The Washington Post just ran this piece on the despicable article on Leopoldo Lopez by a chavista called Roberto Lovato. It describes how a prestigious magazine allowed its good name to get contaminated by the Venezuelan dictatorship. I transcribe the story, together with a few notes of mine along the way.
TITLE:
Foreign
Policy magazine runs seven correction/clarification/update things on piece
about Venezuelan politico
David Rothkopf,
the CEO and Editor of the Foreign Policy Group, is standing behind a July 27
story in his magazine, titled “The Making of Leopoldo López.” “People can
make their own judgment based on the story,” says Rothkopf, “which is factually
correct now.” That last word is key, considering that over the past seven
weeks, the story has sustained four “clarifications” that are actually
corrections; a “correction/clarification”; and a pair of “updates.”
At the center
of all this post-publication amendment is Venezuelan opposition leader López,
who in February 2014 was arrested and charged with allegedly inciting violence
connected to national protests that he’d helped organize against the anti-U.S.
regime of Nicolás Maduro. It didn’t take long for an international consensus to
denounce the charges: The UN’s human rights boss called for López’s release, as have various
other international organizations. The editorial board of the New York Times
called the proceedings a “travesty” and highlighted the government’s
strange argumentthat López used “subliminal” messages to stir up the
masses; The Washington Post called the trial “farcical.” Foreign Policy
magazine called López, a Kenyon College graduate and former mayor of Caracas’s
Chacao district, one of the world’s greatest thinkers of 2014, “the most popular figure in Venezuela’s long-splintered
opposition.”
Over the summer
Foreign Policy — a division of the Graham Holdings Co. and, before that, the
Washington Post Co. — took a swipe at proving itself wrong. The piece by
Roberto Lovato purported to take a deeper look at López’s freedom-fighting
credentials. Reported in partnership with the Investigative Fund at The Nation
Institute (and with support from the Puffin Foundation), Lovato’s story starts
with the observation that the U.S. media has been kind to the 44-year-old
López, leader of the Voluntad Popular party. Then it ventures that the picture
is more complicated in Venezuela, where some concur with the view of the Maduro
regime that he’s a “violent ‘fascista'” with less commitment to constitutional
democracy than editorialists at the Times and the Post might suppose.
(Disclosure: The Erik Wemple Blog works in the editorial division of the Post).
This contention
rests on Lovato’s interpretation of a pivotal event in recent Venezuelan
history. In April 2002, elements of the country’s military and business sectors
tried to pull off a coup against now deceased President Hugo Chávez. It lasted
barely two days. Though López’s people claim he didn’t support the coup or ally
himself with its propagators, Lovato cycles through a sheaf of circumstantial
evidence in an attempt to prove otherwise. “[N]ews reports, parliamentary
records, U.S. government documents, video recordings, and interviews show that
López was not quite as remote from the coup attempt and its plotters as he and
his representatives claim,” writes Lovato.
There’s more:
Lovato depicts close ties between López and Pedro Burelli, a Venezuelan
national, a former big shot at the country’s national petroleum outfit PDVSA
and now a Washington area resident and consultant. Rather than explain how
Lovato links López and Burelli, let’s just recite the ways in which Lovato
failed to link López and Burelli. They are listed at the bottom of the story:
*
Clarification, Aug. 12, 2015: Pedro Burelli was not involved in hiring Leopoldo
López at PDVSA.
**
Clarification, Sept. 3, 2015: Leopoldo López’s mother was originally hired by a
subsidiary of PDVSA in 1980, and transferred to the head office in 1994.
***
Clarification, Aug. 12, 2015: Burelli did not specifically advise López on the
2014 clashes with the Venezuelan government.
Here are the
additional corrective notes:
****
Clarification: Aug. 26, 2015: An editing error in a previous version of this
article made unclear the years in which López was banned from running for
public office.
***** Update,
Aug. 12, 2015: This article has been updated to note the ruling by the
Inter-American Commission and Inter-American Court of Human Rights on behalf of
López.
******
Correction/clarification, Aug. 12, 2015: A previous version of this article
incorrectly noted that Burelli was “considered a fugitive from justice by
Venezuelan authorities.” In June 2014, the BBC reported that the Venezuelan
government would be seeking a Red Notice from Interpol for his arrest. A Red
Notice has not been issued.
******* Update,
Aug. 17, 2015: This article has been updated to reflect Burelli’s explanation
for the meaning of the word “colectivo” and to include the name of the retired
officer to whom he was speaking.
In a chat with
the Erik Wemple Blog, Burelli claimed that the story’s explanation of his
relationship with López is “totally false.” And based on the correctives that
Foreign Policy has already run, Burelli asked that he be removed altogether
from the story. It’s here that the story about Foreign Policy’s López story
soars to front-runner status in the the annual Pulitzer Prize competition,
“Most Thoroughly Contested Magazine Story, 2015 (Latin America Category).” In
an Aug. 19 e-mail to Stephen Kiehl of the law firm Covington & Burling LLP,
Burelli listed 51 bullet points as to why he didn’t belong in the story. A
little taste:
11. I have not
been accused or mentioned in the 100% political case against Mr. Lopez and his
mother related to the above mentioned grant.
12. I have never been a paid advisor to Mr. Lopez.
13. I have never been a formal advisor to Mr. Lopez.
14. I have not been a regular advisor to Mr. Lopez.
15. I have never been a representative of Mr. Lopez.
16. I have never attended an event on Mr. Lopez’s behalf.
17. I have never spoken in Mr. Lopez’s place.
18. I have never pretended to be a representative or a formal advisor of Mr. Lopez.
19. I have never been a member of Primero Justicia or Voluntad Popular.
20. I have never attended an event of Primero Justicia or Voluntad Popular.
12. I have never been a paid advisor to Mr. Lopez.
13. I have never been a formal advisor to Mr. Lopez.
14. I have not been a regular advisor to Mr. Lopez.
15. I have never been a representative of Mr. Lopez.
16. I have never attended an event on Mr. Lopez’s behalf.
17. I have never spoken in Mr. Lopez’s place.
18. I have never pretended to be a representative or a formal advisor of Mr. Lopez.
19. I have never been a member of Primero Justicia or Voluntad Popular.
20. I have never attended an event of Primero Justicia or Voluntad Popular.
No way is the
57-year-old Burelli exiting the story. “He was included in the article as
somebody who has some association with Leopoldo López. I assume he’s proud of
that association,” says Rothkopf. Detect the edge in that quip? It’s based on
weeks and weeks of e-mailing among Burelli, Rothkopf, and lawyers. Burelli
bashed the publication so fiercely in his communications that on Aug. 31, he received
a legal threat letter: “Foreign Policy reserves its rights to pursue all legal
options against you relating to these and any further defamatory statements,”
wrote Kurt Wimmer of Covington & Burling LLP.
And no spat is
a real spat until it surfaces on Twitter:
The objections
posed by Burelli look narrow alongside the 23-page docket against “The Making of Leopoldo
López” written up by Jared Genser, international counsel for the opposition
leader. It breaks down Lovato’s story paragraph by paragraph, alleging factual
mistakes, omissions and biases of all kinds. “I ordinarily would not take the
time to provide such a detailed response; I am doing so here because I am
concerned this article is well outside the norm for acceptable error from a
journalist,” writes Genser, managing director of Perseus Strategies, in his
Aug. 1 broadside.
After a month
of negotiation, Foreign Policy earlier this week published a rebuttal by Genser and another writer under
the title, “The Other Side of Leopoldo López.” The buried lede in the piece
relates to Lovato’s work history: “While researching and writing this article,
Lovato worked concurrently for Telesur, the state-run news agency of Venezuela,
which had viciously and unfairly attacked Lopez for years, and was even a host
of one of their programs,” notes the rebuttal story.
NOTE BY GUSTAVO: I wrote two stories in my blog about this connection. Lovato is a hustler.
In his rebuttal
to the rebuttal, Lovato confirms the Telesur connection: “It is true that, as a
working freelance journalist, I contracted briefly with a TeleSur subsidiary,
TeleSur English, headquartered in and operated out of Ecuador, one of six
countries that jointly run the parent network.” Venezuela, it should be noted,
is the majority stakeholder; it’s accurate to call it Venezuela’s state-run
media outlet.
Shouldn’t this
Telesur detail be written across the top of the story in red? Rothkopf says
that the disclosure in the rebuttal is sufficient. “We have a very high regard
for our readers and feel that they can draw their own conclusions if we present
them with the facts,” he says. The editors didn’t know of the Telesur connection
prior to running the story, says Rothkopf, “and that’s unfortunate.” Executive
Editor Pauker says, “It’s difficult to make the claim that he is the agent of
the Maduro government…based on that association.”
NOTE BY GUSTAVO: Rothkopf is either dishonest or inept in saying this. He had one year to find out!
Esther Kaplan,
editor of the Investigative Fund at the Nation Institute, recalls of the
Telesur matter: “Roberto did mention in passing early on that he was in
discussions with a Latin American network to shoot a pilot show on US Latinos,”
writes Kaplan via e-mail. “Unfortunately, I don’t recall being aware that the
network was Telesur, and I was frankly unaware until recently that Telesur was
majority Venezuela-owned. We absolutely should have disclosed this to readers.”
NOTE by Gustavo: this lady is very careless
Telsur itself has found merit in Lovato’s Foreign Policy piece,recycling its findings in opinion piece titled,
“A Foreign Policy article by Roberto Lovato represents a crack in a huge
propaganda edifice” and in a recent “analysis” story.
NOTE by Gustavo: Of course. Telesur is the TV station of the narco state!
As to the body
of corrections and “clarfication”-corrections at the story’s bottom, Kaplan
comments, “Roberto came to us with an interesting story about a public figure
who hasn’t received much scrutiny. We took extraordinary care, as we always do,
to examine countervailing facts, to seek responses from all of the subjects, to
closely vet every allegation, and to be transparent with readers about
sourcing. Given the intensity of the criticism that has ensued, it’s notable
that we only had to make a handful of clarifications. I think that’s testament
to the care we put into vetting the story.”
NOTE by Gustavo: This lady is pretty cynical. If FP had accepted the letters criticizing the hatchet job there would have been many more clarifications. They never replied to mine, nor published it.
Lovato tells
the Erik Wemple Blog that the piece is factually strong. “The facts in the
story hold,” says Lovato, a San Francisco-based freelancer. “One correction in
a 6,000-word piece does not a story kill.”
Genser has a
take on the other end of the spectrum: “If this article meets the editorial
standards of Foreign Policy, then no reader can trust what they publish.”
Genser is founder of Freedom Now, a group that works to “free
prisoners of conscience worldwide.” “They are providing justification for
keeping a guy in jail who’s been wrongly imprisoned,” says Genser. His job is
to help free López, and the Lovato story isn’t advancing that cause.
NOTE by Gustavo: Foreign Policy magazine is now together in the swamp with the regime's propaganda machine and will carry some of the stigma surrounding Leopoldo Lopez's unjust sentence. This blunder will never go away.
Pushback
against Foreign Policy has stirred something of a backlash in favor of the
piece. A group of professionals from the National Lawyers Guild, the American
Association of Jurists, and International Association of Democratic Lawyers,
for example, encouraged the magazine to stand up to Genser:
“We support the journalistic integrity that you have shown in providing your
readership with an alternative perspective on an important opposition leader in
Venezuela and appreciate that Foreign Policy was willing to print information
that is familiar to many of our organizations’ members, but perhaps not to your
readers,” reads the Aug. 20 letter. David Smilde, a Tulane University professor
knowledgeable on Venezuelan politics, tweeted shortly after the piece was
published:
Amid its strife
with the likes of Burelli and Genser, Foreign Policy evolved on how it viewed
the story.
NOTE by Gustavo: Find out who these people are and you will not be surprised at their support for Lovato's job. I don't mean Smilde, who is just ideologically confused, not a mercenary.
As initially published, it’s taxonomized as a
“profile”:
Now it’s
something different:
When the piece
originally landed with Foreign Policy, says Pauker, “it was internally
designated as an argument piece, which it is now.” That said, Pauker notes that
the factual/reportorial standards for both categories are the same.
Among the many
disputes batted around on e-mail was the length of sentence that López was
facing. The charges, says the story, could add up to a prison sentence of 10
years. “Foreign Policy must correct the years Lopez faces in prison
to being 12 not 10 — that is factually false as written and downplays the time
he might serve in prison,” wrote Genser in an Aug. 13 e-mail not marked
confidential. Foreign Policy refused to budge.
Yesterday,
López was sentenced to nearly 14 years in prison. “The
lawyer got that one right,” says Lovato. “This is one of those things where I
had to beat them over the head, and they didn’t change it,” counters Genser.
NOTE by Gustavo: Foreign Policy's chief editor will always carry the burden of his role in this grotesque affair. He is talented, yes, but in my view, somewhat short on other qualities. I will keep digging this tragic connection between a dictatorial regime, an ideologically poisoned Nation Institute and a magazine which did not konw how to behave responsibly.
Gustavo,
Thank you for keeping track of this.
I went over to the Washington Post website and entered my own comment on Erik Wemple's blog article. I believe Foreign Policy magazine has engaged in what can only be described as a pattern of deception, and that speaks volumes about the publication itself.
And I must mention that neither Leopoldo López nor Pedro Burelli deserved the smears and falsehoods leveled at them by Roberto Lovato as well.
Foreign Policy should be forced by Washington Post - and other main media players - to admit its mistakes, further correct the infamous hatchet job, address all specific "factual" atrocities. Lovato's grotesque piece must be totally discredited by the real Facts.
ResponderEliminarIt is a very serious matter. A man, and his entire family, wife and kids, is in jail now for almost 14 years. The future of an entire country may depend on this man, by far the most capable and popular leader of the opposition, of a country that is in shambles, destroyed by a dictatorship, with the worst Economy and highest murder rates on the planet. 25,000 people die violently every year in Venezuela, and Foreign Policy agrees to sell its soul and help crucify the leader of all future hope for the ravaged country.
These careless or sold-out people should look at their own wives and kids before they go to bed every night, and than pray to whatever deities they are praying for some sense of basic morality and responsibility.
Thanks, Gustavo Coronel.
ResponderEliminarFP will have to deal with the consequences of their infamous action.
Also see Venezuela: Opposition Leader Unjustly Convicted (Human Rights Watch, September 10, 2015), at
http://www.hrw.org/news/2015/09/10/venezuela-opposition-leader-unjustly-convicted (English)
Ver también: Venezuela: Condenan injustamente a líder de la oposición (Human Rights Watch, Septiembre 10, 2015), en
http://www.hrw.org/es/news/2015/09/10/venezuela-condenan-injustamente-lider-de-la-oposicion
Pushback against Foreign Policy has stirred something of a backlash in favor of the piece. A group of professionals from the National Lawyers Guild, the American Association of Jurists, and s, for example, encouraged the magazine to stand up to Genser
ResponderEliminarBut who is doing the pushback? National Lawyers Guild & International Association of Democratic Lawyers: identified in the 1950s as Communist Front organizations. Wiki them. There is also an indirect Chavista thread here. Leonard Boudin was a member of the National Lawyer's Guild. Leonard Boudin's daughter Kathy Boudin,Wikipedia informs us,
was an activist and co-founder of the 1960s radical group the Weather Underground, who served 22 years in prison for her role in a 1981 robbery that left two police officers and a security guard dead. His only biological grandson, Chesa Boudin, Kathy's son, is an attorney and writer.
While his parents were in prison, Bill Ayers and Bernadine Dorhrn raised Cheasa Boudin from infancy. After he graduated from college, Chesea Boudin took the backpacking trek through Latin America. After several days in Venezuela, Chesa Boudin was invited to work in Miraflores. That doesn't happen to many backpackers, but when you have a left wing royalty background via grandfather, parents and guardians, doors open which remain closed to others.
As Bill Ayers blessed the world with his inept forays into terrorism, and with his endorsement of Dictatorship of the Proletariat for the US in his co-authored book Prairie Fire, he blessed Venezuela with some visits, including this report from November 2006:
Despite being under constant attack from within and from abroad, the Bolivarian revolution has made astonishing strides in a brief period: from the Mission Simoncito to the Mission Robinson to the Mission Ribas to the Mission Sucre, to the Bolivarian schools and the UBV, Venezuelans have shown the world that with full participation, full inclusion, and popular empowerment, the failings of capitalist schooling can be resisted and overcome. Venezuela is a beacon to the world in its accomplishment of eliminating illiteracy in record time, and engaging virtually the entire population in the ongoing project of education.....
Viva Mission Sucre!
Viva Presidente Chavez!
Viva La Revolucion Bolivariana!
Hasta La Victoria Siempre!
So when the National Lawyers Guild objects to a takedown of a Chavista slanted article in Foreign Policy, we are not surprised. The pedigree is long.
Thanks, Gringo.
ResponderEliminarGood digging!
fuFBI GROAN
ResponderEliminar