Your View: Media provides a distorted portrayal of
Venezuela
By Ted Morgan
The
Morning Call
Apr 16, 2019
[Photo selected by the Morning Call:] Supporters of opposition leader Juan Guaido march on April
6, 2019, in Caracas, Venezuela to protest outages that left most of the country
scrambling for days in the dark. (Natacha Pisarenko/AP)
Backed by a chorus of U.S. corporate
media singing in unison, the Trump administration has prepared the American
people to believe that the United States is going to do whatever it takes to
rescue the suffering people of Venezuela from their despotic and incompetent
ruler, Nicolás Maduro.
The media behavior is quite stunning
really, unless you happen to recall that the national media always respond this
way when government propaganda prepares the public for a U.S. war or other form
of intervention — from Vietnam and Central America to Afghanistan, Iraq, and
many others.
From Fox News on the right spewing
Trumpian rhetoric about the “failed socialism” of Venezuela to the New York
Times, MSNBC and New Yorker on the so-called “left” side of the spectrum, the
media have been cheerleading for what amounts to a Big Lie from this and previous
administrations. Anyone wishing to examine the media chorus can check the media
watch-dog www.fair.org and review any of its few dozen
articles that document mass media coverage on Venezuela.
Let us first acknowledge that, yes,
the Maduro administration, and to a lesser degree its predecessor under Hugo
Chavez, has been increasingly authoritarian, suppressing opposition forces.
Arguably, too, there has been mismanagement of the state-owned oil producer
(PDVSA) and corruption among government officials. And, although the reasons
are understandable, Chavez erred in failing to diversify Venezuela’s economy
when oil was such a rich resource.
But we need to be clear about a few
things. This is not about authoritarian government in Venezuela.
The United States has over the
decades supported scores of authoritarian regimes — consider, for example, that
bastion of human rights, Saudi Arabia. Readers might check William Blum’s
documentation of case after case in his book, “Killing Hope.” This is not about
bringing democracy to Venezuela. And very importantly, it is not about bringing
aid to the suffering people of Venezuela.
No, instead, the U.S. has engaged in
economic warfare against Venezuela going back into the Barack Obama administration, and, prior to that, staged a brief coup against Chavez during the George W.
Bush years. Donald Trump has sharply escalated the U.S. effort to strangle the
Venezuelan economy through devastating sanctions and a financial embargo.
For U.S. policymakers, the
Venezuelan government’s cardinal sin has for years been that, in defiance of
the United States, it used its ample oil revenue to provide the Venezuelan poor
and working classes with a better life while also providing aid to other Latin
American governments to free them from the boot of “Yankee Imperialism,” i.e.,
centuries of U.S. hegemony over “our backyard.”
As documented by the Center for Economic and Policy Research, poverty
and extreme poverty declined precipitously under Chavez. Inequality,
unemployment and infant mortality all fell significantly. The economy nearly
doubled and the private sector grew faster than the public sector.
After Chavez’s death, global oil
prices dropped radically, severely straining the Venezuelan economy. Then,
claiming Venezuela was “an extraordinary threat to U.S. national security,”
the Obama administration imposed sanctions that made it more difficult for
Venezuela to attract investment and financing.
Meanwhile, the U.S. actively
supported opposition groups through the so-called National Endowment for Democracy, a government
funded organization with a record of working for regime change in “unfriendly”
countries. Along with other opposition groups, the U.S. was grooming a young
right-winger named Juan Guaido to this end.
The five separate Trump
administration sanction orders have all but eliminated Venezuela’s ability to
produce oil for export in order to provide revenue for public needs. Indeed,
the nation’s economy is being strangled, and food and medicine shortages are
increasing public desperation. Hence, the U.S. named Guaido as Venezuela’s
“legitimate” interim president and announced $20 million in U.S. “humanitarian aid.”
The media provided unending visuals
to back up administration claims about the heartless Maduro blocking aid for
his people — what was in fact a publicity stunt designed to wean military
supporters away from Maduro.
I believe the real aims of U.S.
policy toward Venezuela are: 1) to gain control over Venezuelan oil reserves,
the largest in the world, 2) to reassert U.S. domination over all of Latin
America, after bringing about rightist regimes in Honduras, Brazil and
Paraguay, and 3) to ensure that other nations do not seek a form of economic
development independent of the U.S. neoliberal model.
[Links to press reports and the words "I believe" added by the Morning Call.]
Ted Morgan is emeritus professor of
political science at Lehigh University and the author most recently of “What
Really Happened to the 1960s: How Mass Media Culture Failed American
Democracy.”
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