August 30,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Despite its pretentious scribblers and
prestigious claims, the FT is seen by the
Anglo-American financial class as a belligerent
purveyor of militarist policies designed for the
most retrograde sectors of the ruling elite.
What is
most striking about the FT fearless fabrications
on behalf of imperial militarism is how often
their political and economic prognostications
have been incompetent and flat out wrong.
For the
past ten years, the FT editorial pages have
described China in economic crisis and heading
for a fall, while in reality, the Chinese
economy has grown at between eight and six
percent a year.
For
over a decade and a half, the FT editors claimed
Russia under President Vladimir Putin presented
an international existential threat to ‘the
West’. In fact, it was the ‘Western’ armies of
NATO, which expanded military operations to the
borders of Russia, the US, which financed a
neo-fascist coup in Kiev and the US-EU which
promoted an Islamist uprising in Syria designed
to totally undermine Russia’s influence and
relations in the Middle East.
The
FT’s economic gurus and its leading columnists
prescribed the very catastrophic deregulatory
formulas which precipitated the financial crash
of 2008-09, after which they played the clownish
role of “Mickey the Dunce” - blaming others for
the failed policies.
The
fearless FT scribes are currently leading a
virulent propaganda campaign to promote the
violent overthrow of the democratically elected
Venezuelan government of President Nicolas
Maduro.
This
essay will identify the FT’s latest pack of
fearless lies and fabrications and then conclude
by analyzing the political consequences for
Venezuela and other independent regimes.
The
Financial Times and Venezuela: From War in the
Suites to Terror in the Streets
In
covering the crisis in Venezuela, the FT has
systematically ignored the ongoing campaign of
assaults and assassinations against elected
officials, security officers, military and
police who have been murdered by the FT’s
favored ‘opposition’.
The FT
did not cover the horrific murders of an elected
Chavista congresswoman and her two young
children, who were executed (shot in the head)
in broad daylight by opposition-paid hitmen.
These
ongoing opposition terror campaigns against the
elected government and the general public are
systematically ignored in the FTs ‘reports’ and
on its editorial pages, which focus more on the
shortages of consumer items.
The FT
cover-up of rightwing terror extended to
inventing a ‘possible’ army or National Guard
plan to open fire on opposition demonstrators.
In this case, the FT anticipated rightwing
violence by laying the blame on the government
in advance.
The FT
covers-up the opposition business elite’s
campaign of hoarding essential goods to create
artificial shortages and panic buying. They deny
the ongoing price gouging and pin the blame for
shortages and long consumer lines exclusively on
‘regime mismanagement’.
The FT
conveniently omits to mention that the decline
in world oil prices has affected not only the
economy of Venezuela but all countries dependent
on commodity exports, including the Financial
Times favorite neo-liberal regimes in Brazil and
Argentina.
The
Financial Times cites bogus ‘opinion’ polls,
which wildly exaggerate the government’s
declining popularity: In the recent elections
Maduro’s supporters secured 40% of the popular
vote while the FT claims his support to be 7%!
US
client regimes (Mexico, Peru, and Colombia) are
the largest producers of illegal drugs and US
banks are the largest launderers for
narco-money. Yet the FT reports on “Venezuela’s
role as a conduit for illegal drugs smuggled
north to the US and east into Brazil, Africa and
thence to Europe”. Drug enforcement experts all
agree that Colombia, home to seven US military
bases and with a regime closely linked to
paramilitary-narco gangs, is the source of drugs
smuggled through Venezuela. That Venezuela has
become a victim of the violent Colombian
narco-trade is never acknowledged by the elegant
City of London pen-prostitutes.
The FT
blames the re-emergence of ‘malaria and other
possible diseases’ on the leftist Maduro
government. In fact the recent ‘malaria
outbreak’ (also cited by the New York Times
propagandists) is based on a single illegal gold
miner.
The FT
ignores how the US- backed neo-liberal regimes
in Argentina and Brazil, which rule by
presidential decree, have slashed public health
programs setting the stage for much greater
public health crises.
The
Financial Times: Big Lies for Mass Murder
The
Financial Times is waging an all-out propaganda
war with one goal: To incite the violent seizure
of power in Venezuela by US political clients.
In line
with the Obama-Clinton ‘regime-change by any
means’ policies, the FT paints a deceptive
picture of Venezuela facing ‘multiple crises’,
representing a ‘destabilizing’ threat to the
hemisphere, and on the brink of a global
‘humanitarian crisis’.
Armed
with these deadly clichés, the FT editorial
pages demand “a new government soon and
certainly before the 2018 elections”.
Recently, the FT proposed a phony legal gimmick
- a recall referendum. However, since the
opposition cannot initiate the vote in time to
oust the elected President Maduro, the FT calls
for “events which precipitate changes sooner” -
a violent coup!
FT’s
scenarios aim to precipitate a violent rightwing
“march”, eventually provoking civil bloodshed in
early September of this year.
The FT
expects that “blood in Caracas will require an
active Latin America response”(sic). In other
words, the FT hopes that a US-backed military
invasion from neighboring Colombia would help
eliminate the Chavistas and install a rightist
regime.
The
Financial Times, which actively promoted the
NATO-led destruction of the government in Libya,
now calls for a US-led invasion of Venezuela.
Never ones to re-assess their promotion of
‘regime change’, the FT now calls for a violent
coup in Venezuela, which will exceed that of
Libya in terms of the loss of thousands of
Venezuelan lives and the brutal reversal of a
decade of significant socio-economic progress.
“Without fear and without favor”, the FT speaks
for imperial wars everywhere.
Conclusion
The US
presidential elections take place just as the
Obama-Clinton regime prepares to intervene in
Venezuela. Using bogus ‘humanitarian’ reports of
widespread hunger, disease, violence and
instability, the Obama will still need
Venezuelan thugs to provoke enough violent
street violence to trigger an’ invitation’ for
Washington’s Latin American military partners to
‘intervene’ under the auspices of the UN or OAS.
If
’successful’, a rapid overthrow of the elected
government in Caracas could be presented as a
victory for Hilary Clinton’s campaign, and an
example of her policy of ‘humanitarian-military
interventions’ around the world.
However, if Obama’s allied invasion does not
produce a quick and easy victory, if the
Venezuelan people and armed forces mount a
prolonged and courageous defense of their
government and if US lives are lost in what
could turn into a popular war of resistance,
then Washington’s intervention could ultimately
discredit the Clinton campaign and her
‘muscular’ foreign policy. The American
electorate might finally decide against four
more years of losing wars and losing lives. No
thanks to the ‘fearless’ Financial Times.