MRzine.gif

 

 

NED in Venezuela



 

Kim Scipes, MR Zine, USA, 26 February 2014

 

As protests have been taking place in Venezuela for the last couple of
weeks, it is good to check on the National Endowment for Democracy (NED),
the US Empire's "stealth" destabilizer.  What has the NED been up to in
<http://www.ned.org/where-we-work/latin-america-and-caribbean/venezuela>
Venezuela?

 

Before going into details, it is important to note what the NED is and is
not.  First of all, it has nothing to do with the democracy we are taught in
civics classes, concerning one person one vote, everyone affected having a
say in the decision, etc. (which is commonly known as "popular" or
grassroots democracy).  The NED opposes this kind of democracy.

 

The NED promotes top-down, elite, constrained (or "polyarchal") democracy.
This is the democracy where the elites get to decide the candidates or
questions suitable to go before the people -- always limiting the choices to
what the elites are comfortable with.  Only after the elites have made their
decision are the people presented with the "choice" that the elites approve.
And the NED prattles on with its nonsense about how it is "promoting
democracy around the world."

 

The other thing to note about the NED is that it is not independent as it
claims, ad nauseum.  It was created by the US Congress, signed into US law
by President Ronald Reagan (that staunch defender of democracy), and it
operates from funds provided annually by the US Government.

Its Board of Directors is drawn from among the elites in the US Government's
foreign policy-making realm.  Past Board members have included Henry
Kissinger, Madeleine Albright, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Frank Carlucci, General
Wesley K. Clark, and Paul Wolfowitz.  Today's board can be found at
<http://www.ned.org/about/board> www.ned.org/about/board; most notable is
Elliot Abrams of Reagan Administration fame.

 

In reality, the NED is part of the US Empire's tools, and "independent" only
in the sense that no elected presidential administration can directly alter
its composition or activities, even if it wanted to.  It's initial project
director, Professor Allen Weinstein of Georgetown University, admitted in
theWashington Post of September 22, 1991, that
<https://www.google.com/search?q=%22a+lot+of+what+we+do+today+was+done+cover
tly+25+years+ago+by+the+CIA%22&tbm=bks> "a lot of what we do today was done
covertly 25 years ago by the CIA."

 

In other words, according to Professor William Robinson in his 1996 book
<http://books.google.com/books?id=SSjzaNssgAQC&pg=PA69> Promoting Polyarchy,
the NED is a product of US foreign policy shift from "earlier strategies to
contain social and political mobilization through a focus on control of the
state and governmental apparatus" to a process of "democracy promotion,"
whereby "the United States and local elites thoroughly penetrate civil
society, and from therein, assure control over popular mobilization and mass
movements."  What this means is, as I note in my 2010 book
<http://books.google.com/books?id=JxplA5cOqe0C> AFL-CIO's Secret War Against
Developing Country Workers: Solidarity or Sabotage?:

 

[I]nstead of waiting for a client government to be threatened by its people
and then responding, US foreign policy shifted to intervening in the civil
society of a country "of interest" (as defined by US foreign policy goals)
before popular mobilization could become significant, and by supporting
certain groups and certain politicians . . . channel[ing] any potential
mobilization in the direction desired by the US Government.

 

Obviously, this also means that these "civil society" organizations can be
used offensively as well, against any government the US opposes.  NED
funding, for example, was used in all of the "color revolutions" in Eastern
Europe and, I expect, is currently being put to use in the
<http://www.ned.org/where-we-work/eurasia/ukraine> Ukraine as well as
elsewhere.

 

How do they operate?  They have four "institutes" through which they work:
the International Republican Institute (currently headed by US Senator John
McCain), the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs
(currently headed by former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright), the
Center for International Private Enterprise (the international wing of the
US Chamber of Commerce), and the American Center for International Labor
Solidarity (ACILS), the foreign policy operation of the AFL-CIO, with
Richard Trumka the head of its Board of Directors.

 

As I documented in my book, the
<http://books.google.com/books?id=JxplA5cOqe0C&pg=PA63> ACILS had been
indirectly involved in the 2002 coup attempt in Venezuela, by participating
beforehand in meetings with leaders later involved in the coup, and then
denying afterwards the involvement of the leaders of the right-wing labor
organization (CTV) in the coup, leaders of an organization long affiliated
with the AFL-CIO.  We also know the NED overall had been active in Venezuela
since 1997.

 

The NED and its institutes continue to actively fund projects in Venezuela
today.  From the
<http://www.ned.org/publications/annual-reports/2012-annual-report/latin-ame
rica-and-the-caribbean/venezuela> 2012 NED Annual Report (the latest
available), we see they have provided $1,338,331 to organizations and
projects in Venezuela that year alone:  $120,125 for projects for
"accountability"; $470,870 for "civic education"; $96,400 for "democratic
ideas and values"; $105,000 for "freedom of information"; $92,265 for "human
rights"; $216,063 for "political processes"; $34,962 for "rule of law";
$45,000 for "strengthening political institutions"; and $153,646 for Center
for International Private Enterprise.

 

Additionally, however, as found on its
<http://www.ned.org/publications/annual-reports/2012-annual-report/latin-ame
rica-and-the-caribbean/latin-america-and-car> "Latin America and Caribbean
Regional" page, the NED has granted $465,000 to the ACILS to advance NED
objectives of "freedom of association" in the region, with another $380,000
dedicated to Venezuela and Colombia.  All this is in addition to yet another
$645,000 to the International Republican Institute and $750,000 to the
National Democratic Institute for International Affairs.

 

The irony of these pious claims for promoting "freedom of association," etc.
is that Venezuela is a country that has already developed public
participation to one of the highest levels in the world and that also has
one of the freest media in the world.  Even with massive private TV media
involvement in the 2002 coup, the government did not take away their right
to broadcast afterward.

 

In other words, the NED and its institutes are not active in Venezuela to
help promote democracy, as they claim, but in fact, to act against popular
democracy in an effort to restore the rule of the elite, top-down democracy.
They want to take popular democracy away from those nasty Chavistas and show
who is boss in the US Empire.  This author bets they fail.

  _____  

Kim Scipes, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Purdue
University North Central in Westville, IN, and is author of
<http://books.google.com/books?id=JxplA5cOqe0C> AFL-CIO's Secret War Against
Developing Country Workers: Solidarity or Sabotage? .  He can be reached
through his web site at  <http://faculty.pnc.edu/kscipes>
faculty.pnc.edu/kscipes.

 

 

From: http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/2014/scipes260214.html

 

 

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