Haiti

Haiti is a nation on the island of Hispaniola in the Carribean Sea. The majority of its population is black.

Haiti in Southern Victory
Haiti was a traditional US ally in the Entente-dominated Caribbean. It signed a mutual defense pact with President Thomas Brackett Reed in the late nineteenth century.

During the Great War, Haiti was overrun by Confederate and British forces and its government was exiled to Philadelphia. From Philadelphia, the government aligned itself with the Central Powers and was among the first governments to extend diplomatic recognition to the Republic of Quebec.

The government was restored to power in Haiti after the Great War. In 1936, a Haitian runner won a bronze medal in the 1936 Olympic Games in Richmond, much to the disappointment of Confederate President Jake Featherston, who had attempted to bar black athletes from participating in the games.

In 1941, in the early days of the Second Great War, Entente forces took the United States' main Caribbean base, Bermuda, leading to Haiti's invasion by the Confederate States at some point afterwards.

The Confederate States ran a death camp south of Port-au-Prince, where first political prisoners were murdered, then intellectuals, and then all black inhabitants of Haiti that fell afoul of the Confederates, before its liberation in 1944 by the United States. The Confederate soldiers quickly surrendered to the U.S. rather than face the wrath of the Haitian population.

Haiti in Worldwar
Haiti was an American ally in World War II and the subsequent war against the Race's Conquest Fleet. Before the Peace of Cairo, President Cordell Hull put Haiti under his country's protection, and US Secretary of State George Marshall insisted that Atvar respect Haitian sovereignty. Haiti became one of the few Latin American nations to maintain sovereignty rather than be colonized by the Race.