Don’t Believe
Media Coverage of Venezuela
By Sonali Kolhatkar
March 06, 2015 "ICH"
- "Truthdig"
- Diplomatic relations between
Venezuela and the U.S. have just
taken a big hit, with the
government of Nicolas Maduro
demanding that the American
Embassy in Caracas
reduce its staff by 80% and
that U.S. visitors
apply for visas.
Most
symbolically, Venezuela has now
barred a number of U.S.
officials from visiting,
including George W. Bush and
Dick Cheney. The backdrop to
these political moves is a new
crisis within Venezuela that has
an old script: right-wing
leaders plan a coup, with the
U.S. deeply implicated; wealthy
protesters take to the streets;
and the Western media cover both
stories with great sympathy
while openly mocking the
democratically elected
government for attempting to
defend itself.
The latest
crisis began when authorities
acting on Maduro’s orders
arrested Caracas Mayor Antonio
Ledezma in mid-February. A
well-known right-wing opposition
figure, Ledezma will face trial
for conspiracy against the
government in what is now being
called the “blue coup.” Among
the pieces of
evidence the government says
it has collected are phone calls
made by the mayor to a U.S.
phone number, as well as a cache
of weapons, including Molotov
cocktails, grenade-like
explosives and gas masks, found
in the office headquarters of
the opposition political party.
Ledezma is
being held in the same facility
as another right-wing
politician, Leopoldo Lopez, who
was arrested last year for
overseeing a plan called La
Salida, or “the exit,” to
overturn the government. Lopez
has had
dealings with U.S.
government figures including
Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. According
to Wikileaks, the two apparently
“discussed possible media
strategies with Lopez, and
methods for getting his positive
message to audiences in the
U.S.” Just before Ledezma’s
arrest, he, Lopez and other
right-wing opposition leaders,
including Maria Corina Machado,
had signed a document calling
for a “National Transition”—a
move the government says was a
precursor to a U.S.-backed coup.
The U.S. has
long been involved in attempts
to destabilize Venezuela’s
socialist government. Its role
in the 2002 coup against Hugo
Chavez is
well-documented. Over the
years, many organizations,
including ones in which
right-wing opposition figures
are involved, have received
funding from the likes of
USAID and the
National Endowment for Democracy
(NED), both U.S.-based
agencies notorious for fomenting
unrest in countries hostile to
U.S. interests. For example,
Machado headed an organization
named
Sumate that has
received funding from the NED.
U.S. officials
have also made no secret about
their hostility to Venezuela.
Last year the Obama
administration
imposed sanctions on a
number of Venezuelan officials
it claims are implicated in
human rights abuses and
corruption, although it is
keeping the list of names
secret. In President Obama’s
2015 National Security Strategy,
he announced that the U.S. would
“stand by the citizens of
countries where the full
exercise of democracy is at
risk, such as Venezuela.”
Despite this
documentation of American
animosity toward Venezuela,
media outlets continue to harbor
an inexplicable blind spot on
the U.S. role. The New York
Times
opined last week in what we
can consider Exhibit A in the
case against media coverage of
Venezuela:
Listening
to embattled President
Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela
ramble for hours about an
international right-wing
conspiracy to oust him, it’s
clear that he would use any
fabricated pretext to jail
opposition leaders and crack
down on dissent. In recent
days, the government’s
claims have become
outlandish and its
repression of critics even
more vicious.
Professor
Miguel Tinker Salas, one of
the few U.S.-based experts on
Venezuela, has written a book
that will be
released May 4 titled
“Venezuela: What Everyone Needs
to Know.” In an
interview on
“Uprising,” he responded to
the editorial, saying, “We know
that there was a historical
amnesia on the part of the New
York Times that celebrated the
2002 coup against Hugo Chavez.”
Salas was
referring to the paper’s
mea culpa at initially
celebrating that coup and then
retracting its words days later
when it was overturned. In its
new editorial, the paper failed
to raise the historical context
of U.S. backing for the 2002
coup or its own contradictory
stances dismissing Maduro’s
concerns.
Exhibit B is
The Economist, which went as
far as headlining the current
crisis in Venezuela “A
slow-motion coup.” If by “coup”
the magazine means “coup
d’état”—which is generally
defined as the illegal takeover
of a government—then it is
unclear what the writers mean,
for the article claims the
“regime is lurching from
authoritarianism to
dictatorship.” (Is Maduro’s
government organizing a coup
against itself?) The magazine
also goes on to assert that
“Crackpot economic policies have
brought food shortages, soaring
inflation and rising poverty.”
Salas
explained that the writers are
irked by the fact that “[s]ixty
percent of the government’s
budget actually goes to social
programs and [the opposition]
would rather it go to
infrastructure and oil companies
so that they can produce more
oil and have a larger supply of
oil on the world market, and
have it be privately owned.”
Thanks to this
type of media coverage, the
Venezuelan right-wing opposition
has been extremely successful at
generating sympathy, especially
among the U.S. public, and even
among American celebrities. Last
year’s right-wing protests
inspired a
shout-out by actor Jared
Leto during his Oscar acceptance
speech, a
supportive blog post by
Kevin Spacey and even a
social media post by singer
Madonna.
What neither
the Times nor The Economist nor
the supportive celebrities
notice are the troubling double
standards of criticizing
Venezuela when a close U.S. ally
such as Mexico suffers from far
worse problems of
anti-democratic corruption and
violence. Salas pointed out the
hypocrisy, saying that 43 people
were killed in Venezuela last
year on both sides of the
divide, and still, “The New York
Times blames the government for
these deaths, and yet they
remain silent about the 43
students that were killed in
Mexico.” Additionally, Salas
pointed out, although Mexico has
“100,000 dead and a real
humanitarian crisis,” the Times
says “almost nothing, while on
Venezuela they ... mock the
government.”
A
November 2014 editorial by
the Times on Mexico’s 43 missing
students expressed not nearly as
much vitriol for that country’s
clearly corrupt and discredited
government as the paper reserves
for Venezuela’s Maduro, whom it
called “authoritarian,”
“erratic” and “maniacal.”
Additionally,
The Economist’s mocking of
Venezuela’s economic crisis is
also hypocritical because,
according to Salas, in Mexico,
“fifty percent of the population
lives in poverty” and yet the
country “is portrayed as a model
for Western development and
neo-liberal economics.” And
while media outlets make fun of
Venezuela’s
toilet paper shortage, Salas
counters that in Mexico, which
is a U.S. ally, huge numbers of
“people don’t even have access
to basic services and foods.”
Media coverage
of Venezuela is so skewed that
even the contentious issue of
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
seems to generate fairer
coverage these days. Salas
attributed the bias to the savvy
organizing of right-wing
Venezuelan groups, who he says
have “learned the lesson very
well from Cuban Americans in
Miami and South Florida, so they
know how to target the media,
they know how to create public
opinion and they have done that
very well.”
But Salas
thinks there is another
explanation, and that is “the
lack of knowledge that existed
about Venezuela in the U.S.
before Hugo Chavez came to
power.” Most of what Americans
knew about the country other
than that it had abundant oil
reserves was the fact that it
once won a Miss Universe contest
and was home to a few good
baseball players. That ignorance
has been a perfect blank slate
on which the U.S. government,
mainstream media and right-wing
opposition parties have been
able to carve their warped
perspectives about Venezuela’s
left-wing government.