-Caveat Lector-
In a message dated 8/13/2004 10:12:53 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Via NY Transfer News Collective  *  All the News that Doesn't Fit

[Finally, a mainstream paper has detailed the ties between the NED and the
oligarchy's henchmen -- as if it were news. But at least the facts are
finally getting out to the middle americans who read the mainstream press.
Tonight's BBC news had a truly dreadful report, showing the anti-Chavez demo
and saying it was huge (they briefly mentioned the pro-Chavez demos, but did
not say it was more than a million people, more than 10 times the crowd that
the Opposition mustered). BBC also showed military (or police) around the
capitol, saying darkly that they were preparing for "violence" around the
election because -- shot of the poor in the slums where Chavez's support is
strongest -- "these people may not be willing to accept a defeat." Then they
interviewed an "oil industry analyst" who said with the high demand
Venezuela should be producing much more oil right now, and the country isn't
(as if any country can ramp up oil production at the wave of a hand).  Why?
The report insinuated that it was because Chavez is spending all the money
on the poor ("free food is good for votes") -- and sending the economy into
"ruins." --NY Transfer]

sent by Walter Lippmann (cubanews)

Los Angeles Times - August 13, 2004
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-venez13aug13,1,4376313.story

Chavez Camp Accuses U.S. of Pushing for His Recall

Some members of groups funded by the National Endowment for Democracy
have ties to the 2002 coup leaders. Venezuela votes Sunday.

by Ken Silverstein and Carol J. Williams
Los Angeles Times Staff Writers

CARACAS, Venezuela  As this bitterly divided nation approaches a vote
Sunday on whether to recall populist President Hugo Chavez, he and his
supporters are accusing Washington of interfering in Venezuela's affairs by
providing about $2 million to opposition groups.

Grants from the National Endowment for Democracy to more than a dozen
organizations over two years account for only a fraction of opposition
funding. But because some members of the U.S.-supported groups have ties to
the opponents who briefly deposed Chavez in April 2002, the former
paratrooper contends that the funding backs another effort to oust him.

"Washington has been financing the opposition with millions, including for
this referendum," Chavez said during a news conference Thursday at the
presidential palace.

Chavez won the presidency in December 1998, and his rule has polarized this
country, one of the world's largest oil producers. After the 2002 coup and a
two-month national strike failed, opponents changed strategy to focus on a
recall campaign. This spring, they submitted 2.5 million signatures,
slightly more than the 20% of registered voters required to trigger a
recall.

The Venezuela Solidarity Committee, a New York-based nonprofit group,
obtained several thousand pages of documents on NED programs in Venezuela
under the Freedom of Information Act and provided them to the Los Angeles
Times and other media.

At issue is whether the endowment strayed from its mandate to support the
development of democracy by assisting nonpartisan grass-roots organizations.
The NED technically is a private organization, but it receives most of its
budget  about $80 million this year  from Congress and other
taxpayer-financed sources.

Chris Sabatini, the NED's director for Latin American programs, defended the
endowment funding and denied that it was aimed at destabilizing Chavez's
government. He said the group was trying to promote dialogue in Venezuela
and opposed any unconstitutional actions against Chavez.

"In a situation of political polarization, if you want to pull people back
from the brink of conflict, you have to work with people at the brink,"
Sabatini said.

Chavez supporters see more ominous intentions.

"The NED says its goal is to build democracy, but it is giving money to
people who were key players in the coup and who are trying to oust a
democratically elected president," said Deborah James of the
Washington-based Venezuela Information Office.

One grant of $42,000 went to a group called Leadership and Vision to train
Caracas police "in democratic rights and responsibilities, and the peaceful
resolution of conflict."

Though he described the NED contribution as "totally insignificant," the
group's leader, economist Gerver Torres, said the training project "should
have been welcomed by a government committed to the public's interests." The
private, nonprofit group aims to educate voters and encourage broader
participation in the country's decision-making, he said.

But Chavez supporters say that some members of the capital's police force,
under the control of an opposition mayor, supported the coup. And Oscar
Garcia Mendoza, who signed Leadership and Vision's grant agreement with the
NED, also signed a newspaper advertisement two days after Chavez's brief
ouster that declared "unconditional support" for the coup government.

Join Up, another group that received NED funding, said the money it received
was spent on voter education and activities that equally benefited the pro-
and anti-Chavez camps. Join Up said it received $35,000; the NED grant lists
it as $54,000.

"None of this was hidden from anyone. We are extremely transparent," said
one of the group's leaders, Alejandro Plaz. He denied the government charge
that Maria Corina Machado, another leader of the group, attended the
swearing-in of Pedro Carmona, the oil executive who replaced Chavez until an
uprising of the poor restored him to power.

Late last month, government prosecutors here announced that they were
investigating Machado on conspiracy charges for having accepted NED funding.
Chavez supporters accuse Join Up of being openly hostile to Chavez. The
group's website says it "collected and processed signatures" in support of a
recall vote.

The grant agreement between the group and the NED lists promoting support
for the recall referendum as a "project objective."

Some recipients, such as the avidly anti-Chavez political party Justice
First, make no pretense of being nonpartisan. Several prominent members of
the party supported the coup leaders. One of them, Leopoldo Martinez, was
finance minister in the coup government.

The NED also has given money to a conservative think tank known as CEDICE to
help it draft "a viable [opposition] agenda." Rocmo Guijarro, the group's
general manager, signed the coup decree that abolished Venezuela's
Constitution, Supreme Court and National Assembly. Several members of
CEDICE's project advisory committee attended Carmona's swearing-in.

"In principle, NED is an independent tool to promote democracy, but in
practice it has been a weapon for regime change against governments the U.S.
deems as undesirable," said Peter Kornbluh, a Latin America policy
specialist at the National Security Archives, a nonprofit research group in
Washington. "Its actions are particularly controversial in Venezuela, where
the regime is democratically elected."

Chavez says Venezuela's oil wealth should fund relief for the poor, and his
power base is estimated by pollsters to be about 30% of the nation's 25
million people. A roughly equal share of middle class and elite despise
Chavez, saying he has steered the economy down a path of communist-style
revolution that has reduced per capita income, foreign investment and
employment.

Until Chavez's tenure, the United States had enjoyed close relations with
Venezuela. According to the Energy Department, the South American country
has 77.8 billion barrels of proven oil reserves, the most in the Western
Hemisphere. It accounts for about one-eighth of U.S. oil imports.

One point of contention has been Chavez's role at the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries, where he has fought to maintain production
quotas and keep oil prices high. Before his election, Venezuela regularly
exceeded its OPEC production targets, the Energy Department said.

The White House initially endorsed the 2002 coup, but it backed off after 19
Latin American countries condemned it.

A State Department inspector general report subsequently concluded that the
Bush administration did not have advance knowledge of the coup and "worked
to support democracy and constitutionality in Venezuela." However, the
report said the U.S. was in close contact with Chavez's opponents and that
its "displeasure with certain of President Chavez's policies, actions and
relationships was well-known by his opponents in Caracas." Chavez has a
close relationship with Cuban leader Fidel Castro.

The inspector general found that the NED and other U.S. assistance programs
"provided training, institution building, and other support to individuals
and organizations understood to be actively involved in the brief ouster of
the Chavez government." The report found no evidence that the NED's support
"directly contributed, or was intended to contribute," to the coup.

Williams reported from Caracas and Silverstein from Washington.

      
                                *
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www.ctrl.org DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

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--- Begin Message ---
-Caveat Lector-

Via NY Transfer News Collective  *  All the News that Doesn't Fit

[Finally, a mainstream paper has detailed the ties between the NED and the
oligarchy's henchmen -- as if it were news. But at least the facts are
finally getting out to the middle americans who read the mainstream press.
Tonight's BBC news had a truly dreadful report, showing the anti-Chavez demo
and saying it was huge (they briefly mentioned the pro-Chavez demos, but did
not say it was more than a million people, more than 10 times the crowd that
the Opposition mustered). BBC also showed military (or police) around the
capitol, saying darkly that they were preparing for "violence" around the
election because -- shot of the poor in the slums where Chavez's support is
strongest -- "these people may not be willing to accept a defeat." Then they
interviewed an "oil industry analyst" who said with the high demand
Venezuela should be producing much more oil right now, and the country isn't
(as if any country can ramp up oil production at the wave of a hand).  Why?
The report insinuated that it was because Chavez is spending all the money
on the poor ("free food is good for votes") -- and sending the economy into
"ruins." --NY Transfer]

sent by Walter Lippmann (cubanews)

Los Angeles Times - August 13, 2004
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-venez13aug13,1,4376313.story

Chavez Camp Accuses U.S. of Pushing for His Recall

Some members of groups funded by the National Endowment for Democracy
have ties to the 2002 coup leaders. Venezuela votes Sunday.

by Ken Silverstein and Carol J. Williams
Los Angeles Times Staff Writers

CARACAS, Venezuela  As this bitterly divided nation approaches a vote
Sunday on whether to recall populist President Hugo Chavez, he and his
supporters are accusing Washington of interfering in Venezuela's affairs by
providing about $2 million to opposition groups.

Grants from the National Endowment for Democracy to more than a dozen
organizations over two years account for only a fraction of opposition
funding. But because some members of the U.S.-supported groups have ties to
the opponents who briefly deposed Chavez in April 2002, the former
paratrooper contends that the funding backs another effort to oust him.

"Washington has been financing the opposition with millions, including for
this referendum," Chavez said during a news conference Thursday at the
presidential palace.

Chavez won the presidency in December 1998, and his rule has polarized this
country, one of the world's largest oil producers. After the 2002 coup and a
two-month national strike failed, opponents changed strategy to focus on a
recall campaign. This spring, they submitted 2.5 million signatures,
slightly more than the 20% of registered voters required to trigger a
recall.

The Venezuela Solidarity Committee, a New York-based nonprofit group,
obtained several thousand pages of documents on NED programs in Venezuela
under the Freedom of Information Act and provided them to the Los Angeles
Times and other media.

At issue is whether the endowment strayed from its mandate to support the
development of democracy by assisting nonpartisan grass-roots organizations.
The NED technically is a private organization, but it receives most of its
budget  about $80 million this year  from Congress and other
taxpayer-financed sources.

Chris Sabatini, the NED's director for Latin American programs, defended the
endowment funding and denied that it was aimed at destabilizing Chavez's
government. He said the group was trying to promote dialogue in Venezuela
and opposed any unconstitutional actions against Chavez.

"In a situation of political polarization, if you want to pull people back
from the brink of conflict, you have to work with people at the brink,"
Sabatini said.

Chavez supporters see more ominous intentions.

"The NED says its goal is to build democracy, but it is giving money to
people who were key players in the coup and who are trying to oust a
democratically elected president," said Deborah James of the
Washington-based Venezuela Information Office.

One grant of $42,000 went to a group called Leadership and Vision to train
Caracas police "in democratic rights and responsibilities, and the peaceful
resolution of conflict."

Though he described the NED contribution as "totally insignificant," the
group's leader, economist Gerver Torres, said the training project "should
have been welcomed by a government committed to the public's interests." The
private, nonprofit group aims to educate voters and encourage broader
participation in the country's decision-making, he said.

But Chavez supporters say that some members of the capital's police force,
under the control of an opposition mayor, supported the coup. And Oscar
Garcia Mendoza, who signed Leadership and Vision's grant agreement with the
NED, also signed a newspaper advertisement two days after Chavez's brief
ouster that declared "unconditional support" for the coup government.

Join Up, another group that received NED funding, said the money it received
was spent on voter education and activities that equally benefited the pro-
and anti-Chavez camps. Join Up said it received $35,000; the NED grant lists
it as $54,000.

"None of this was hidden from anyone. We are extremely transparent," said
one of the group's leaders, Alejandro Plaz. He denied the government charge
that Maria Corina Machado, another leader of the group, attended the
swearing-in of Pedro Carmona, the oil executive who replaced Chavez until an
uprising of the poor restored him to power.

Late last month, government prosecutors here announced that they were
investigating Machado on conspiracy charges for having accepted NED funding.
Chavez supporters accuse Join Up of being openly hostile to Chavez. The
group's website says it "collected and processed signatures" in support of a
recall vote.

The grant agreement between the group and the NED lists promoting support
for the recall referendum as a "project objective."

Some recipients, such as the avidly anti-Chavez political party Justice
First, make no pretense of being nonpartisan. Several prominent members of
the party supported the coup leaders. One of them, Leopoldo Martinez, was
finance minister in the coup government.

The NED also has given money to a conservative think tank known as CEDICE to
help it draft "a viable [opposition] agenda." Rocmo Guijarro, the group's
general manager, signed the coup decree that abolished Venezuela's
Constitution, Supreme Court and National Assembly. Several members of
CEDICE's project advisory committee attended Carmona's swearing-in.

"In principle, NED is an independent tool to promote democracy, but in
practice it has been a weapon for regime change against governments the U.S.
deems as undesirable," said Peter Kornbluh, a Latin America policy
specialist at the National Security Archives, a nonprofit research group in
Washington. "Its actions are particularly controversial in Venezuela, where
the regime is democratically elected."

Chavez says Venezuela's oil wealth should fund relief for the poor, and his
power base is estimated by pollsters to be about 30% of the nation's 25
million people. A roughly equal share of middle class and elite despise
Chavez, saying he has steered the economy down a path of communist-style
revolution that has reduced per capita income, foreign investment and
employment.

Until Chavez's tenure, the United States had enjoyed close relations with
Venezuela. According to the Energy Department, the South American country
has 77.8 billion barrels of proven oil reserves, the most in the Western
Hemisphere. It accounts for about one-eighth of U.S. oil imports.

One point of contention has been Chavez's role at the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries, where he has fought to maintain production
quotas and keep oil prices high. Before his election, Venezuela regularly
exceeded its OPEC production targets, the Energy Department said.

The White House initially endorsed the 2002 coup, but it backed off after 19
Latin American countries condemned it.

A State Department inspector general report subsequently concluded that the
Bush administration did not have advance knowledge of the coup and "worked
to support democracy and constitutionality in Venezuela." However, the
report said the U.S. was in close contact with Chavez's opponents and that
its "displeasure with certain of President Chavez's policies, actions and
relationships was well-known by his opponents in Caracas." Chavez has a
close relationship with Cuban leader Fidel Castro.

The inspector general found that the NED and other U.S. assistance programs
"provided training, institution building, and other support to individuals
and organizations understood to be actively involved in the brief ouster of
the Chavez government." The report found no evidence that the NED's support
"directly contributed, or was intended to contribute," to the coup.

Williams reported from Caracas and Silverstein from Washington.


                                *
Search the NYTr Archives at:
http://olm.blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/

To subscribe or unsubscribe or change your settings via the web, visit:
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=================================================================
  NY Transfer News Collective   *   A Service of Blythe Systems
           Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us
              339 Lafayette St., New York, NY 10012
  http://www.blythe.org                  e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
=================================================================

www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
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