[NYTr] "Crisis in the Americas" - A Page Out of US Propaganda Playbook on Venezuela
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Wed Oct 31 17:06:34 EDT 2007
Venezuelanalysis - Oct 29, 2007
http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/2771
"Crisis in the Americas"
A Page Out of Washington’s Propaganda Playbook on Venezuela
by Michael Fox – Venezuelanalysis.com
What does the founder of the U.S. House of Representatives Task Force
on Terrorism and Unconventional Warfare, the son of an advisor and
close friend of Cuba's former Dictator Fulgencio Batista, and the
great-grandson of the legendary Baseball Hall of Famer, Connie Mack,
all have in common?[1]
They are all Florida residents, staunch Republicans, anti-Castro Cuban
activists, government officials, and they all participated in the
newly-released scandalous half-hour American Security Council
Foundation "documentary," which spins lies and unsubstantiated claims
to paint Venezuela's democratically-elected President Hugo Chavez as a
maniacal dictator attempting to take over the Western Hemisphere.
Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum and Florida Congressmen Lincoln
Diaz-Balart and Connie Mack will be presenting their documentary,
entitled "Crisis in the Americas: A Documentary on Dictator Hugo
Chavez", at Miami's Doral Park Country Club, this morning.
The only person missing from the trio is Otto Reich, who is prominently
interviewed in the film. Reich, an anti-Castro Cuban-born former US
intelligence officer, played an active role in the Iran-Contra scandal
and the 2002 coup d'etat against Chavez. He also is the former
director of the covert Office of Public Diplomacy for Latin America and
the Caribbean (OPD), which among other things waged a propaganda
campaign on the American people in support of Reagan Administration
interests in Central America in the 1980s. Now, with "Crisis in the
Americas," it appears that Reich and the American Security Council
Foundation are playing their old propaganda cards; this time with the
focus on Venezuela.
The Office of Public Diplomacy
In 1983, the Reagan government founded the OPD with Reich at its helm.
According to Greg Grandin in his recent book Empire's Workshop, the OPD
was "officially charged with implementing a ‘new, nontraditional'
approach to ‘defining the terms of the public discussion on Central
American policy.'" Staffed by psychological warfare operatives from the
CIA and the U.S. Army, the new office created a propaganda machine of
unsubstantiated lies and misrepresentations, which it disseminated to
the American people by covertly placing news in the US media.[2]
According to a 1988 Propaganda Review article by Peter Kornbluh, Reich
and his staff disseminated countless documents and pamphlets "to
hundreds of civic groups, rotary clubs, and university audiences,
[which] were invariably filled with innuendo, rhetoric, and
misinformation, meant to cast the [Nicaraguan] Sandinistas in the worst
possible light and the contras in the best."
"In its effort to manipulate the media and the public mindset, OPD
employed a tactic the CIA frequently uses in foreign countries planting
articles and stories in the press under the names of third parties.
Known in the intelligence community as "white propaganda," these
activities were conducted inside the United States with the full
knowledge of the White House."[3]
According to a "confidential" March 13, 1985 memorandum, OPD Deputy
Director Jonathan Miller explained that stories were placed at NBC, The
Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Newsweek,
USA Today and countless more outlets.[4]
Additionally, the OPD coordinated with PR firms to help Administration
Officials frame their debate. As Grandin points out, one 1985 PR
"action plan" encouraged the use of simple loaded phrases to paint the
Nicaraguan Sandinistas as "evil," Soviet "puppets," "racist and repress
human rights," and "involved in US drug problems," the "military
buildup," "the drug connection," "human rights violations," and the
"communist connection."[5]
The office also attempted to shift the debate from communism to
terrorism, accusing the Sandinistas of having terrorist ties with the
Middle East, or of "anti-Semitism."
Grandin writes:
"By flooding the media with questionable facts and allegations, the OPD
forced Reagan's opponents to dissipate their energies disproving
allegations rather than making their own positive case for
nonintervention."[6]
The office was widely criticized after its involvement in the
Iran-Contra Scandal, and Congress ordered that it be shut down by for
engaging in a "prohibited convert propaganda operation." Nevertheless,
as the New York Times reported at the end of 1987, "State Department
officials say they will simply reorganize the office, distributing its
functions to other parts of the department."[7]
Reich continued with the State Department through the 1980s,
coincidentally as Ambassador to Venezuela, and was brought back in
George W. Bush's first term as Assistant Secretary of State for Western
Hemisphere Affairs and a subsequent nomination as Special Envoy to the
Western Hemisphere in 2002, where it appears he played a fairly
substantial role in assistance to Pedro Carmona Estanga and other
leaders of the short-lived 2002 coup d'etat against Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez.[8]
The official Office of Public Diplomacy may have been closed nearly
twenty years ago, and Reich may no longer be with the White House, but
he still knows how to play his cards, and he pulls out all of the stops
in "Crisis in the Americas."
Nearly all of the PR catch phrases and allegations used by the OPD
against the Sandinistas on the American people are once again employed
against Venezuela in the documentary. It is not the first time.
Countless unsubstantiated reports against Venezuela have riddled the
Internet and the mainstream press since President Chavez came in to
office in 1998.[9] This is, however, the first time all of these claims
have been formulated in to a concise half-hour documentary, which goes
so far as to call for US military intervention in Venezuela to
liquidate the Chavez "threat."
"Crisis in the Americas"[10]
The movie, like a page straight out of the OPD, attempts to link Chavez
to terrorism, drug-trafficking, violence, despotism, Cuban communism,
stolen elections, the axis of evil, and "radical Islam" with quick
sound-bites, Orwellian double-speak, and an association of non-related,
but negative images and themes. Of course, there is no hard evidence.
It opens with the voice of US President George W. Bush,
"My fellow citizens, Americans have known surprise attacks, but never
before on thousands of citizens... We are a country awakened to danger,
and called to defend freedom."
Laid on top of the audio are images from 9-11, and footage from
fighting in the middle east, as if attempting to make the subconscious
connection from the first moment that somehow Venezuela is supporting
terrorists, or perhaps had something to do with the 9-11 attacks.
Bush continues, "Either you are with us or you are with the terrorists,"
The screen zooms in on a map of Venezuela.
Representative Connie Mack speaking before Congress,
"Hugo Chavez is an enemy of Freedom that threatens the balance of power
in the hemisphere... Hugo Chavez is a threat, we must take him
seriously and we must act now..."
Representative Lincoln Diaz-Balart, speaking one of the first blatant
lies,
"Chavez is a dictator and thus not a legitimate leader."
The movie continues with suspenseful music, and footage of police,
violence, and demonstrations from the 2002 coup d'état, that make it
appear as though Venezuela is living in a state of repression and
protest. The documentary makes tragically unsubstantiated claims on
how "unemployment and poverty have increased" under Chavez; how
Venezuela is a "Cuban colony"; how Chavez wants to "attack the United
States"; how Chavez is a "a member of the axis-of-evil... that wants to
bring [the US] to our knees"; how he is a "terrorist collaborator," a
"subnormal psychopath"; how Chavez is ‘collaborating with the enemy-
radical Islam"; how he is "motivated by envy and resentment", is racist
and machista, "anti-Semitic", and "anti-Jew."
To make the terrorist link, the movie goes so far as to claim that
Venezuela has issued passports for 300 radical Islamist terrorists and
that Hezbollah is operating a division out of Venezuela.
To make the drug connection, it claims that he is building his own
"paramilitary" group; providing support to the Colombian guerrilla,
FARC; and a random reference that he may "wind up being the largest
drug kingpin in Latin America."
It follows the connections to Russia, and points to a massive military
buildup, which is completely unsubstantiated considering that even
under the most extreme estimates, Venezuela's 2007 defense budget is
less than 1% of that of the Pentagon.[11]
It claims China wants to "substitute the United States as the primary
power in the western hemisphere," and calls Venezuela's relationship to
the Asian country, "extremely dangerous."
In an attempt to de-legitimize Chavez's presidency, it goes so far as
to resurrect a completely discredited claim that Chavez stole the
Venezuelan 2004 Recall Referendum- a point that even most members of
the Venezuelan opposition no longer believe. The movie claims that in
the lead-up to the Referendum, "all the exit polls, [were] unanimously
59-60% anti-Chavez." The claim is an outright and proven lie. The
only poll that showed Chavez behind in the 2004 election was the one
conducted by the US-based, Penn, Schoen and Berland, which was being
carried out on behalf of the opposition organization, Sumate.[12]
During a ghastly lament for the loss of a potential US invasion
opportunity, the movie even gets in a jab at Former US President Jimmy
Carter, whose Carter Center, along with the OAS certified the 2004
Referendum as legitimate,
"For the Carter Center to certify the phony elections that Chavez used
to keep himself in power... that completely undermined any effort we
could have made at a time to try and restore a real democratic system
in Venezuela, and we didn't stand by the Venezuelan opposition. We
have to stop letting the Jimmy Carters of the world dictate the agendas
of the United States in the Western Hemisphere."
The documentary then calls the US to action:
Connie Mack:
"It is very important that the US act now... instead of waiting until
he is able to build up either forces or friends."
Bill McCollum:
"Whether or not we remove his presence politically, or isolate him,
remains to be seen, but if he continues to grow as a threat... then at
some point we have to take real action to stop him. Is that military
action? I hope not, but if that's what it takes to do it, then I think
ultimately that's what we're going to have to do."
The video ends with a quote from Connie Mack which, as if out of a PR
textbook perfectly frames the last words of debate for the United
States,
"To me this whole debate is simple, Chavez wants policies of
destruction and despair, and we want policies of hope and opportunity,
he wants to limit policies of hope and opportunity for the people of
Latin America."
While the entire structure may appear to have been taken directly from
the OPD file, Reich shouldn't be given all of the credit. "Crisis in
the Americas" is far from the first such propaganda-style video that
the four-decade-old American Security Council Foundation (formerly the
American Security Council- ASC) has produced.
American Security Council Foundation (ASCF)
Since its support of McCarthyism in the 1950s, the organization, which
has close ties to the US military industrial complex, the Republican
party, and US intelligence personnel, has spent millions of dollars and
produced countless videos and books attempting to promote its vision of
the communist threat and the need for increased US military
expenditure. In 1980, ASC produced the similarly named "Attack on the
Americas!" in which it called for a stronger stance against the spread
of communism in the Hemisphere.[13]
According to a 1981 NACLA review, which called the documentary "biased
and distorted,"
"‘Attack on the Americas' argues for U.S. support to unpopular military
dictatorships in El Salvador, Guatemala, and elsewhere in the Americas.
It claims, despite widespread findings to the contrary by international
organizations, church groups, and the U.S. government, that these
governments have not violated human rights. The film concludes with a
plea for increased military strength in order to protect the United
States' geopolitical and economic interests in Central America and the
Caribbean."
In the same NACLA article, Phillip Wheaton, then director of the
Ecumenical Program on Central America and the Caribbean (EPICA) points
out:
"The film has a double message or argument ... [first] a rhetorical,
redbaiting warning against the steadily growing and intentional
strategy of the Soviet Union to take over the Caribbean basin and to
march inexorably northward through Central America, country by country,
until they are at our border. Thus the Americas are 'under siege' and
through Cuban intervention, the Soviets intend to 'slash' the Americas
in half. The second message is an attack on the Carter administration's
human rights philosophy as naive."[14]
With a little rearranging, the substitution of Venezuela for the Soviet
Union, and the focus on South rather than Central America, nearly the
same quote could be said about ACSF's latest film, "Crisis in the Americas," even down to the attack on Jimmy Carter. Once again, unsubstantiated claims are refurbished with the goal of persuading public opinion.
History often repeats itself and ACSF and Reich know the propaganda
playbook by heart. The question is if the American people will take
steps to call them on it, or if they will continue to be duped by their
PR spin and "manufactured consent" that not only brought us Central
America in the 1980s, but the war in Iraq, Afghanistan, potentially
now, Iran, and perhaps one day, Venezuela.
End Notes:
[1] Oscar Corral, "New Díaz-Balart in Congress adds to family's growing
political dynasty", The Miami Herald, Miami, Florida: January 6, 2003
http://www.cubanet.org/CNews/y03/jan03/06e5.htm
[2] Greg Grandin, Empire's Workshop: Latin America, the United States,
and the Rise of New Imperialism, New York: Metropolitan Books, 2006, p.
124-136
[3] Peter Kornbluh, "Reagan's Propaganda Ministry", Propaganda Review,
San Francisco: Number 2, Summer 1988
[4] Johnathan S. Miller, Declassified Memorandum, OPD: Washington DC,
March 13, 1985
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB40/
[5] Grandin (2006)
[6] Grandin (2006)
[7] "WASHINGTON TALK: BRIEFING; Shut and Open", New York Times, New
York: December 30, 1987
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DE5DC143AF933A05751C1A961948260
[8] Thomas Blanton, "Public Diplomacy and Covert Propoganda: The
Declassified Record of Otto Juan Reich", National Security Archives,
Washington DC: March 2, 2001
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB40/
and Ed Vulliamy, "Venezuela coup linked to Bush team", The Guardian,
New York: April 21, 2002
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,688071,00.html
[9] Michael Fox, "A U.S. Intelligence Hoax on Venezuela?",
Venezuelanalysis, Caracas, Venezuela: April 19, 2006
http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/1705
[10] "Crisis in the Americas" (http://www.ascfusa.org/dvd/index.html)
(Link to short preview on the ASCF website) and:
http://www.borev.net/2007/10/hey_look_what_i_did.html
(full video with subtitled commentary from BoRev.net editor)
[11] Approximately $4.2 Billion (Venezuela) vs $439.3 Billion (United
States) Simon Romero, "Venezuela Spending on Arms Soars to World's Top
Ranks" New York Times, Caracas, Venezuela: February 25, 2007
(http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/25/world/americas/25venez.html?ex=1330059600&en=25be50a9a3dfea93&ei=5088)
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Feb2006/d20060206slides.pdf page 19
[12] Chris Carlson, "Coup D'etat in Venezuela: Made in the USA", ZNet,
Merida, Venezuela: November 24, 2006
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=45&ItemID=11471
[13] American Security Council Foundation Website
(http://www.ascfusa.org/) and International Relations Center Group
Watch: American Security Council
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/groupwatch/asc.php
[14] Ruth McDonough Fitzpatrick, "Attack on the Americas!
Counterrevolution", NACLA's Report on the Americas: March-April 1981
http://www.ejumpcut.org/archive/onlinessays/JC26folder/AttackonAmericas.html
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