Mark Weisbrot is a
Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a think tank based in
Washington. In his writings about
Venezuela he violates the promise made in the website of this organization,
see: https://cepr.net/
, where one can read:
CEPR is
committed to presenting issues in an accurate and understandable manner, so
that the public is better informed.
Accuracy is not a virtue Mr.Weisbrot
can claim. In an article he wrote for the Centre Daily Times, the newspaper of Pennsylvania
State University, he demanded that the U.S. establish normal diplomatic
relations with Venezuela. To support his demand he made several statements
which are demonstrably false and which give the Venezuelan despotic regime an
aura of democracy it has lacked for the last 17 years. See article: http://www.centredaily.com/opinion/article55344755.html
He says:
·
“Venezuela had elections for its National Assembly scheduled for Dec. 6,
and the Obama administration wanted to do what it could to influence, discredit
and delegitimize these elections. This was done primarily through an
international public relations campaign that argued the elections would not be
credible without monitors from the Organization of American States, who have
long been heavily influenced by Washington”.
To
accuse the Obama administration of mounting an international public relations campaign
to discredit the transparency of the Venezuelan elections is a falsehood. It should
not be written by the director of a think tank that purports to be accurate and
objective. It sounds as if it were written for an ideologically committed newspaper, such as Havana's Granma
Weisbrot
lies when he says the OAS has been under the control of the U.S. In fact, at
least for the last 10 years this organization has been very much under the
control of the Venezuelan regime, due to the votes of the Caribbean and ALBA member
countries, votes mostly obtained by means of significant
petroleum subsidies. Weisbrot fails to mention the fact that the OAS has had
for many years the best team of electoral observers in the hemisphere. This
team was blocked from going to the country by the Venezuelan regime while other
independent observers from the European Union were equally excluded from observation.
The only observers allowed were from UNASUR, an organization led by a man,
Ernesto Samper, who has proven to be at the service of the Venezuelan regime.
What
actually happened was that this time the countries of the hemisphere paid a great degree
of attention to the Venezuelan elections and this attention put the necessary
pressure on the Venezuelan regime not to commit fraud,
as it has usually been the case in Venezuela during the last 17 years.
Weisbrot
says that the “campaign” proved to be unnecessary since the victory of the
opposition was by a landslide. The fact
is that the pressure put on the Maduro regime by the democratic countries of
the hemisphere to conduct a clean
election was a powerful factor in preventing another fraud such as the one that
took place when Maduro “won” the presidency through to a series of illegal
maneuvers which are well documented.
·
Weisbrot says: “in Venezuela’s heavily safeguarded,
fraud-proof voting system, which former president and electoral expert Jimmy
Carter called “the best in the world,” there were no problems with the vote
count”. This is false. The night of the elections Maduro tried to reverse
the results of the voting but this attempt was neutralized by the Armed Forces,
which this time around came out in favor of democracy. Everybody knew about
this event but Weisbrot prefers to rely on the old and discredited opinion of
Jimmy Carter, which does not even represent any longer the opinion of the Carter
Center.
·
According to Weisbrot the Venezuelan opposition had “a
strategy of “military takeover” which included a U.S.-backed military coup
(2002) and oil strike (2002-2003) to topple the government”. Weisbrot echoes the Venezuelan
regime version of a U.S. backed coup when Chavez was removed from the
presidency by the Venezuelan military, after they refused to act against the
Venezuelan protesters and when he created a crisis in the oil company to
politicize it and destroy it.
·
Weisbrot lies again when he says: “In 2013 the opposition
refused to accept its loss in the presidential election, even though there was
no doubt about the results. It took to the streets with violence, again backed
by Washington until international pressure convinced the U.S. to recognize the
results. And in 2014 the opposition once again engaged in violent street
actions aimed at deposing the government”. In those 2013
elections Maduro ran for president in violation of the constitution and “won” by
a margin of less than 2% of the votes. The irregularities in this event mounted
to several times that margin. To say that there were no doubts about the outcome
is a flagrant lie. As for the 2014 protests, the story about the repression of
the government that took many lives is so-well known that Weisbrot should not go there. It is now known that the trial of Leopoldo Lopez was a cruel
mockery of justice, even “Foreign Policy”
knows it.
·
According to Weisbrot “ hard-liners in Venezuela who want to
overthrow the government will find vitally important support from within the U.S.
“national security state.” Again, Weisbrot distorts the truth. What he calls “hard liners”
are an impressive majority of Venezuelans who want to see Maduro and his gang
gone from power. The regime has run the country into the ground and is now
taking steps to prevent the new National Assembly from doing their
constitutional job. The regime is acting in violation of the Constitution, not
the other way around.
I believe Mark Weisbrot’s falsehoods do not add
credibility to the promises of accuracy made by the Center for Economic and Policy Research in its
website. Does he belong there?
I wonder how much Weisbrot was paid for the article?
A propaganda moment like this, coming at a time when the Venezuelan regime is feeling mounting pressure from an international community that recognizes one of its principal debtors is going down the road to Zimbabwe, must have been worth at least two kilos of prime blow.
Weisbrot has been an official spokesperson in Washington DC for the Venezuelan regime for years now, more effective than the inept Venezuelan embassy. I do not know what the deal is but he got paid a bundle for his participation in a documentary by Oliver Stone praising Chávez.
ResponderEliminarThanks, Gustavo Coronel, for exposing this infamy.
ResponderEliminarWeisbrot says: “in Venezuela’s heavily safeguarded, fraud-proof voting system, which former president and electoral expert Jimmy Carter called “the best in the world,” there were no problems with the vote count”
Yes, that is correct, Jimmy Carter fraudulently delivered Venezuela to Chavez.
Sr. Coronel different subject but ... did you see the new F1 built for that driving ace Pastor Maldonado? Here it is: http://www.noticierodigital.com/2016/01/panorama-divulgan-foto-del-nuevo-monoplaza-de-pastor-maldonado/
ResponderEliminarFor long time ago Mark Weisbrot has been a person that can't be taken seriously. The ludicrous report stating that the financial crisis would no affect Venezuela is a joke.
ResponderEliminarAnd now this.
I wonder which will be the following work of this man.
Who can take the Center for Economic Policy Research seriously when all their opinions come from al jezeera, telesur, huffy post, alternet etc etc etc.
ResponderEliminarThe serious sounding name is just a façade for a "progressive" (read america hating) rubble rousing group.
Reminiscent of when they sent the commie poet Ezra Pound to Ukraine to check on reports of famine back in the 1930s. Of course, he came back telling the world how wonderful Stalinist communism was and that there was no famine. And 6+ million people died while the world did nothing. Weisbrot is a just another lying, ridiculous communist apologist like Noam Chomsky.
ResponderEliminarthe problem with this institution is that it is funded by numerous organizations such as:
ResponderEliminarAmerican Association of Retired Persons (AARP)
American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE)
American Federation of Labor and Congress of International Workers (AFL-CIO)
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
Annie E. Casey Foundation (AECF)
Ford Foundation
National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC)
Rauch Foundation
Rockefeller Brothers Fund
Rockefeller Family Fund
Russell Sage Foundation
Sloan Foundation
Streisand Foundation
The problem -to me- is not that it is funded by many institutions but that they are all leftists. Yes the Rockefeller foundation is leftist, yes aarp is leftist, all the majority are unions that by definition are leftist/outright communist.
ResponderEliminarPor la plata baila el mono............como traduciriamos esto al ingles?
ResponderEliminarThe monkey dances for the money?
the money makes de monkey dance?
It is for the money the monkey dances?
traduccion maracucha (sector San Francisco): By the money dances the monkey...que mollejation.