How ‘Free Markets’ Defame
‘Democracy’
Exclusive: Venezuela seems to be following
Ukraine on the neocon hit list for “regime
change” as Washington punishes Caracas for
acting against a perceived coup threat. But
a broader problem is how the U.S. conflates
“free markets” with “democracy,” giving
“democracy” a bad name, writes Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
March 14, 2015 "ICH"
- "Consortium
News" - The one
common thread in modern U.S. foreign policy
is an insistence on “free market” solutions
to the world’s problems. That is, unless
you’re lucky enough to live in a First World
ally of the United States or your country is
too big to bully.
So, if you’re in France or
Canada or – for that matter – China, you can
have generous health and educational
services and build a modern infrastructure.
But if you’re a Third World country or
otherwise vulnerable – like, say, Ukraine or
Venezuela – Official Washington insists that
you shred your social safety net and give
free reign to private investors.
If you’re good and accept
this “free market” domination, you become,
by the U.S. definition, a “democracy” – even
if doing so goes against the wishes of most
of your citizens. In other words, it doesn’t
matter what most voters want; they must
accept the “magic of the market” to be
deemed a “democracy.”
Thus, in today’s U.S.
parlance, “democracy” has come to mean
almost the opposite of what it classically
meant. Rather than rule by a majority of the
people, you have rule by “the market,” which
usually translates into rule by local
oligarchs, rich foreigners and global banks.
Governments that don’t
follow these rules – by instead shaping
their societies to address the needs of
average citizens – are deemed “not free,”
thus making them targets of U.S.-funded
“non-governmental organizations,” which
train activists, pay journalists and
coordinate business groups to organize an
opposition to get rid of these
“un-democratic” governments.
If a leader seeks to
defend his or her nation’s sovereignty by
such means as requiring these NGOs to
register as “foreign agents,” the offending
government is accused of violating “human
rights” and becomes a candidate for more
aggressive “regime change.”
Currently, one of the big
U.S. complaints against Russia is that it
requires foreign-funded NGOs that seek to
influence policy decisions to register as
“foreign agents.” The New York Times and
other Western publications have
cited this 2012 law as proof that
Russia has become a dictatorship, while
ignoring the fact that the Russians modeled
their legislation after a U.S. law known as
the “Foreign Agent Registration Act.”
So, it’s okay for the U.S.
to label people who are paid by foreign
entities to influence U.S. policies as
“foreign agents” – and to imprison people
who fail to register – but not for Russia to
do the same. A number of these NGOs in
Russia and elsewhere also are not
“independent” entities but instead are
financed by the U.S.-funded National
Endowment for Democracy (NED) and the U.S.
Agency for International Development.
There is even a circular
element to this U.S. complaint. Leading the
denunciation of Russia and other governments
that restrain these U.S.-financed NGOs is
Freedom House, which marks down countries on
its “freedom index” when they balk at
letting in this back-door U.S. influence.
However, over the past three decades,
Freedom House has become essentially a
subsidiary of NED, a bought-and-paid-for NGO
itself.
The Hidden CIA
Hand
That takeover began in
earnest in 1983 when CIA Director William
Casey was focused on creating a funding
mechanism to support Freedom House and
other outside groups that would
engage in propaganda and political action
that the CIA had historically organized and
financed covertly. Casey helped shape the
plan for a congressionally funded entity
that would serve as a conduit for this U.S.
government money.
But Casey recognized the
need to hide the CIA’s strings. “Obviously
we here [at CIA] should not get out front in
the development of such an organization, nor
should we appear to be a sponsor or
advocate,” Casey said in
one
undated letter to then-White
House counselor Edwin Meese III – as Casey
urged creation of a “National Endowment.”
[See Consortiumnews.com’s “CIA’s
Hidden Hand in ‘Democracy’ Groups.”]
Casey’s planning led to
the 1983 creation of NED, which was put
under the control of neoconservative Carl
Gershman, who remains in charge to this day.
Gershman’s NED now distributes more than
$100 million a year, which included
financing scores of activists, journalists
and other groups inside Ukraine before last
year’s coup and now pays for dozens of
projects in Venezuela, the new emerging
target for “regime change.”
But NED’s cash is only a
part of how the U.S. government manipulates
events in vulnerable countries. In Ukraine,
prior to the February 2014 coup, neocon
Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland
reminded Ukrainian business leaders that the
United States had invested $5 billion in
their “European aspirations.”
Nuland then handpicked who
would be the new leadership, telling U.S.
Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt that “Yats is the
guy,” referring to “free market” politician
Arseniy Yatsenyuk, who not surprisingly
emerged as the new prime minister after a
violent coup ousted elected President Viktor
Yanukovych on Feb. 22, 2014.
The coup also started a
civil war that has claimed more than 6,000
lives, mostly ethnic Russians in eastern
Ukraine who had supported Yanukovych and
were targeted for a ruthless “anti-terrorist
operation” spearheaded by neo-Nazi and other
far-right militias dispatched by the
U.S.-backed regime in Kiev. But Nuland
blames everything on Russia’s President
Vladimir Putin. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Nuland’s
Mastery of Ukraine Propaganda.”]
On top of Ukraine’s
horrific death toll, the country’s economy
has largely collapsed, but Nuland, Yatsenyuk
and other free-marketeers have devised a
solution, in line with the wishes of the
Washington-based International Monetary
Fund: Austerity for the average Ukrainian.
Before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee on Tuesday, Nuland
hailed “reforms” to turn Ukraine into a
“free-market state,” including decisions “to
reduce and cap pension benefits, increase
work requirements and phase in a higher
retirement age; … [and] cutting wasteful gas
subsidies.”
In other words, these
“reforms” are designed to make the hard
lives of average Ukrainians even harder – by
slashing pensions, removing work
protections, forcing people to work into
their old age and making them pay more for
heat during the winter.
‘Sharing’ the
Wealth
In exchange for those
“reforms,” the IMF approved $17.5 billion in
aid that will be handled by Ukraine’s
Finance Minister Natalie Jaresko, who until
last December was a former U.S. diplomat
responsible for a U.S. taxpayer-financed
$150 million investment fund for Ukraine
that was drained of money as she engaged in
lucrative insider deals – deals that she has
fought to keep secret. Now, Ms. Jaresko and
her cronies will get a chance to be the
caretakers of more than 100 times more
money. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Ukraine’s
Finance Minister’s American ‘Values.’”]
Other prominent Americans
have been circling around Ukraine’s
“democratic” opportunities. For instance,
Vice President Joe Biden’s son Hunter was
named to the board of directors of Burisma
Holdings, Ukraine’s largest private gas
firm, a shadowy Cyprus-based company linked
to Privat Bank.
Privat Bank is controlled
by the thuggish billionaire oligarch Ihor
Kolomoysky, who was appointed by the
Kiev regime to be governor of Dnipropetrovsk
Oblast, a south-central province of Ukraine.
In this tribute to “democracy,” the
U.S.-backed Ukrainian authorities gave an
oligarch his own province to rule.
Kolomoysky also has helped
finance paramilitary forces killing ethnic
Russians in eastern Ukraine.
Burisma has been lining up
well-connected American lobbyists, too, some
with ties to Secretary of State John Kerry,
including Kerry’s former Senate chief of
staff David Leiter, according to lobbying
disclosures.
As Time magazine
reported, “Leiter’s involvement
in the firm rounds out a power-packed team
of politically-connected Americans that also
includes a second new board member, Devon
Archer, a Democratic bundler and former
adviser to John Kerry’s 2004 presidential
campaign. Both Archer and Hunter Biden have
worked as business partners with Kerry’s
son-in-law, Christopher Heinz, the founding
partner of Rosemont Capital, a
private-equity company.” [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “The
Whys Behind the Ukraine Crisis.”]
So, it seems even this
modern form of “democracy” has some “sharing
the wealth” aspects.
Which brings us to the
worsening crisis in Venezuela, a South
American country which has been ruled over
the past decade or so by leftist leaders who
– with broad public support – have sought to
spread the nation’s oil wealth around more
broadly than ever before, including paying
for ambitious social programs to address
problems of illiteracy, disease and poverty.
While there were surely
missteps and mistakes by the late President
Hugo Chavez and his successor Nicolas
Maduro, the Chavista government has made
progress in addressing some of Venezuela’s
enduring social ills, which had been coolly
ignored by previous U.S.-backed rulers, such
as President Carlos Andres Perez, who
collaborated with the CIA and hobnobbed with
the great and powerful.
I was once told by an
Andres Perez assistant that the Venezuelan
president shared his villa outside Caracas
with the likes of David Rockefeller and
Henry Kissinger, bringing in beauty pageant
contestants for their entertainment.
Chavez and Maduro at least
have tried to improve the lot of the average
Venezuelan. However, facing a deepening
economic crisis made worse by the drop in
world oil prices, Maduro has found himself
under increasing political pressure, some of
it financed or inspired by Washington and
supported by the rightist government in
neighboring Colombia.
Allegations of a
Coup
Maduro has reacted to
these moves against his government by
accusing some opponents of plotting a coup,
a claim that is mocked by the U.S. State
Department and by the U.S. mainstream media,
which apparently doesn’t believe that the
United States would ever think of staging a
coup in Latin America.
This week, the White House
declared that the evidence of any
coup-plotting is either fabricated or
implausible, as the New York Times
reported. President Barack Obama
then cited what he called “an extraordinary
threat to the national security of the
United States” from Venezuela and froze the
American assets of seven Venezuelan police
and military officials.
The fact that Obama can
deliver that line with a straight face
should make any future words out of his
mouth not credible. Venezuela has done
nothing to threaten the “national security
of the United States” extraordinarily or
otherwise. Whatever the truth about the
coup-plotting, Venezuela has a much greater
reason to fear for its national security at
the hands of the United States.
But in this up-is-down
world of Official Washington, bureaucrats
and journalists nod in agreement at such
absurdities.
A few weeks ago, I was
having brunch with a longtime State
Department official who was chortling about
the pain that the drop in oil prices was
inflicting on Venezuela and some other
adversarial states, including Iran and
Russia.
I asked why the U.S.
government took such pleasure at watching
people in these countries suffer. I
suggested that it was perhaps more in U.S.
interests for these countries and their
people to be doing well with money in their
pockets so they could shop and do business.
His response was that
these countries had caused trouble for U.S.
foreign policy in the past and now it was
their turn to pay the price. He also called
me a “Putin apologist” when I wouldn’t agree
with the State Department’s line
blaming Russia for all of Ukraine’s ills.
But the broader question
is: Why does the United States insist on
imposing “free market” rules on these
struggling countries when Democrats and even
some Republicans agree that an unrestrained
“free market” has not worked well for the
American people? It was “free market”
extremism that led to the Great Depression
of the 1930s and to the Great Recession of
2008, the effects of which are only now
slowly receding.
Further, real democracy –
i.e., the will of the majority to shape
societies to serve the many rather than the
few – has turned out also to be good
economics. American society and economy were
arguably strongest when government policy
encouraged a growing middle class from the
New Deal through the 1970s.
To be sure, there were
faults and false starts during those
decades, but experiments with an
uncontrolled “free market” have proven
catastrophic. Yet, that is what the U.S.
government seems determined to foist on
vulnerable countries whose majorities would
prefer to make their societies more
equitable, more fair.
And beyond the negative
social impact of the “free market,” there is
the danger that conflating policies that
cause economic inequality with democracy
will give democracy a very bad name.
Investigative reporter Robert
Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories
for The Associated Press and Newsweek in the
1980s. You can buy his latest book,
America’s
Stolen Narrative,
either in print
here or
as an e-book (from
Amazon
and
barnesandnoble.com).
You also can order Robert Parry’s trilogy on
the Bush Family and its connections to
various right-wing operatives for only $34.
The trilogy includes
America’s
Stolen Narrative.
For details on this offer,
click here.