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President Barack Obama issued an order allowing selected members of the military's reserves to be called up to support operations in Haiti. Signed Saturday, it lets the Pentagon and Homeland Security Department tap reserve medical personnel and a Coast Guard unit that will help provide port security. More than 250 medical personnel from the Health and Human Services Department are already in Haiti. The U.S. ambassador to Haiti said Monday that American officials are concerned about security but consider the situation manageable. "The Haitian police, due to their own significant losses, are degraded," Kenneth Merten said in a nationally broadcast interview. "The U.N. has had losses." But Merten also said "things are going reasonably well. This is not a perfect law and order situation here even in the best of times." Merten called the U.S. military presence in and around the island a backup option to handle violence, saying first call would be the Haitian police force and the U.N. force in Haiti. He credited Brazilians in that force with contributing to stability.
"Our troops are standing by in cases where neither the Haitian police nor the U.N. troops are providing security," Merten said on NBC's "Today" show. "In most cases, the Haitian police and the U.N. forces have been able to handle the situation." Roughly 200,000 people may have been killed in the magnitude-7.0 quake, the European Union said, quoting Haitian officials who also said about 70,000 bodies have been recovered. Merten said it was too soon to put a number on the economic loss. He described downtown Port-au-Prince, the capital city, as resembling "Tokyo at the end of the Second World War."
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