Corporate
Media Cover for US Mob Threats Against Venezuela
By Lucas
Koerner and Ricardo Vaz
April 22, 2020
"Information
Clearing House"
- The Trump administration unveiled on March 31 a
“democratic transition” plan to remove Venezuelan
President Nicolás Maduro from office, in favor of a
“council of state” composed of both opposition and
ruling party loyalists.
The plan
was, however, less an offer to negotiate than a
diktat, with the US State Department (3/31/20)
vowing that “sanctions will remain in effect, and
increase, until the Maduro regime accepts a genuine
political transition.”
Despite
the obvious mafioso overtones, Washington’s
stenographers in the corporate press were quick to
present the initiative as “sanctions relief,” once again
whitewashing murderous US economic warfare against
Venezuela (FAIR.org,
2/6/19,
6/14/19,
6/26/19).
Western
journalists’ callous obfuscation of sanctions’ deadly
toll, especially amid a global pandemic (FAIR.org,
3/25/20), goes hand in
hand with their parroting of bogus “narco-terrorism”
charges leveled against Maduro and top Venezuelan
officials, which butresses Washington’s ever-illicit
casus belli.
An Offer They Can’t Refuse
The New
York Times (3/31/20)
jumped at the opportunity to furnish the Trump
administration’s plan with a varnish of reasonability.
“The proposal…offers to ease American sanctions intended
to pressure President Nicolás Maduro and his loyalists
over the past year,” Lara Jakes wrote, misconstruing the
unilateral measures destroying Venezuela’s economy as
well-intentioned steps to bring about “fair elections.”
At no
point did the paper of record mention Washington’s
threat to ramp up illegal sanctions if Maduro refuses
the “offer” to replace his government with a five-person
junta, in flagrant violation of Venezuela’s
constitution. Other Western media likewise covered up
the US blackmail, praising Donald Trump’s
bayonet-hoisted ultimatum as a “roadmap to relief”
(Washington Post,
3/31/20), a “more
toned-down approach” (Reuters,
3/31/20) and a
“conciliatory framework” (Economist,
4/2/20).
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Having
dutifully whitewashed US sanctions, the Times and its
counterparts were free to cast war criminal Elliott
Abrams, rehabilitated last year as Trump’s Venezuela
envoy (CounterSpin,
3/1/19), as an honest
broker committed to good-faith dialogue:
But Mr.
Abrams was careful to say that the plan was an
opening offer for talks between the two sides, “not
a take-it-or-leave-it proposition,” and that no
single issue was a deal breaker—except the demand
for Mr. Maduro’s departure.
By
contrast, Maduro—reelected in
internationally monitored
elections with a
greater percentage of
the electorate than Trump won in 2016, or Barack Obama
in 2012—is for the Times “reminiscent of mid-20th
century Latin American strongmen,” whose 2018 victory
was “self-declared.”
The Times
went on to accuse the Venezuelan leader of “creating one
of the
world’s largest refugee populations,”
concealing the role of criminal sanctions in driving
migration (FAIR.org,
2/18/18).
This
vilification of Maduro and the Chavista poor people’s
movement does not merely reflect reporters’ professional
class bias, but is structurally necessary to justify US
economic warfare and more overt criminality in the first
place.
It is
therefore no coincidence that the Trump administration’s
gunpoint “proposal” to overturn Venezuela’s
constitutional order came on the heels of Department of
Justice “narco-terrorism”
charges against the
Venezuelan head of state and other top officials, which
corporate journalists trumpeted enthusiastically.
Most
outlets regarded the timing as a symptom of
“contradictory” (Washington Post,
4/14/20) or “erratic”
(New York Times,
4/10/20) US policy,
which could “make it harder to remove Maduro”
(Economist,
4/2/20), but the
underlying regime change (ir)rationality never comes
into question.
Indeed,
even liberal imperialist academics like David Smilde and
Abraham Lowenthal (Washington Post,
4/14/20) declined to
call for scrapping the indictments, let alone easing
sanctions, as a goodwill gesture aimed at securing
Chavista support for the US plan, which they hailed as a
“step in the right direction.” Rather, they merely
recommend that the Trump administration offer
“guarantees for indicted officials” against extradition,
as if Maduro would be inclined to negotiate while
Washington continues its
collective punishment
and maintains a $15 million bounty on his head.
Smilde and his Washington
Office on Latin America colleague Geoff Ramsey’s
(Washington Post,
3/27/20) refusal to
demand the immediate annulment of the drug charges and
illegal sanctions is hardly surprising, given both men’s
long-running support for US coup efforts (Common Dreams,
3/5/19).
Calling the Kettle Black
The DoJ’s
indictment of 14 current or former senior Venezuelan
officials on “narco-terrorism” charges provided the
Western media with fresh grist for its imperial
propaganda mill.
This is
hardly the first time that the corporate media have
reported the Washington’s evidence-free drug allegations
against official enemies, which they have frequently
done without any pretense of journalistic rigor (Extra!,
1/90,
9/12; FAIR.org,
9/24/19,
5/24/19).
The New
York Times (3/26/20)
dedicated no less than 12 paragraphs to repeating
prosecutors’ claims, which are centered on the
outlandish notion that Maduro secretly heads a drug
cartel that conspired with Colombia’s FARC guerrillas to
“‘flood’ the United States with cocaine.”
Despite
marshaling a crack team of three writers and four
contributing reporters, the Times proved incapable of
citing any contrarian perspectives, let alone basic
facts, that cast doubt on the “narco-terrorism”
narrative.
The
Guardian (3/26/20)
and the Washington Post (3/27/20)
were virtually the only outlets to mention the US
government’s own publicly available data showing that
just a small fraction of drug routes pass through
Venezuela, with the overwhelming majority of cocaine
entering the United States via Mexico and Central
America. Furthermore, Colombia remains the world’s
largest cocaine producer, right under the nose of large
US military and DEA contingents, which have long
waged a “war for
drugs and of terror” in the country.
A
map produced by the US Southern Command shows the
main drug-smuggling routes in Latin America
connecting Colombia and Ecuador with Guatemala and
Mexico (Business Insider,
9/14/17). Venezuela
(and Nicaragua, another official enemy that has been
targeted with
bogus drug charges)
are conspicuous for their relative lack of
involvement.
The DoJ’s
case looks like a reheated version of equally unfounded
accusations against former President Hugo Chávez, which
corporate journalists eagerly promoted last year (FAIR.org,
9/24/19).
As with
prior allegations against Socialist Party Vice President
Diosdado Cabello (Wall Street Journal,
5/18/15), the
indictments hinge on the testimony of defectors, whose
claims are echoed in the Western press without scrutiny.
In the most
recent case, retired Maj. Gen. Cliver Alcalá and former
intelligence chief Hugo “El Pollo” Carvajal were also
charged by the DoJ and pledged to cooperate with US
authorities. Both had previously broken with the Maduro
government and endorsed self-proclaimed “interim
president” Juan Guaidó.
Alcalá, who swiftly
surrendered to DEA
agents and was flown to the US,
boasted of plotting a
coup in conjunction with Guaidó and “US advisers.”
In an
exposé of the coup plot, the Financial Times (4/4/20)
cast doubt on the general’s “rambling and contradictory”
account, quoting several US officials denying the coup
attempt and alleging Alcalá was “acting on the orders of
Caracas.”
The outlet
conveniently ignored that this would not be the first
time Alcalá conspired to invade Venezuela with a
paramilitary force.
According
to Bloomberg (3/6/19),
there was a plan for the general to lead a contingent of
200 Venezuelan exile soldiers to clear the way for the
entry of “humanitarian aid” on February 23, 2019, which
was vetoed at the last minute by Colombia, suggesting
high-level coordination with Washington, Bogotá and
Guaidó.
By repeating
the US narrative of Alcalá as a Maduro “plant,”
corporate journalists paradoxically legitimize the
general as a reliable source of current information on
Venezuelan “narco-terrorism,” while concealing his
embarrassing ties to the US and its opposition proxies.
As we
have exposed for FAIR.org (5/24/19),
Carvajal has already proved his worth in the past by
serving up to credulous reporters highly dubious
allegations about Venezuelan leaders’ Hezbollah ties
(New York Times,
2/21/19).
Imaginary Cartels, Real Warships
The uncritical
coverage of the DoJ charges paved the way for a further
US escalation shortly after the “transition” plan was
unveiled.
On March
31, the Trump administration announced a military
deployment to the Caribbean described by Associated
Press (4/1/20)
as “one of the largest in the region since the 1989
invasion of Panama.”
One might have
expected such an obscenely expensive display of force
amid a deadly pandemic currently killing thousands of
Americans to be met with widespread rebuke across the
media spectrum.
In fact,
the opposition was largely muted. Newsweek (4/3/20)
and Foreign Policy (4/2/20)
gave voice to the Pentagon’s concern that the operation
was wasteful and politically motivated, while the New
York Times (4/10/20)
published an op-ed raising polite proceduralist
quibbles. Agreeing with the Trump administration that
Maduro is a “dictator” who “must go,”
Michael Shifter and
Michael Camilleri nonetheless placed a vague call for
Washington “to reboot sanctions policy, provide aid
through accountable channels, and press the country’s
leaders to work together.” Evidently, demanding the
immediate lifting of (arguably
genocidal) sanctions
was too unreasonable to ask.
Referring to
the Venezuelan military as “deeply involved in
corruption and criminality,” Shifter and Camilleri
exemplify the decadent imperial intelligentsia’s
psychology of displacement.
From
social democratic left to neoliberal right, Global North
journalists and intellectuals remain invested in the
self-serving illusion that besieged Southern nations
such as Venezuela and Iran are more “criminal,”
“corrupt” and “authoritarian” than the US empire (FAIR.org,
2/12/20).
For all their
polite critiques of illegal US sanctions and military
escalation–whose monstrosity has been laid bare by the
current pandemic–the cult of Western exceptionalism goes
unchallenged.
Lucas Koerner
is an editor and political analyst at Venezuelanalysis.
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