---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Center for Economic and Policy Research <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Aug 27, 2015 at 1:46 PM
Subject: NEW RELEASE: CEPR Analysts Author Revealing Chapters in Anthology
Covering Wikileaks Cables
To: [email protected]


NEW RELEASE: CEPR Analysts Author Latin America Chapters of New Book *The
WikiLeaks Files*
------------------------------

*For Immediate Release:* August 27, 2015
*Contact: *Alan Barber, (202) 293-5380 x115

*Washington, D.C.*- In 2013, Secretary of State Kerry announced that the
Monroe Doctrine era of U.S. intervention in Latin America’s internal
affairs was “over.”  A review of much of the major media coverage that
followed the release of thousands of U.S. State Department cables by
WikiLeaks appears to confirm this assertion, with numerous articles noting
the supposedly benign nature of the U.S. diplomatic activities described in
the cables.  In The WikiLeaks Files
<http://org.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=hbRjW38GV7SL9u2UiIguxnPjdQE11jRn>,
a new Verso anthology published in collaboration with WikiLeaks, three CEPR
analysts look more carefully at what the leaked cables reveal about U.S.
government activities in the Western Hemisphere and find that the cables
provide ample evidence that “US interference in Latin American countries’
internal political affairs remains, in fact, alive and well in the
twenty-first century.”

The co-authors of the book’s two chapters on Latin America and the
Caribbean – CEPR International Communications Director Dan Beeton, CEPR
Senior Associate Alexander Main and CEPR Research Associate Jake Johnston –
focus on cables related to countries with left governments, including
Bolivia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras and Venezuela – as well as Haiti,
where the U.S. has a long track record of aggressive internal intervention.

“The cables provide an extremely troubling but useful picture of the 21st
century arsenal of political intervention employed by U.S. diplomats in
Latin America,” said Alexander Main, lead author on the “Latin America and
the Caribbean” chapter.  “A better understanding of these methods and their
impact is particularly relevant today, given the current political turmoil
unfolding in a number of countries with left governments today.”

In “Latin America and the Caribbean,” the authors describe a variety of
soft and hard methods used by U.S. diplomats to try to influence the
outcome of elections, force governments to modify their policies and
undermine left governments and candidates. In “Venezuela,” the authors show
how the U.S. State Department, under both George W. Bush and the early part
of the Obama administration covered in the leaked cables, focuses
obsessively on the alleged Bolivarian “threat” to U.S. interests in the
region, with Venezuela effectively replacing the Soviet Union and Cuba as
the new regional bugbear.  The chapter also describes how numerous cables
show the constant, close coordination that exists between the U.S. embassy
in Caracas and the Venezuelan opposition, with constant attempts to unite
opposition factions and divide and/or co-opt pro-government groups.

“The WikiLeaks cables give the lie to official claims that the U.S. doesn’t
interfere in Venezuela’s internal politics,” said Dan Beeton, lead author
of the “Venezuela” chapter.  “In fact, the cables reveal how, over the past
15 years, undermining the government of Venezuela internally, and isolating
it regionally, have been key priorities for the U.S. government in the
hemisphere.”

As NSA whistleblower Edward J. Snowden wrote of the book, “Long after the
debate over the publication of these cables has been forgotten, the
documents themselves will remain a valuable archive for scholars and
students of US foreign policy. The essays that make up The WikiLeaks Files
shed critical light on a once secret history.”

###


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