âGo to Hellâ: Venezuelan Coup Leader Ricardo Hausmann Stages WhatsApp Meltdown When Confronted with his own Hypocrisy and Lack of Transparency

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Over the course of an entire day, Venezuelan coup leader Ricardo Hausmann melted down on WhatsApp after I confronted him about his hypocritical financial dealings and opacity. Hausmann has accepted speaking fees from repressive governments like Saudi Arabia while slamming banks that did business in Venezuela.
By Anya Parampil
At 3:31 AM on September 1, Venezuelan coup official Ricardo Hausmann fired off a message on WhatsApp demanding to see âone articleâ in which I âquestioned or criticized any of Maduroâs crimes and errors.â
The text was part of a prolonged diatribe in which the Harvard professor of economics lobbed multiple ad-hominem attacks and a demand I âgo to hell.â
Hausmannâs meltdown, which can be seen below, was prompted by questions I sent the economist concerning his and his coup colleaguesâ lack of transparency.
On August 31, I exposed Hausmannâs hypocritical financial past, revealing he accepted speaking fees from repressive governments like Israel and Saudi Arabia, while criticizing banks for doing business with Venezuelaâs elected government. I also raised questions about Hausmannâs private consulting firm, questioning why the economist failed to disclose his clients now that he claims to represent GuaidĂłâs administration at the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB).
I sought comment from Hausmann while writing that article, asking him questions including whether or not it was appropriate for him and GuaidĂłâs âattorney general,â JosĂŠ Ignacio HernĂĄndez, to continue working at Harvard despite their service in Venezuelaâs US-recognized government.
âI canât think of one example of someone who worked an academic job [at Harvard] while serving in government. How do you have time for all of your duties?â I asked the professor.
âI exercise no government functions,â Haussman replied. âI do not run an organization, I am not paid by the Venezuelan government and I do not manage a public budget.â
This answer surprised me. Hausmannâs appointment to serve at the IDB and his role in designing GuaidĂłâs $160 billion debt restructuring plan surely constitute âgovernment functions,â and in fact, required the ouster of an IDB official who had been appointed by the elected government of President Nicolas Maduro.
âAre you telling me Guaidoâs administration does not constitute a legitimate government? I am sure the Venezuelan people will be surprised to hear that,â I said to Hausmann, highlighting his role in GuaidĂłâs so-called administration.
Realizing his error, Hausmann conceded, âI am an advisor of Juan GuaidĂł, which I do on a pro bono basis. I have been named governor of the IDB and a member of the restructuring commission. Neither involves any compensation.â
âSo you do exercise government function?â I replied in order to confirm Hausmannâs self-contradiction. I noted the fact Alejandro Grisanti, the GuaidĂł-appointed chair of PdVSAâs board, and Gustavo Tarre, GuaidĂłâs âambassadorâ to the Organization of American States, were required to quit their previous jobs before joining Venezuelaâs shadow regime, even if they arenât getting paid either.
âThis isnât an issue of compensation,â I added, stressing the issue of his dual employment.
It was at this point that Hausmannâs defense devolved from logic, which seemed to be in low supply, to ad-hominem.
âYou are not a journalist nor are you interested in the truth,â charged Hausmann. âYou are an advocate of a cause and you produce biased and untrue stuff that advances your political agenda.â
âOk, you are entitled to your opinion,â I responded, inviting Hausmann to correct any of my inaccuracies. âHave I said anything false?â
âI am not required to quit my job, according to Venezuelan law, US law or Harvard norms,â asserted the professor.
âOk,â I accepted. âBut shouldnât you disclose your private consulting clients if you are a government advisor?â
Rather than answer my question, Hausmann changed the subject: âYou tried to disqualify my daughter just because she is my daughter as if she was not an [independent] woman.â
Hausmannâs complaint was a reference to my reporting about his daughterâs failure to disclose her relationship with him, a coup official, while promoting regime-change in Venezuela in a video op-ed for the New York Times.
âWas anything I said false?â I demanded to know. âDid she learn failure to disclose from you?â
Once again, Hausmann could only offer a deflection.
âPlease [disclose] how much money you have received from Maduro. What have been your [dealings] with that dictatorship?â he wrote.
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While I worked as a correspondent and anchor for RT America until December of 2018, I have never accepted payment from the Venezuelan government or any other state â unlike Hausmann. Whatâs more, The Grayzone is not funded by any government.
Hausmann responded to this point by urging me to âgo to hell.â But that was not the end of our conversation, which lasted into the early hours of the morning.
The exchange also concerned my September 3 investigation into allegations of âcriminal negligenceâ by opposition figures against Hausmann and GuaidĂłâs US-based officials over their management of the countryâs assets.
In that report, I documented how GuaidĂłâs âattorney generalâ, JosĂŠ Ignacio HernĂĄndez, failed to disclose his previous testimony on behalf of multiple companies suing the Venezuelan state during his confirmation process earlier this year. He then appeared to take several actions which helped those cases against the state after assuming his role as GuaidĂłâs top overseas legal representative.
HernĂĄndezâs actions, which Hausmann has defended, could lead to the liquidation of Citgo, Venezuelaâs most valuable international asset.
In refusing to disclose who his private consulting clients were, Ricardo Hausmann descended deeper into the realm of absurdity, demanding to know who my father was.
Hausmann declined to answer my question about Citgo and ultimately resorted to blocking me on WhatsApp. And that was how a meltdown that saw a top Venezuelan coup official and jet-setting neoliberal economist bark insults at a reporter until the early hours of the morning finally ended.
Anya Parampil is a journalist based in Washington, DC. She previously hosted a daily progressive afternoon news program called In Question on RT America. She has produced and reported several documentaries, including on-the-ground reports from the Korean peninsula and Palestine.