Blame it on Caracas

Oct 1st 2013, by Gregory Wilpert - NY Times eXaminer
[image: Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro (archive)]

Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro (archive)

*Venezuelanalysis.com founder Gregory Wilpert critiques the New York Times’
coverage of Venezuela – U.S. relations following the expulsion of three
U.S. diplomats from Venezuela by President Nicolas Maduro.*

“Stepping up hostilities with the United States, President Nicolás Maduro
of Venezuela expelled the top American diplomat,” reads the first sentence
of the *New York Times’s* coverage of the three diplomats President Maduro
expelled on Monday (“With Accusations of Sabotage, Venezuela Expels 3 U.S.
Embassy Officials,” by William Neuman, *NYT*, Oct. 1, 2013, p.A6). After
explaining that Maduro accused the diplomats of fomenting sabotage and
protest activity among the opposition, the rest of the article goes on to
say, “The expulsions were the latest diplomatic swipe at Washington by Mr.
Maduro since he took over for the country’s longtime president…” and that
Maduro is intent on “painting the United States as an imperialist aggressor
out to undermine his government.”

In other words, it is the Venezuelan government that is worsening relations
between Caracas and Washington and that the U.S. government is an innocent
victim of Maduro’s verbal and presumably not-so-diplomatic onslaught. The
fact that the U.S. first initiated almost every turn in the worsening
relations between the U.S. and Venezuela is conveniently omitted in
Neuman’s article.

For example, it was ambassador-designate Larry Palmer, in August 2010, who
first cast aspersions on Venezuela’s military and thereby torpedoed his
acceptance as U.S. ambassador to Venezuela. Then, in May of 2011, the U.S.
imposed sanctions on Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA for doing business
with Iran. Later in that same year the Obama administration accused four
Venezuelan government officials of providing support to Colombia’s
guerrilla, the FARC, and levying sanctions in these officials. Shortly
thereafter Obama himself accused the Chávez government of restricting human
rights and of violating democratic principles in Venezuela. In January of
2012 Obama proceeded to expel Venezuela’s consul general in Miami for
allegedly engaging in a spying operation against the U.S. while she was
stationed in Mexico a year earlier. What happened was that she had met with
someone connected to the Venezuelan opposition who tried to entrap her by
claiming to have information about U.S. nuclear facilities. Other than
meeting with someone who unsuccessfully tried to give her false
information, she never actually engaged in any spying activity. Finally,
the day that Chávez died, Maduro revealed that two U.S. diplomats were
meeting with Venezuelan military officials, proposing destabilization plans.

Reading the *New York Times* on U.S-Venezuelan relations, one could get the
impression that either none of these above-named incidents happened or that
if they did, they were meaningless and do not deserve a reaction from the
Venezuelan government. The fact that the Venezuelan government did react
each time and did not tolerate these actions can—in the *NYT* worldview—only
mean that the Venezuelan government is either hell-bent on sabotaging
U.S.-Venezuela relations and/or that these actions are merely a smokescreen
to distract from domestic Venezuelan problems.

Distraction is precisely what Neuman suggests when he quotes Michael
Shifter, president of the Inter-American Dialogue, “He [Maduro] needs
diversions and distractions … The situation is so dire in Venezuela that he
needs to find a scapegoat, and it’s convenient and politically so tempting
to kick out U.S. diplomats,” and Neuman follows up with his own comment
that “the country’s economic woes are getting worse.”

Given the lack of information about earlier U.S. actions against Venezuela,
distraction appears to be a compelling explanation for Maduro’s apparently
irrational attacks against the good-hearted Obama administration.
Unfortunately for this narrative, the facts don’t quite fit. That is, while
the article cites an unusually high inflation rate of 45 percent for 2013
so far, it fails to mention that inflation has been declining recently,
from a high of 6.1 percent in May 2013, and dropping to 3.2 and 3.0 percent
in July and August, respectively. Also, while economic growth has been
sluggish, it has been fluctuating between 0.5% and 2.6% per quarter this
year. Another area that is written about a lot is shortages, but these too
have become less acute than earlier this year, according to official
statistics. In short, while there are no doubt economic problems in
Venezuela, they have been improving recently, contrary to Neuman’s claim
that the situation is “getting worse.”

Once again, it seems that the *New York Times* is determined to present
official enemies of the U.S. as irrational and deceptive, while the U.S.
government is the innocent victim of these enemies. However, it really
should not be all that difficult to believe that countries of strategic
importance, such as Venezuela, which has one of the world’s largest oil
reserves, would be a target of U.S. covert (or not so covert) intervention.
After all, in Obama’s recent UN speech he promised, referring to the Middle
East, “We will ensure the free flow of energy from the region to the
world.” We have no reason to expect the U.S. to treat Venezuela any
differently, especially if Obama can count on the*New York Times* to
provide the media distortions it needs.

*Gregory Wilpert is a political sociologist, activist, and freelance writer*
*.*
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*Source URL (retrieved on 01/10/2013 - 10:56pm):*
http://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/10059

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