
by Joyce Nelson
On February 11, Bloomberg News published an astonishing piece about the unfolding Venezuelan turmoil. It was apparently the result of a major investigative effort involving three reporters and five others providing âassistanceâ. Youâll notice I havenât called it a piece of news (although thatâs what it looks like), but Iâm not sure what to call it. Itâs a piece of something, but what?
With eight people working on it, the piece is a long one, with plenty of sources. By my count, there were 19 sources. Here are 16 of them:
1-4) âfour people with knowledge of the discussionsâ
5) âanother personâ
6) âa person familiar with the thinkingâ
7) âa person with knowledge of the conversationsâ
8) âanother personâ (different from the previously cited âanother personâ)
9) âa foreign military officialâ
10) âa French officialâ
11) âanother person with knowledge of the deliberationsâ
12) âa person with knowledge of the internal discussionsâ
13) âa person familiar with [Juan] Guaidoâs thinkingâ
14) âa person familiar with the discussionsâ
15) âa senior Turkish officialâ
16) âanother personâ (different from the previously cited âanother personâ and âanother personâ)
A seventeenth source was Elliott Abrams, the Trump administrationâs special representative for Venezuela. Itâs not clear, however, that any of Bloomberg Newsâ three reporters or the five others providing âassistanceâ actually interviewed Abrams or were simply quoting from a previous press conference: âSpeaking in Washington last week, Abrams saidâŚâ
So what was the focus of this piece? The intrepid reporters were picking up on a January 31st tweet by U.S. National Security Advisor John Bolton, who encouraged Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to retire to âa nice beach somewhere far from Venezuelaâ while he still had time.
The Bloomberg News piece is entitled: âAs Nicolas Maduro digs in, his aides hunt for an emergency escape route out of Venezuela.â It got wide exposure, including in Canadaâs National Post. [1] The eight reporters and aforementioned 16 sources imply that Maduro is frantically seeking a bolthole somewhere, anywhere â Cuba? Russia? Turkey? Mexico? France? â while appearing to hang on to power.
Their quote from Abrams is this: ââI think it is better for the transition to democracy in Venezuela that he be outside the country,â Elliott Abrams, U.S. Secretary of State Michael Pompeoâs special representative for Venezuela, said of Maduro. âAnd there are a number of countries that I think would be willing to accept him,â he told reporters, citing âfriends in places like Cuba and Russiaâ.â
There were two more sources cited in this piece: Andrey Kortunov, head of a Moscow research organization entitled the Russian International Affairs Council, and Russian lawmaker Andrey Klimov, deputy head of the upper house of Parliamentâs foreign affairs committee. Both affirmed Maduroâs resilience in the midst of the turmoil, with Klimov telling Bloomberg News that Maduro âis not planning to go anywhere.â
Indeed, Klimov âdismissed talk of Maduroâs evacuation as âpsychological warfareâ aimed at âsowing panic and hysteriaââ in Venezuela.
In the old days, according to persons knowledgeable on the matter, psychological warfare was conducted through the CIAâs âMighty Wurlitzerâ â massive propaganda efforts utilizing mainstream media and other outlets. These days U.S. taxpayer-funded organizations like the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) have taken over much of that function. As The Intercept (Jan. 30) informs us, Elliott Abrams is on the board of the NED. [2]
The Mighty Wurlitzer blares on, but under different management and branding. Has Bloomberg News become part of this effort? At this point, persons familiar with the companyâs thinking about the question have yet to come forward.
Footnotes:
[1] Esteban Duarte, Eric Martin, Ilya Arkhipov (Bloomberg News), âAs Nicolas Maduro digs in, his aides hunt for an emergency escape route out of Venezuela,â National Post, February 11, 2019.
https://nationalpost.com/news/world/as-nicolas-maduro-digs-in-his-aides-hunt-for-an-emergecy-escape-route-out-of-venezuela
[2] Jon Schwartz, âElliott Abrams, Trumpâs Pick for Fixing âDemocracyâ in Venezuela, Has Spent His Life Crushing Democracy,â The Intercept ,January 30, 2019.
Joyce Nelsonâs sixth book, Beyond Banksters: Resisting the New Feudalism, can be ordered at: http://watershedsentinel.ca/banksters. She can be reached through www.joycenelson.ca.
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