The guided-missile destroyer USS Southland arrives amid uncertainty over Haiti’s post–February 7 governance and escalating international concern.
By:Haitian Prime News|February 3, 2026|Port-au-Prince, Haiti
In a move underscoring growing international concern over Haiti’s deepening instability, the Miami Herald reports that the U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyer USS Southland has anchored in the bay off Port-au-Prince. Two U.S. Coast Guard cutters are patrolling nearby waters.
The USS Southland, an advanced Arleigh Burke-class destroyer equipped with anti-air, anti-surface, and anti-submarine warfare capabilities, is part of a broader deployment of U.S. naval assets in the Caribbean ordered by the Trump administration. U.S. officials have not publicly detailed the mission’s objectives, but the timing coincides with heightened political tension ahead of February 7—the expiration date of Haiti’s Transitional Presidential Council (TPC).
The nine-member TPC, formed in April 2024 to oversee the country during a transition period, was intended to exercise presidential powers until elections could be held or until the February 7 deadline arrived, whichever came first. The council has publicly agreed to dissolve on Saturday, with some members affirming their intent to step down. However, discord persists as certain councilors continue to intervene in transition planning, despite U.S. warnings that their mandate ends on that date.
In response, the U.S. State Department recently imposed visa restrictions on five TPC members—including Louis Gérald Gilles, Leslie Voltaire, and Edgard Leblanc—over efforts to oust Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé. U.S. officials described the attempted move as destabilizing at a critical juncture.
Haiti’s political landscape remains fragmented, with no consensus on governance after February 7. At least five competing groups are engaged in parallel negotiations, while recent dialogues sponsored by three TPC members have been marked by infighting and self-promotion. Elections are tentatively scheduled for summer 2026, but analysts question their feasibility amid entrenched gang violence that has plagued the country since 2020.
While no official confirmation has been provided, the USS Southland’s presence may signal U.S. readiness to support evacuation contingencies, monitor developments, or deter further escalation during a volatile transition period.
Sources
Miami Herald reporting on U.S. naval movements near Haiti
U.S. State Department statements on visa restrictions related to Haiti’s Transitional Presidential Council
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