both cases, the Department of Homeland Security claimed that continued protections were “not in the national security or foreign policy interests of the United States,” affirming U.S. policy abuses redefine their “interests” at a whim. 

While the U.S. has long politicized displacement from leftist states like Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua, casting migrants as evidence of socialism’s failure and selectively offering protections when it aligns with Washington’s broader regime-change goals, Haitian migration has been structurally and historically precarious. The 2025 TPS revocation is simply the latest chapter in a bipartisan, decades-long anti-Haitian regime, one that criminalizes the forced displacement of African/Black peoples while actively producing the conditions of displacement through coups, occupation, IMF prescriptions, Core Group dictates, and externally imposed “security” interventions that deny the Haitian masses true political sovereignty.

Moreover, Haitian migration has been criminalized longer and more intensely than any other migrant flow in the Western hemisphere. Haitians face the harshest, most racialized exclusions within the U.S. immigration system and across the Americas, in particular in the Dominican Republic where state targeting and  violence against Haitians, descendants of Haitian migrants, and AfroDominicans are routine. Haitian migrants are routinely denied political meaning, stripped of historic context, dehumanized, and subjected to abrupt TPS revocation alongside mass deportations under Republican and Democratic administrations alike, regardless of materially worsening conditions on the ground driven by U.S. imperial meddling. The recent news of Haitians, along with citizens of 18 other countries, showing up to take their oath for citizenship, getting plucked out of line and told they couldn’t proceed due to their country of origin, highlights the precarity and anti-Haitian racism that many face. 

Thus, the latest TPS decision must be understood as a function of both historic  white supremacist domestic policy and ongoing imperial aggression toward Haiti itself, including the collapse of the U.S. designed Kenya-led Multinational Security Support Mission (MSS) and the emergence of the rebranded hyper-militarized occupation, called the “Gang Suppression Force.” This is a continuation of the  denial of popular sovereignty in Haiti that forces Haitians to migrate under extremely dangerous and dire conditions must be connected to the global white supremacist, colonial, capitalist order of the U.S./EU/NATO Axis of Domination that seeks to maintain hegemonic power in Our Americas. The crisis of Haiti, much like the broader crisis of “immigration” in the U.S., is in fact a crisis of imperialism steeped in anti-Haitian racism.

A History of Policing Haitian Migration

For over forty years, Haitians have been detained at higher rates, deported at faster speeds, and granted asylum at historically low levels (4–5%). Moreover, the U.S. has a long history of strengthening penalties to limit their asylum access. In 1981, the Reagan administration signed an agreement with the repressive pro-Western ‘Baby Doc’ Duvalier regime to interdict any vessel suspected of transporting migrants from Haiti for immediate return, and between 1981-1990 the Immigration Naturalization Service approved only 11 Haitian requests for asylum with some estimates as low as 6. Rather than “refugees,” the Reagan administration characterized Haitian asylum seekers as largely “economic migrants” and “boat people” who were abandoning “one of the poorest countries in the world.”

Following the 1991 U.S.-backed military coup against the democratically elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, thousands of Haitian asylum seekers were interdicted at sea and detained at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba where under the Clinton administration, the camps were expanded and Haitians were held without access to asylum protections, legal counsel and subjected to invasive mandatory HIV screening. This extraterritorial system of racialized detention reinforced the U.S.’s broader imperial strategy of punishing Haitians and pathologizing their displacement in the aftermath of U.S.-backed political destabilization.

That Haitians were later carved out of the 1997 Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central American Relief Act and forced to wait a year for the more restrictive Haitian Refugee Immigration Fairness Act follows this trend. Even in moments of so-called humanitarian relief, African/Black migrants are excluded, over-scrutinized, and systematically denied the protections freely extended to others. This exclusion cannot be separated from the broader neocolonial context because just years after the 1991 coup and Aristide’s conditional reinstatement under an IMF-imposed austerity regime, Haitian displacement was criminalized rather than politically recognized, reinforcing a racialized logic of punishment for asserting sovereignty. This, as well as the infamous Clinton-orchestrated rice importation scheme that devastated the Haitian rice industry and destroyed national food sovereignty, is an example of how the centuries-long campaign of economic warfare against the Haitian people has fed into the ongoing imperialist crises of forced and coerced migration.

Maritime interdictions, Guantánamo detention camps, fast-track removals, and dehumanizing racially-coded language about “chaos,” “instability” and “boat people” have all served to justify anti-Haitian exclusion. Neither party has deviated from such anti-Black logic and state practices against Haiti and Haitians, which is predicated on a broader system of domination through white supremacist colonialism that is the method through which the U.S. maintains hegemony in the region. As such, bipartisan anti-Haitian racism is key to wider U.S. aims of full-spectrum dominance in the Western Hemisphere and fascistic social control domestically.

U.S. foreign policy creates Haitian displacement then criminalizes Haitians for fleeing

What is happening in Haiti in 2025 is not organic instability. It is the predictable outcome of years-long U.S.-backed coups, externally imposed political arrangements, IMF-engineered dependencies hollowing out of the Haitian state, loose flow of arms, and Washington’s support for un-elected leaders against popular will while enforcing foreign police interventions presented as “security reforms.” 

Haitians do not flee Haiti because Haiti is a failed state. They flee because U.S.-led imperialism – with key support by Canada, the EU, NATO allies, and others – ensures Haiti is denied the sovereignty required to build a safe, sustainable environment and future. The paramilitary armed groups (so-called “gangs”) that have for years now wreaked violence against the Haitian people, destroyed neighborhoods that are the foundation of popular movements, and heightened social instability are a direct result and tool of U.S.-led imperialism’s war on Haitian sovereignty, and they are reinforced by neocolonial oligarchs and comprador political elites whose interests oppose popular sovereignty. This brings us directly to the current “security” interventions designed to fail.

The MSS occupation designed and championed by the U.S. collapsed under the weight of its own contradictions. Destabilization was the strategy, so the paramilitary violence raging in the capital is not halted because it functions as justification for further occupation and a weapon against popular sovereignty. The new GSF, while presented as a fresh mandate, is simply the MSS intensified. A senior UN peace operation official Jack Christofides brings the same doctrinal and paternalistic peacekeeping framework that has historically failed in Haiti, Iraq, and elsewhere. This is not “new expertise” but continuity with a model of imperial governance that expands foreign control while eroding Haitian self-determination.

Supporting Haitian self-determination and people(s)-centered human rights means understanding the connections between U.S. “domestic” immigration policies. This means fighting to build an authentic Zone of Peace in the hemisphere, which does not fall prey to anti-Haitian racism and colonial logics with regard to migration. 

Temporary Protected Status has always meant the least for Haitians because Haitians have always been held to the most punitive, white supremacist standard in the U.S. immigration system. The 2025 Trump revocation is not a break from the past, but a continuation of a bipartisan architecture that destabilizes Haiti through endless imperial intervention, criminalizes Haitian migration, and denies refuge to those fleeing crises the U.S. itself produces. Until U.S. imperialism is confronted and Haitian popular sovereignty restored, TPS revocations, mass deportations, and militarized foreign interventions will continue to operate together as the bipartisan machinery of white supremacist, anti-Haitian rule.

Instead of falling back on failed imperialist, neocolonial models that only exacerbate the root causes of forced and coerced migration, we must understand resolving challenges of migration as an integral part of fulfilling the call for a Zone of Peace in Our Americas. Struggling for this Zone of Peace requires upholding and supporting Haitian self-determination as central to the liberation of the region, through the bottom-up, mass-based, popular struggle in coordination with grassroots struggles throughout the region. Along these lines, the U.S./NATO Out of Our Americas Network is building out a structure for the masses of our peoples to successfully expel the U.S./EU/NATO Axis of Domination from our hemisphere, and open up the space for alternative systems and institutions that can end the imperialist crises of forced and coerced migration of Haitians and all peoples of Our Americas.

Hands Off Haiti!

Shut Down ICE!

Make Our Americas A Zone of Peace!

Afrodescendants: Casting off Illusions, Preparing for Struggle

Afrodescendants: Casting off Illusions, Preparing for Struggle

Afrodescendants: Casting off Illusions, Preparing for Struggle

The Afro-Venezuelan Organizations Network (ROA) and the Regional Articulation of Afrodescendants of Latin America and the Caribbean (ARAAC), Afrodescendant organizations born from anti-imperialist social change processes and anti-neocolonial struggles at the dawn of the twenty-first century, carry the dignity and sovereignty that our African Ancestors entrusted to us as a living imprint of the self-determination of peoples.

Latin America and the Caribbean have suffered, throughout the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries, invasions, territorial dispossession, and targeted assassinations of Latin American and Afrodescendant leaders. The historical record confirms this across nearly all the countries of Our America (Abya Yala), from the seizure of Puerto Rico, Panama, and several Caribbean islands, to the tragic invasions of Nicaragua, El Salvador, Honduras, the Dominican Republic, and Grenada, among many others.

The current president of the United States, Donald Trump, attempted through multiple avenues to invade Venezuela. He relied on internal civilian and military enemies through Operation Gedeón, as well as mercenaries neutralized by the heroic Afrodescendant community of Chuao (Aragua State). With military and paramilitary support from Colombian-Venezuelan sectors and the backing of former presidents Duque and Uribe, he attempted to provoke an invasion. Trump sought to undermine the legitimacy of our government by imposing an illegitimate president, a puppet named Juan Guaidó. He attempted to delegitimize Venezuela internationally by creating in 2017 a group of countries led by delinquent presidents, known as the Lima Group (Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Colombia, Paraguay, Peru). They appointed parallel ambassadors, imposed more than a thousand coercive measures that remain in effect nearly a decade later, and even stole our embassies, including the one in Washington, D.C.

In the face of these covert, open, and shameless aggressions, our sovereign people have responded with dignity, just as our cimarrón ancestors did during the colonial period, the war of independence, and the contemporary struggles that followed. The majority of the Venezuelan population lives along the Caribbean coast, from Zulia State to our border with Trinidad and Tobago, whose president Kamla Persad-Bissessar openly defends pro-imperialist positions.

THE INVASION ATTEMPT BY MR. TRUMP AND HIS ALLIES

The resident of the White House, Mr. Trump, has launched a second campaign aimed at invading our country, obsessed with seizing our oil reserves, the largest in the world, along with our gas, gold, and rare earth minerals. His motivation stems from the imminent depletion of U.S. reserves within five years and the decline of rare earth minerals necessary to sustain emerging technologies, including artificial intelligence.

The deployment of United States military forces only a few kilometers from our coastline, the killing of eighty fishermen under the pretext of drug trafficking, the violation of our airspace with threats against commercial flights, the illegal sale of the oil company CITGO, and more than 1,100 coercive measures reveal a multifaceted attack. This aggression could lead to the outbreak of a third world war, with the Caribbean and Latin America as its stage. At the center of this racist and white supremacist hatred stands Secretary of State Marco Rubio, an ultraright Cuban-American figure who has made it his mission to destroy the region’s progressive governments and act as a mercenary for ExxonMobil.

In light of this situation, we call upon the noble people of the United States to halt these aggressions. We also call on sovereign governments in the Caribbean and Latin America to stop the attacks led by Donald Trump and his mafia. We call on Afrodescendant peoples, communities, and social movements to mobilize in solidarity with our people, to denounce the false U.S. narrative of a war on drug trafficking, and to stop the march toward war.

We also call upon our Afro-Venezuelan people to defend our sovereignty and independence, and to uphold our right to self-determination as a nation. We urge our people to prepare for resistance and participate actively in a prolonged popular struggle for the defense of our homeland.

Caracas, December 4, 2025

Leadership of the Afro-Venezuelan Organizations Network

Coordination of the Regional Articulation of Afrodescendants of the Americas and the Caribbean


AFRODESCENDIENTES: DESECHANDO ILUSIONES, PREPARÁNDOSE PARA LA LUCHA


La Red de Organizaciones Afrovenezolanas (ROA) y la Articulación Regional de Afrodescendientes de América Latina y el Caribe (ARAAC), organizaciones afrodescendientes surgidas de los procesos de cambio social antiimperialista y de las luchas anticoloniales y neocoloniales en los albores del siglo XXI, portan la dignidad y soberanía que nuestros Ancestros Africanos nos encomendaron como impronta viva de la autodeterminación de los pueblos.

América Latina y el Caribe han sufrido, a lo largo de los siglos XIX, XX y XXI, invasiones, despojos territoriales y asesinatos selectivos de líderes latinoamericanos y afrodescendientes. El registro histórico lo confirma en casi todos los países de Nuestra América (Abya Yala), desde el apoderamiento de Puerto Rico, Panamá y varias islas del Caribe, hasta las trágicas invasiones a Nicaragua, El Salvador, Honduras, República Dominicana y Granada, entre muchas otras.

El actual presidente de los Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, intentó por múltiples vías invadir Venezuela. Se valió de enemigos internos civiles y militares a través de la Operación Gedeón, así como de mercenarios neutralizados por la heroica comunidad afrodescendiente de Chuao (Estado Aragua). Con apoyo militar y paramilitar de sectores colombo-venezolanos y el respaldo de los ex presidentes Duque y Uribe, intentó propiciar una invasión. Trump buscó socavar la legitimidad de nuestro gobierno imponiendo un presidente ilegítimo, un títere llamado Juan Guaidó. Pretendió deslegitimar a Venezuela en el ámbito internacional creando en 2017 un grupo de países dirigido por presidentes delincuentes, conocido como el Grupo de Lima (Argentina, Brasil, Canadá, Chile, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Colombia, Paraguay, Perú). Designaron embajadores paralelos, impusieron más de mil medidas coercitivas que aún se mantienen casi una década después, e incluso robaron nuestras embajadas, incluida la de Washington D.C.

Frente a estas agresiones solapadas, abiertas y descaradas, nuestro pueblo soberano ha respondido con dignidad, al igual que lo hicieron nuestros ancestros cimarrones durante la época colonial, la guerra de independencia y las luchas contemporáneas posteriores. La mayoría de la población venezolana vive a lo largo de la costa caribeña, desde el estado Zulia hasta nuestra frontera con Trinidad y Tobago, cuyo presidente Kamla Persad-Bissessar defiende abiertamente posturas proimperialistas.

EL INTENTO DE INVASIÓN DEL SEÑOR TRUMP Y SUS ALIADOS

El residente de la Casa Blanca, el señor Trump, ha lanzado una segunda campaña dirigida a invadir nuestro país, obsesionado con apoderarse de nuestras reservas petroleras, las más grandes del mundo, junto con nuestro gas, oro y minerales de tierras raras. Su motivación proviene del inminente agotamiento de las reservas estadounidenses en cinco años y la disminución de los minerales de tierras raras necesarios para sostener las tecnologías emergentes, incluida la inteligencia artificial.

El despliegue de fuerzas militares de Estados Unidos a solo unos kilómetros de nuestra costa, el asesinato de ochenta pescadores bajo el pretexto del narcotráfico, la violación de nuestro espacio aéreo con amenazas contra vuelos comerciales, la venta ilegal de la petrolera CITGO y más de 1.100 medidas coercitivas revelan un ataque multifacético. Esta agresión podría desencadenar una tercera guerra mundial, teniendo al Caribe y a América Latina como escenario. En el centro de este odio racista y supremacista blanco se encuentra el Secretario de Estado Marco Rubio, una figura ultraderechista cubano-estadounidense que ha hecho de su misión destruir los gobiernos progresistas de la región y actuar como mercenario de ExxonMobil.

Ante esta situación, hacemos un llamado al noble pueblo de los Estados Unidos para que detenga estas agresiones. También llamamos a los gobiernos soberanos del Caribe y América Latina a que paren los ataques liderados por Donald Trump y su mafia. Convocamos a los pueblos, comunidades y movimientos sociales afrodescendientes a movilizarse en solidaridad con nuestro pueblo, a denunciar la falsa narrativa estadounidense de una guerra contra el narcotráfico y a detener la marcha hacia la guerra.

Asimismo, hacemos un llamado a nuestro pueblo afrovenezolano a defender nuestra soberanía e independencia, y a sostener nuestro derecho a la autodeterminación como nación. Exhortamos a nuestro pueblo a prepararse para la resistencia y a participar activamente en una prolongada lucha popular por la defensa de nuestra patria.

Caracas, 4 de diciembre de 2025

Dirección de la Red de Organizaciones Afrovenezolanas, Coordinación de la Articulación Regional de Afrodescendientes de las Américas y el Caribe


AFRODESCENDANTS: ROMPRE AVEC LES ILLUSIONS, SE PRÉPARER AUX LUTTES

La Réseau des Organisations Afro-Vénézuéliennes (ROA) et l’Articulation Régionale des Afrodescendants d’Amérique Latine et de la Caraïbe (ARAAC), organisations afrodescendantes nées des processus de changement social anti-impérialistes et des luttes antinéocoloniales à l’aube du XXIᵉ siècle, portent la dignité et la souveraineté que nous ont léguées nos Ancêtres africains comme empreinte vivante de l’autodétermination des peuples.

L’Amérique latine et la Caraïbe, au XIXᵉ, XXᵉ et XXIᵉ siècle, ont subi invasions, spoliations territoriales et assassinats sélectifs de dirigeants latino-américains et afrodescendants, comme en témoignent presque tous les pays de Notre Amérique (Abya Yala) : du dépouillement de Porto Rico, du Panama et de plusieurs îles de la Caraïbe, jusqu’aux invasions meurtrières au Nicaragua, au Salvador, au Honduras, en République dominicaine, à la Grenade, parmi tant d’autres.

L’actuel président des États-Unis, Donald Trump, a tenté par plusieurs voies d’envahir le Venezuela, utilisant des ennemis civils et militaires internes à travers l’Opération Gedeón, ainsi que des mercenaires neutralisés par le glorieux peuple afrodescendant de Chuao (état d’Aragua). Il a aussi encouragé, avec l’appui militaire et paramilitaire de secteurs colombo-vénézuéliens, une tentative d’invasion soutenue par les ex-présidents Duque et Uribe. Trump a voulu nier la légitimité de notre gouvernement en imposant un président illégitime, un pantin nommé Juan Guaidó. Il a essayé de délégitimer notre pays au niveau international en créant en 2017 un groupe de pays dirigé par des présidents délinquants connu sous le nom de Groupe de Lima (Argentine, Brésil, Canada, Chili, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Colombie, Paraguay, Pérou). Ils ont désigné de faux ambassadeurs, imposé plus de mille mesures coercitives encore en vigueur depuis près d’une décennie, et nous ont volé nos ambassades dont celle de Washington D.C.

Face à toutes ces agressions dissimulées, ouvertes ou insolentes, notre peuple souverain a su répondre avec dignité, comme l’avaient fait nos ancêtres cimarrones et cimarronas depuis l’époque coloniale jusqu’à la guerre d’indépendance et les luttes contemporaines. La majorité du peuple vénézuélien vit sur la côte caraïbe, depuis l’état du Zulia jusqu’à notre frontière avec Trinité et Tobago avec sa présidente pro-impérialiste Kamla Persad Bissessar.

L’INVASION DE MONSIEUR TRUMP ET SES ALLIÉS

L’habitant de la Maison-Blanche, Monsieur Trump, a lancé une deuxième campagne visant à envahir notre pays, obsédé par l’idée de s’emparer de nos réserves pétrolières, les plus grandes du monde, ainsi que de notre gaz, notre or et nos terres rares. Il craint l’épuisement imminent de ses propres réserves dans cinq ans, et également le manque de minerais stratégiques nécessaires au développement des nouvelles technologies comme l’intelligence artificielle.

Le déploiement militaire des États-Unis à quelques kilomètres de nos côtes, l’assassinat de quatre-vingts pêcheurs sous prétexte de trafic de drogue, la violation de notre espace aérien accompagnée de menaces contre les vols commerciaux, la vente illégale de l’entreprise pétrolière CITGO, ainsi que plus de mille cent mesures coercitives, révèlent une attaque plurielle qui pourrait ouvrir la voie à une troisième guerre mondiale ayant pour théâtre la Caraïbe et l’Amérique latine. Le pion de la haine raciste et suprémaciste blanche est son secrétaire d’État, Marco Rubio, un ultradroitiste cubano-américain reconnu, qui s’est donné pour mission de détruire les gouvernements progressistes de la région et de servir les intérêts de ExxonMobil en véritable mercenaire.

Face à cette situation, nous appelons le peuple nord-américain, dans sa noblesse et sa conscience, à mettre fin à ces agressions. Nous appelons également les gouvernements souverains de la Caraïbe et de l’Amérique latine à freiner les attaques menées par Donald Trump et sa mafia. Nous appelons les peuples, les communautés et les mouvements sociaux afrodescendants à se mobiliser en solidarité avec notre peuple, à dénoncer le mensonge de la prétendue lutte contre le narcotrafic invoquée par les États-Unis et à stopper l’escalade vers la guerre.

Nous lançons aussi un appel à notre peuple afro-vénézuélien pour défendre notre souveraineté, notre indépendance et le respect de notre autodétermination en tant que nation. Préparons-nous à la résistance et à participer activement à une lutte populaire prolongée pour la défense de notre patrie.

Fait à Caracas, le 4 décembre 2025

Direction du Réseau des Organisations Afro-Vénézuéliennes

Coordination de l’Articulation Régionale des Afrodescendants des Amériques et de la Caraïbe

A Call for Mass Struggle Against U.S.-Led War on Venezuela and the Caribbean

A Call for Mass Struggle Against U.S.-Led War on Venezuela and the Caribbean

Realizing a Zone of Peace in Our Americas Requires Defending Venezuela’s Popular Sovereignty

Nov 14, 2025 — The U.S. empire, unable to accept the sovereignty, progress, and moral example of the Bolivarian Revolution, is escalating its aggressive attacks against Venezuela. This is by no means an isolated struggle — what started as aggression against Venezuela and the Bolivarian Revolution has already claimed several dozen lives of working-class people in the Caribbean and Pacific, extended to threats against Colombia and its President, been linked to the militarization of Ecuador and Panama, and re-militarized Puerto Rico. This is yet another front in the struggle against U.S. imperialism, and it is interlocked with our movements for liberation in Haiti, Palestine, throughout Our Americas, across the Global South, and within the borders of the United States.

It is the wider ongoing pattern of regional militarization and imperialist control that fundamentally violates the principles of a Zone of Peace, as the U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) has systematically transformed the Caribbean into a staging ground for its hegemonic projects. Puerto Rico, a colonial territory, is consistently used as a strategic site for the deployment and launch of military exercises, normalizing its status as a forward operating base, while nations like Guyana and Trinidad & Tobago are treated as subordinate "puppet states" that risk their own sovereignty to facilitate U.S. objectives. Simultaneously, Haiti has been cast as a laboratory for imperial policy, where an accelerated militarization and occupation over the last four years has provided a blueprint for intervention. The racist and cynical designation of Haitian paramilitary armed groups as “terrorists” to be eradicated by US-led occupation has done nothing to relieve impoverished, marginalized Haitians from the violence of these “gangs” — because they are a direct consequence of imperialism. And yet, the excuse and label of “terrorism” has now been directly exported to the case of Venezuela. There, the U.S. Department of War cynically compares Caribbean people in fishing boats to Al-Qaeda, a transparent tactic to manufacture a pretext for full military invasion and attack. 

To oppose this militarization and violence, and expel the nefarious forces of imperialist, colonial violence from our region, we must be steadfast in guaranteeing Our Americas as a Zone of Peace. This guarantee can only be built from the bottom up, through grassroots coordination and popular struggle that elevates/focuses on/highlights anti-imperialist national sovereignty. This is why the Popular Steering Committee for a Zone of Peace in Our Americas launched the U.S./NATO Out of Our Americas (UNOOAN) earlier this year. The UNOOAN is the mass organizational structure of the Zone Of Peace campaign designed to educate the public and strengthen an Americas-wide consciousness among the peoples of the region.

To move towards meeting this moment, BAP has joined with dozens of organizations calling for local actions during the week of November 15 - 23 to Defend Venezuela’s Sovereignty and connect our struggles. This week of action is a crucial beginning, but the gravity of the moment demands a coordinated and powerful response that moves from mobilization to sustained organization. Our movements must pull together our forces to expose the imperial lies that cynically label popular resistance as terrorism, broadening our analysis to expose the interlocked assaults on sovereignty across the region. And we must advance our collective consciousness beyond merely exposing these lies and toward challenging state violence and repression through popular power.

This mobilization must fuel the concrete building of national coalitions against SOUTHCOM and local self-defense networks, learning from the powerful examples of Venezuela's communal militias and projects that embody popular democracy. The steadfastness of the Venezuelan people, who have joined these militias by the millions to defend their homeland, is not just an act of national resistance; it is a living proof that alternatives to imperial domination exist. The U.S. empire seeks to destroy the Bolivarian Revolution precisely because it shows we can fight for People(s)-Centered Human Rights (PCHRs) and for a true, just, militant peace. In unwavering solidarity with the Venezuelan people, we therefore commit to continuing this fight, organizing in solidarity with their masses and popular movements across the Americas to defend sovereignty, dignity, and the right to forge a different future.

Defend Venezuela's Sovereignty!
U.S. & NATO Out of Our Americas!
Make Our Americas a Zone of Peace!

New members of the Bolivarian militia during a military deployment in Caracas, Venezuela. Courtesy of Gabriela Oraa (EL PAÍS) | Video: EPV

Black Alliance for Peace Stands Firmly with Venezuela and the Bolivarian Revolution

Black Alliance for Peace Stands Firmly with Venezuela and the Bolivarian Revolution

Black Alliance for Peace Stands Firmly with Venezuela and the Bolivarian Revolution

We condemn U.S. lawlessness in Our Americas and call for multinational intervention to guarantee a ‘Zone of Peace’

Oct 23, 2025 – U.S. lawless attacks throughout the Caribbean and Pacific, military buildup on various islands, strikes against Venezuela, antagonism against Colombia, and threats to escalate to land bombings are plunging the Americas to the brink of war. The Black Alliance for Peace condemns U.S. imperialist actions and calls on the so-called "international community” and regional/global multinational institutions – such as CELAC, CARICOM, and the UN Security Council – to intervene and end this aggression before it is too late.

Not only has the U.S./EU/NATO axis of domination bombed and extrajudicially killed fishermen in the Caribbean, they have expanded their encirclement of Venezuela to the Pacific, remilitarized Puerto Rico as a launchpad for further aggression, and anointed Trinidad & Tobago as the puppet to funnel Venezuela’s oil resources to the North in the future. This is all occurring as we near the anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Grenada in 1983 (Oct 25), reminding us of comrade Maurice Bishop who called on the countries of the region to guarantee the Caribbean as a Zone of Peace. Such a peace is impossible unless it is principled and anti-imperialist.

As BAP National Co-Coordinator Erica Caines describes, 

“BAP has been clear that the accelerated militarization and occupation that we have seen in Haiti over the last four years has violated the concept of a Zone of Peace and should have served as a warning for the rest of the region. The labeling of “gangs” as terrorist organizations in Haiti has allowed the U.S. to do the same in Venezuela, where the Department of War now compares Caribbean people in boats to Al-Qaeda, in order to justify their imperialist bloodlust. Despite these challenges the steadfast people of Venezuela have joined civilian militias in the millions to defend their homeland, to enforce peace. We applaud the Bolivarian Revolution and support the Venezuelan people’s defense of their sovereignty.” 

BAP is preparing to close out the 5th International Month of Action Against AFRICOM under the theme of  “21st Century Neocolonialism: Capitalism, Compradors, and the Ongoing Scramble for Africa”, we understand that any invasion of Venezuela – led by SOUTHCOM, AFRICOM’S counterpart in the Americas – not only has ramifications in the region, but for the continent and world. So today we urge unity in the fight against U.S.-led imperialism and we emphasize the need for a focus on building a Zone of Peace in Our Americas through popular struggle and grassroots coordination – including efforts that we are a part of, like the U.S./NATO Out of Our Americas Network. It is only the unity of our struggles and peoples that will defeat the capitalists and imperialists who seek to dominate us through never ending war. 

Make Our Americas a Zone of Peace!

No Compromise No Retreat!

————————————-EN ESPANOL—————————————

La Alianza Negra por la Paz se mantiene firme junto a Venezuela y la Revolución Bolivariana

Condenamos la ilegalidad de Estados Unidos en Nuestra América y pedimos una intervención multinacional para garantizar una Zona de Paz

23 de octubre de 2025 – Los bombardeos marítimos ilegales de Estados Unidos en todo el Caribe y el Pacífico, el aumento de la presencia militar en varias islas, los ataques contra Venezuela, el antagonismo contra Colombia y las amenazas de intensificar los bombardeos terrestres están sumiendo a las Américas al borde de la guerra. La Alianza Negra por la Paz (BAP) condena las acciones imperialistas de Estados Unidos y pide a la llamada ‘comunidad internacional’ y a las instituciones multinacionales regionales y mundiales – como a CELAC, e CARICOM, el Consejo de Seguridad de la ONU – que intervengan y pongan fin a esta agresión antes de que sea demasiado tarde.

El eje de dominación de Estados Unidos, la Unión Europea y la OTAN no solo ha bombardeado y asesinado extrajudicialmente a pescadores en el Caribe, sino que ha ampliado su cerco a Venezuela hasta el Pacífico, ha re-militarizado Puerto Rico como plataforma de lanzamiento para nuevas agresiones y ha consagrado a Trinidad y Tobago como títere para canalizar los recursos petroleros de Venezuela hacia el Norte en el futuro. Todo esto ocurre cuando se acerca el aniversario de la invasión estadounidense de Granada en 1983 (25 de octubre), lo que nos recuerda al camarada Maurice Bishop, quien pidió a los países de la región que garantizaran el Caribe como zona de paz. Esa paz es imposible a menos que sea basada en principios antiimperialistas.

Como describe la co-coordinadora nacional de BAP, Erica Caines,

«El BAP ha dejado claro que la acelerada militarización y ocupación que hemos visto en Haití durante los últimos cuatro años ha violado el concepto de zona de paz y debería haber servido de advertencia para el resto de la región. La calificación de las ‘bandas’ como organizaciones terroristas en Haití ha permitido a Estados Unidos hacer lo mismo en Venezuela, donde el Departamento de Guerra compara a los caribeños que viajan en barcos con Al Qaeda, con el fin de justificar su sed de sangre imperialista. A pesar de estos desafíos, el firme pueblo de Venezuela se ha unido a las milicias civiles por millones para defender su patria y hacer cumplir la paz. Aplaudimos la Revolución Bolivariana y apoyamos la defensa de la soberanía del pueblo venezolano».

BAP se prepara para cerrar el 5.º Mes Internacional de Acción contra AFRICOM que tiene el tema ‘Neocolonialismo del siglo XXI: capitalismo, compradores y la actual lucha por África’. Entendemos que cualquier invasión de Venezuela, liderada por el Comando Sur, la contraparte de AFRICOM en las Américas, no solo tiene ramificaciones en la región, sino también en el continente y el mundo. Por eso, hoy instamos a la unidad en la lucha contra el imperialismo liderado por Estados Unidos y enfatizamos la necesidad de centrarnos en la construcción de una Zona de Paz en Nuestra América a través de la lucha popular y la coordinación de base, incluyendo iniciativas de las que formamos parte, como ‘la Red E.E. UU./OTAN Fuera de Nuestra América’. Solo la unidad de nuestras luchas y nuestros pueblos derrotará a los capitalistas e imperialistas que buscan dominarnos a través de una guerra sin fin.

¡Hagamos de Nuestra América una Zona de Paz!

¡Sin compromisos, sin retrasos!


Image: Courtesy of Cristian Hernandez/AP/TT