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magbana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-26-08 11:24 PM
Original message
The Dangers of US Destabilization Programs and Media Collusion

I wrote the following article back in January of this year, just as Jackson Diehl, an editor at the Washington Post had stepped into the land of no return with his lies and smears about President Chavez. I was delighted to see that Andres Izarra, Chavez' Communications Minister, whacked him in a letter today.

The collusion between the US government and media to destabilize countries led to unbelievably disastrous consequences for Haiti and, had it not been for a million people outside Miraflores palace scaring the bejeebers out of the criminal coup makers, Venezuela could have been put back 20-30 years regarding its social programs as well. And, so the only thing I can think of doing is to continue hammering on the press and that's why I wrote this article.


"Washington Post's Obsession with Chavez"

If you are in the mood to submerge yourself in someone else's hissy fit, check out this week's Washington Post editorial on Hugo Chavez, Ally to Kidnappers: Venezuela's Hugo Chávez endorses Colombian groups known for abductions, drug trafficking and mass murder. The subtitle gives you the basic thrust and makes it easy to dispense with the entire editorial in the following paragraph.

The Post condemns Chavez for his suggestion that the guerrilla group FARC in Colombia is not a terrorist organization. The Post calls Chavez an "ally to kidnappers," though the Venezuelan leader has consistently stated that his involvement in hostage negotiations does not mean he sides with the guerrillas. The Post does not mention that it was the US State Department that put FARC on its terrorist list in 2002 (some 40 years after the group formed). The 'terrorist' designation upped US military aid to the Uribe government to over $1 billion annually as part of 'Plan Colombia,' and approved US counter-insurgency funding and training. Enough said.

Now, let's talk about what is important. What's really going on here? Obviously, these kinds of editorials take up space that could be devoted to topics far more important to the US public: global warming, voting machine fraud, fixing the health care system, racism and its deadly endgame, the failed US education system, the need for a living wage, the military-industrial-prison complex and the ever-growing US "war on terror" which is preventing us from having the money and the wits to do anything about the aforementioned.

Instead the Wash Post editorial staff burns the midnight oil producing one rant after another about Chavez. Shortly after the December 2nd constitutional referendum in Venezuela, the Venezuelan ambassador to the US, Bernardo Alvarez, issued a statement that included the following:

"The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times and The New York Times dedicated over 11,000 words in 14 op-eds or editorials to attacking Venezuela just in the last month. The Miami Herald alone published more than 15 op-eds and editorials in that same period."

And why such obsession? Is Chavez that fascinating? What these three newspapers and many others are doing is partnering with the US government in destabilizing democratically-elected governments in order to ready the public for some form of US intervention. Period.

In the case of Haiti in 2004, these newspapers convinced us that the highly intelligent and talented president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, was a dictator and his followers were chimeres or thug-monsters. Further, these newspapers formed a chorus and pronounced that a groundswell of Haitians forced Aristide to resign and flee the country. The truth is that the US had to kidnap Aristide precisely because there was no groundswell and the 200 Haitian "rebels" who the US equipped and trained for the job couldn't get near the capital, Port-au-Prince, because they would have been squashed like bugs by Aristide's supporters.

In the case of the April 2002 coup in Venezuela, these newspapers played a similar role in demonizing Chavez and damning the efforts of the government to bring better health care and education to people who rarely, if ever, had access to such things. Yet, the only thing these newspapers could focus on was Chavez' relationship with Fidel Castro -- "he wants to make Venezuela another Cuba!" Their fictional accounts of events leading up to the coup paved the way for the US to applaud the illegal kidnapping and incarceration of Venezuela's democratically-elected president and congratulate the illegal seizure of the presidency by businessman, Pedro Carmona.

When newspapers distort facts, malign leaders, and help the US government set coups (and worse) in motion, there are far more casualties than the leaders themselves. It is estimated that in the lead up to the coup and the years since, upwards of 10,000 of Aristide's supporters were killed largely in an attempt to "make the coup stick" because it never had public support in the first place. When Aristide was kidnapped, over 8,000 Lavalas (Aristide's political party) officials throughout the country had to go into hiding and, when not done quickly enough, faced incarceration or murder. And for those still alive, progress made by Aristide's administration came to a halt -- children had to drop out of school, vital literacy and many health programs were abandoned, road projects vital to public commerce were abruptly ended, etc. Of course, the international embargo on aid that the US orchestrated in 2000 had already nearly strangled Haiti to death.

During the 2002 coup in Venezuela, several people were gunned down in the street during the "Bridge" incident in which Caracas police sharpshooters set upon Chavez and opposition demonstrators in an attempt to make it look like Chavez supporters were the perpetrators. A private TV station in collusion with the scheme aired footage of the incident later in the day in which they claimed that Chavez supporters were firing on unarmed demonstrators. Chavez supporters did use their guns that day --to fire at the sharpshooters in self-defense. Further, there were no demonstrators in the direction in which the Chavez supporters were firing as the TV station proclaimed. These scenes were shown repeatedly throughout the world and especially in the US to pave the way for acceptance of a coup that came hours later. But, not all the cameras could lie that day when, after Chavez was kidnapped, close to a million of his supporters surrounded the presidential palace, Miraflores, demanding his return. Pedro Carmona and his thugs new the jig was up and ran for their lives out of the palace. Fortunately, Carmona's "Attorney General" was captured and his proclamation to dissolve the national assembly, supreme court, and the central bank did not come to fruition. Luckily, for Venezuelans, they didn't lose the admirable gains of the Bolivarian revolution, but it easily could have gone the other way. And, still could. By virtue of the plethora of "trash Chavez" editorials, the US is still trying and President Chavez is wise to warn the world about attempts to kill him and overthrow his government.

In both Haiti, Venezuela and many other countries to come, the pattern is the same. An elite segment of the population collaborates with the United States to "arrange" for the destabilization of countries which is paid for by the US government's National Endowment for Democracy (NED). NED moves in and establishes fake human rights organizations that accuse democratically-elected leaders of "human rights abuses" (it may sound ludicrous, but the US and Canada did this in the case of Haiti and the Prime Minister, Yvon Neptune, spent 24 months in prison on such a trumped up charge). In addition, NED establishes NGO's to organize opposition "support" in which people are often paid to participate. And in lockstep, at every juncture, the US press is there completing the lie, sharpening the knives, and preparing the public for the kill.

What a way to make a living. How do these bastards sleep at night?

http://hcvanalysis.wordpress.com/2008/01/17/venezuela-w... /

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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-26-08 11:30 PM
Response to Original message
1. Guy Philippe:
Guy Philippe:


In 2000, Haitian authorities said they had discovered Philippe was plotting a coup with a group of other police chiefs. Philippe fled to the Dominican Republic, the country that shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti.

Haitian and U.S. authorities say that Philippe was involved in drug trafficking while he was police chief in Cap-Haitien, as well as during his exile in the Dominican Republic, although he has never been officially accused of any drug crimes.

The Haitian government has accused Philippe of organizing an attack on the police academy in Petionville, a suburb of Port-au-Prince, in July 2001, and another attack in December 2001 on the national palace. The Organization of American States investigated, but was unable to find out who was behind the attacks.

Philippe was thought to have been in exile, but in February 2004, he appeared at a news conference at the side of one of the leaders of the anti-Aristide rebels.

His rebel group, the National Front for the Liberation of Haiti, is largely made up of former soldiers who lost their jobs when the military was demobilized.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/haiti/philippe.html

Guy Philippe
Guy Philippe is a former member of the FAD’H (Haitian Army). During the 1991-94 military regime, he and a number of other officers received training from the US Special Forces in Equador, and when the FAD’H was dissolved by Aristide in early 1995, Philippe was incorporated into the new National Police Force.

He served as police chief in the Port-au-Prince suburb of Delmas and in the second city, Cap-Haitien, before he fled Haiti in October 2000 when Haitian authorities discovered him plotting what they described as a coup, together with a clique of other police chiefs. Since that time, the Haitian government has accused Philippe of master-minding deadly attacks on the Haitian Police Academy and the National Palace in July and December 2001, as well as hit-and-run raids against police stations on Haiti’s Central Plateau over last two years.

http://www.haiti-progres.com/eng02-25.html

The leader of the insurrectionary forces, Guy Philippe, age thirty-five, trained by the United States as an army officer in Ecuador. He was integrated into the new Haitian National Police in 1995 and his first command post was in Ouanaminthe, on the northern border with the Dominican Republic. Later, in about 1997 to 1999, he served as police chief for Delmas, a large urban district on the north side of the Port-au-Prince metropolitan area. During his tenure there, the UN/OAS International Civilian Mission learned that dozens of suspected gang members were summarily executed, mainly by police under the command of Inspector Berthony Bazile, Philippe’s deputy.

On October 18, 2000, Haiti’s prime minister announced that Philippe and other officers were plotting a coup d’etat. Before they were arrested, however, the men escaped over the border to the Dominican Republic.

http://www.flashpoints.net/Haiti_Rebel_Leaders.html
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magbana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-27-08 08:32 AM
Response to Reply #1
4. I was in Haiti six weeks after the coup . . .
participating n a delegation to determine the involvement of the US in the coup. A member of our delegation interviewed Philippe and I will soon put out a story about that and many other amazing things that took place while we were there. Thanks for providing folks with articles about him from Haiti Progres and Flashpoints.
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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-27-08 08:38 AM
Response to Reply #4
6. I and some others here followed every moment
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magbana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-27-08 11:07 AM
Response to Reply #6
9. Great stuff!! Excellent! Great narrative and picture chronicle of events
and who's who in the Haitian coup. Thank for doing this and look forward to seeing the stuff on Your Tube.
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magbana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-27-08 05:54 PM
Response to Reply #1
10. The DEA Charade and Guy Philippe
from my blog: Haiti-Cuba-Venezuela Analysis - http://hcvanalysis.wordpress.com

HAITI: DEA hunts Guy Philippe Again! US, Is this any way to treat the guy who did your dirty work?

Guy Philippe was one of two primary leaders of a paramilitary group that the US housed, trained and armed in the Dominican Republic to make cross-border attacks into Haiti beginning in 2002 in order to kill their countrymen aligned with the administration of the democratically-elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Last year, he started shooting his mouth off about which elite members of Haitian society helped finance the coup. Before long, the DEA engaged in a dramatic hunt looking for Philippe and came up empty-handed.
Perhaps, anticipating his announcement that he plans to run for the Haitian Senate, the DEA is after him again. The issue is that Philippe knows way too much about the US involvement in the coup and especially about hat of a diplomat who used to be at the US embassy in Port-au-Prince. Philippe must be contained and the bet way to do that is drive him underground. Arresting him is tricky because the US doesn't want him in court talking either. So the pretend pursuit of Philippe continues and soon you may be able to call the guy with the most blood on his hands from the 2004 coup -- Senator Philippe.
Former Haitian rebel sought by US for drug trafficking says he will run for Senate

The Associated Press
Thursday, March 27, 2008
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti: A former Haitian rebel wanted by the U.S. on drug-trafficking charges said Thursday that he plans to run for Senate.Guy Philippe, whose rebel band helped topple President Jean-Bertrand Aristide during a 2004 revolt, has been in hiding since U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents and Haitian police raided his home in July."You don't need to look hard for me because there are going to be elections," Philippe told Radio Vision 2000 in a telephone interview — without revealing his location. "I am going to be a candidate for Senate."The legislative elections, originally scheduled for last November, were postponed as Haiti launched an investigation into fraud allegations at its electoral council. A new date has not been set.The former soldier ran for president in 2006 under his Front for National Reconstruction Party, which hoped to reinstate the notorious Haitian military disbanded by Aristide.Philippe, who has been named in a sealed indictment in the U.S. state of Florida, evaded arrest during the DEA raid last summer. But local radio reported that foreign, English-speaking agents went looking for Philippe at his home in southern Haiti again on Tuesday.

In the radio interview, he accused the U.S. of fabricating allegations against him.

"Before when they wanted you they said you were a communist. Now they say you're a drug trafficker."

Philippe told a local radio show in October that he was the victim of a political plot and he dared U.S. agents to kill him.
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magellan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-26-08 11:34 PM
Response to Original message
2. Excellent!
I envy your skill at putting all this information together in such a concise way. Although I'm aware of all these events and what really went down, it's still a shocking read. If only people like you were reporting things instead of the shills who do it now.

Thank you for sharing this. Please keep writing.
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magbana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-27-08 08:36 AM
Response to Reply #2
5. Thanks for your kind comments
I have written several articles about Haiti and will post them to this list. What haoppened in Haiti is the model that was used in Venezuela as well and promises to be the model for future US imperial forays.
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JohnnyCougar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-26-08 11:42 PM
Response to Original message
3. It's the sad truth.
The US is continuing it's well-known War on Democracy in Latin America. The only thing scary about this is that it is likely to continue no matter who is elected President in 2008.
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chimper Donating Member (142 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-27-08 10:32 AM
Response to Reply #3
7. BUMP.
.
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Echo In Light Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-27-08 10:35 AM
Response to Reply #3
8. Yep
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JohnnyCougar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-27-08 08:34 PM
Response to Reply #3
11. Kick.
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