President Biden has left Americans behind AGAIN. This time, American missionaries are pleading for rescue from Haiti as the country is torn to shreds by violence and gang activity.

Last week, U.S. Marines airlifted embassy workers out of Haiti as the country descended into mayhem, but left other Americans trapped in the country. The embassy in Haiti’s capital of Port-au-Prince is the eighth United States embassy to be evacuated under President Biden’s watch - and was partially evacuated earlier in the Biden Administration.

On March 4, several dozen heavily-armed gang members unleashed gunfire and reportedly struck aircraft on the tarmac in an effort to overtake Port-au-Prince airport. Since the attack, flights have been canceled and the airports shut down - leaving American missionaries stranded in Haiti.

Reporting from Fox News indicates, according to the U.S. State Department, that there are OVER 1,000 Americans stranded in Haiti. “A country [the State Dept.] is now calling "one of the most dire humanitarian situations in the world." 

At this point, Americans would rightfully be concerned about getting home and their options would be slim. How do they ask for help?

Kim Patterson, from Georgia, is trying to get her father, a retired Marine, out of Haiti. She and her siblings have exhausted all options and said the embassy “was not a lot of help” in the process.

Reports of the situation in Haiti have described bodies piling up in the streets with no one to pick up the corpses, causing the city to smell of death.

Miriam Cinotti, a missionary worker with Mission of Grace from Florida said, “Nobody’s reached out to us or anything. And then of course, when we saw the non-essential workers get picked up, we were thinking well, maybe they’re going to come back and start evacuating Port-au-Prince and then have a plane for everyone else…”

Armed gangs, led by Jimmy “Barbecue” Chérizier, have attacked airports, police stations, seaports, the Central Bank and the country’s national soccer stadium. This gang has been exchanging gunfire with police and their prison raids have helped over 4,000 prisoners escape.

Jimmy “Barbecue” Cherizier

This is not the first time Americans have been left behind and left in the dark by the Biden Administration.

In February 2022, a report released by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee found that as many as 9,000 Americans were left in Afghanistan during the Biden Administration’s disastrous withdrawal. In March 2023, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken testified before Congress that there are about 175 Americans still in Afghanistan, some of them held captive by the Taliban.

In October 2023, over a dozen Americans were taken hostage in Gaza following the Hamas terrorist attack on Israel. Over 30 of the original 240+ hostages have been confirmed dead in recent months, leaving the five Americans still believed to be alive in grave danger.

If the Biden Administration doesn’t know exactly how many Americans are in danger in Haiti, what do they know about the proximity of danger to their location?

Was the State Department’s mandatory noncombatant evacuation operation plan in place? If so, what went wrong with its execution?

Do they know that the U.S. embassy in Haiti is reportedly unable or unwilling to offer assistance to these American nationals? What are they doing about it?

Each year, hundreds if not thousands of Americans travel to Haiti in selfless efforts to improve the conditions of the Haitian people. These Good Samaritans are the best of America - they and their families deserve answers.

After an incident each year of the Biden Administration has left Americans stranded, in danger, and reliant on themselves to escape to safety, you would hope the Biden Administration would have developed better methods to communicate with American citizens - if only to avoid these heartbreaking stories of Americans left behind in grave danger abroad.

The White House needs to take its job more seriously and, for a change, leave no one behind in Haiti.