DEBUNKING THE MAINSTREAM NARRATIVE ON VENEZUELA
The justification of U.S. intervention
in Venezuela is based on the dominant narrative of the U.S. government, the
Republican and Democratic Parties and the mainstream media. That narrative
states that Maduro is an autocrat and that Venezuela’s pressing economic
problems are solely attributable to government incompetence. I attempt to
refute those notions in the following article posted by Consortium News.
By Steve Ellner
Posted
by Consortium News
The recognition by Nancy Pelosi and Joe Biden of Juan
Guaidó as Venezuelan president is the latest demonstration of the consensus in
Washington over the nefariousness of the Nicolás Maduro government. Not since
Fidel Castro’s early years in power has a Latin American head of state been so consistently
demonized. But the 1960s was the peak of the Cold War polarization that placed Cuba
plainly in the enemy camp, and unlike Venezuela of today that nation had a one-party
system in the absence of political pluralism.
The scope of the consensus was put in evidence by the
recent faceoff between two figures as far apart as Donald Trump and Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez. In his State of the Union address, Trump attributed Venezuela’s
economic crisis to the failed system of socialism. Ocasio-Cortez responded by
arguing that the Venezuelan case is “an issue of authoritarian
regime versus democracy.”
Taken together, the comments by Trump and
Ocasio-Cortez complement one another. According to the narrative that dominates
Washington, Venezuela is a disaster from both economic and political
viewpoints. The exclusive blame for the sorry state of the economy and for the
country’s allegedly authoritarian rule lays with Maduro and his cohorts.
Not surprisingly, the mainstream media have refrained
from questioning these assumptions. Most of their reporting puts the accent
mark on state incompetence and corruption, while skirting the detrimental
effects of the economic sanctions implemented by the Trump administration.
In addition, many on the left point to the economic
sanctions as responsible, at least in part, for the nation’s pressing economic difficulties,
but few critically examine the mainstream’s characterization of the state of Venezuelan
democracy. Some who do so oppose the sanctions but join the opposition in
bashing the Maduro government. A recent article by Gabriel Hetland, for
instance, posted by Jacobin and NACLA: Report on the Americas claims
that Maduro “holds [ing] onto power through authoritarian means”; the author then
turns to the nation’s economic difficulties by arguing that “the primary driver is the government’s
mismanagement of its oil revenue” and
corruption.
During my participation in a two-month Venezuelan
solidarity tour late last year in the U.S. and Canada, I often heard the
statement that knowing the specifics about Venezuela’s economic and political
problems is not essential because the bottom line is the illegality of Trump’s sanctions
and threats of military intervention. But does international law end the
discussion? If it could be proven that Maduro is a dictator and a totally
incompetent ruler, would people enthusiastically rally behind his government in
opposition to foreign intervention? I don’t think so. Undoubtedly, it is necessary
to take a close look at both political and economic fronts because the
effectiveness of solidarity efforts hinges on the specifics. The dominant
narrative about Maduro and its assumptions cannot be taken at face value, even
while there are elements of truth in it.
How
Far Back Do The Economic Problems Go?
The Venezuelan opposition frequently argues that
neither the sanctions nor depressed international oil prices are to blame for
the nation’s economic difficulties, only the mismanagement of the economy. At
best, declining oil prices contributed to the problems but were not a root
cause. Some opposition analysts deny or minimize the importance of oil prices as
a factor by pointing out that the economies of other OPEC nations are as
dependent on oil exports as that of Venezuela but have
not plummeted to the same levels.
The opposition’s central argument here is that Venezuela’s
dire economic problems predate Trump’s implementation of sanctions and even
predate the sharp decline in international oil prices beginning mid-2014. That
is, government follies with disastrous effects came first, followed by the
decline in oil prices and then the sanctions. Two-time presidential candidate
for the opposition Henrique Capriles claimed that the crisis began prior to the fall of oil prices but for a long time was “ignored,
repressed and covered up” by the
government.
There are two fallacies in this line of thinking. In
the first place, the so-called “economic war” against Venezuela, which
eventually included the Trump-imposed sanctions, preceded everything else.
Washington almost from the beginning of Chávez’s presidency in 1999 did not
stand by idly while he defied the neoliberal Washington Consensus as well as
U.S. hegemony. Washington’s hostility seriously harmed the economy in multiple
ways. For instance, the George W. Bush administration banned the sale of spare parts
for the Venezuelan Air Force’s costly F-16 fighter jets in 2006, forcing the
country to turn to Russia for the purchase of 24 Sukhoi SU-30 fighter planes.
Furthermore, the international sanctions did not begin with Trump, but rather
Obama in 2015 which were justified by his executive order calling Venezuela a threat
to U.S. national security. That order was followed by an avalanche of pull-outs
from Venezuela by multinationals including Ford, Kimberly Clark, General
Motors, Kellogg’s and nearly all the international airlines.
In the second place, oil prices under Maduro have not
only been low since 2014 but nosedived, just the opposite of what happened
under Chávez. This is particularly problematic because high prices create
expectations and commitments that then get transformed into frustration and
anger when they precipitously drop. Prices are currently slightly over half of
what they were before the decline, in spite of their modest recovery since
2017.
Three factors explain Venezuela’s economic woes, not
one: low oil prices, the “economic war” against Venezuela, and mistaken
policies. Prominent in the latter category is Maduro’s lethargic response to
the problem of the widening disparity between official prices set by the
government on certain items and prices on the black market. The government has
encountered major problems in distributing basic commodities that are in short
supply and are sold way below that of the black market. The system is conducive
to corruption and contraband as many of the products that are supposed to be
retailed at reduced prices end up being sold on the black market or sent off to
neighboring Colombia.
The
Dictatorship Label Repeated a Thousand Times
The media are in desperate need of good fact-checkers
in their reporting on Venezuela. Statements about Venezuelan democracy range
from blatantly misleading to accurate with most lying between the two extremes.
An example of the former is the Guardian’s claim that the Venezuelan
government “controls most TV and radio stations which transmit a constant
stream of pro-Maduro propaganda.” In fact,
of those who tune into Venezuelan TV channels, 80 percent watch the 3 major
private channels (Venevisión, Televén, and Globovisión) which cannot be
seriously accused of being pro-government.
At the other extreme is Hetland’s assertion in his Jacobin-NACLA piece that the decision to
strip Henrique Capriles of his right to run for office as a result of
corruption charges was politically motivated. The statement is accurate. Actually,
the move was worse than what Hetland discusses. For some time before that, Capriles,
whose political positions have vacillated considerably, favored a less
intransigent stance toward the government than those on the radical right,
which has largely dominated the opposition of late. The move, in effect, played
into the hands of the radicals and undermined efforts to bring about a
much-needed national dialogue.
Those who call Maduro a dictator make two basic
assertions. In the first place, the government is alleged to have brutally repressed
the 4-month long peaceful demonstrations designed to bring about regime change
carried out in 2014 and then 2017. In fact, the protests were hardly peaceful.
Six National Guardsmen and 2 policemen were killed in 2014 and protestors fired
into an air force base in Caracas and attacked a number of police
stations in Táchira in 2017. There are different versions
of the circumstances surrounding the numerous fatalities in 2014 and 2017, thus
requiring an impartial analysis, which the media has hardly attempted to
present. Police repression is reprehensible – and repression there was on both
occasions – regardless of circumstances, but the context has to be brought into
the picture.
In the second place, the
opposition denies that Maduro’s re-election in May of last year was legitimate
because the election was called for by the National Constituent Assembly (ANC),
whose existence allegedly has no legal basis. One of the nation’s foremost
constitutional lawyers Hermann Escarrá has defended
the ANC’s legality, while others formulate plausible arguments to
the contrary. Again, the mainstream media has failed to present both sides or
to objectively analyze the issue. Nearly all the opposition parties that
refused to participate in the presidential elections in 2018, however, did
participate in the gubernatorial elections of the preceding year that were
convened by the same ANC. The justification for
Juan Guaidó’s self-proclamation as Venezuelan president on January 23 was
predicated on the illegitimacy of the ANC.
Violation of democratic norms and cases of police
repression do not in themselves demonstrate that a government is authoritarian
or dictatorial. If they did, the United States would hardly be considered
democratic. The real defining issue is whether electoral fraud takes place in
which votes are not correctly counted. That accusation has been largely absent
in the controversy over recent elections, even among leaders of the radical
opposition.
The mainstream media and Washington politicians freely
call Maduro an “autocrat”
a “dictator” and “authoritarian.” More than anything that is said about
Venezuela’s economic difficulties, the use of these terms has had a profound
effect on policy making. A nation’s economic problems do not justify
intervention of any sort. The real issue of contention, therefore, is the state
of Venezuelan democracy as depicted by the dominant narrative. Amazingly
enough, there is no major actor in mainstream politics and the mainstream media
willing to challenge that narrative with all its questionable claims regarding
the Maduro government.
Steve Ellner is a retired professor from Venezuela’s University of the
East and is currently associate managing editor of “Latin American
Perspectives.” Among his over a dozen books on Latin America is his edited The Pink Tide Experiences: Breakthroughs
and Shortcomings in Twenty-First Century Latin America (Rowman & Littlefield, 2019).
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