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Full
disclosure: Buying The
THE
US State Department is secretly funnelling millions of dollars to Latin
American journalists, according to documents obtained in June under
the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). The 20 documents released to
this author - including grant proposals, awards, and quarterly reports
- show that between 2007 and 2009, the State Department's little-known
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour (state.gov/g/drl) channelled
at least $4 million to journalists in Bolivia, Guatemala, Haiti, Nicaragua,
and Venezuela, through the Pan American Development Foundation (PADF,
padf.org), a Washington-based grant maker. The documents shed light
on one small portion of the overall The
records released thus far pertain only to one particular programme,
called 'Fostering Media Freedom in Both the State Department and PADF declined to comment for this article. 'Fostering
Media Freedom in These
government entities fund hundreds of foreign non-governmental organisations
(NGOs), journalists, policy makers, journalist associations, media outlets,
training institutes, and academic journalism faculties. Grant sizes
range from a few thousand dollars to millions. For some groups and individuals,
the funding can come from more than one By serving as an intermediary, PADF has until now hidden the State Department's role in developing Venezuelan media - one of the political opposition's most powerful weapons against President Hugo Ch vez and his Bolivarian movement. Neither the State Department, PADF, nor the Venezuelans whom they fund have disclosed the programme's existence. Yet, as one document notes, the State Department's own policies require 'all publications' that it funds to 'acknowledge the support'. The provision was simply waived for PADF. 'For the purposes of this award,' the document reads, ' ...the recipient is not required to publicly acknowledge the support of the US Department of State.' The document does not explain how the programme's purposes - which, among other things, include establishing professional norms in journalism - do not require PADF or its 'subgrantees' to acknowledge that they are funded by the US government. Although
$700,000 may not seem like a lot of money, the funds have been strategically
designed to underwrite the best of PADF's
These
initiatives have been undertaken with the collaboration of well-connected
opposition NGOs that focus on media. Only one of the documents names
any of these organisations - which was probably an oversight on the
State Department's part, since the recipients' names and a lot of other
information are excised in the rest of the documents. A 2007 document
names Espacio P£blico (espaciopublico.org) and Instituto Prensa y Sociedad
(ipys.org.ve) as recipients of 'subgrants'. Neither of these organisations
has disclosed its participation in the PADF Venezuela programme. On
its website, Espacio P£blico describes itself as a 'non-profit, non-governmental
civil association that is independent and autonomous of political parties,
religious institutions, international organisations or any government'
(emphasis added). The other 'subgrantee', the Venezuelan chapter of
Instituto Prensa y Sociedad (IPyS-Ve), is a Peru-based journalism organisation
funded by USAID and the NED. Both groups strongly criticise the Ch vez
government for its alleged assault on free expression and other human
rights in The
disclosure in July of these organisations' collaboration with PADF led
to calls in Neither
statement addressed the real issue: the NGOs' failure to disclose the
Traditionally,
the leading 'democracy promoter' in PADF's
main office is housed within the Organisation of American States (OAS),
granting its officers privileged access to the big players in hemispheric
affairs. Funded by various US government agencies and a few private
sources - including Stanford Financial Group (recently under investigation
for bad banking practices and its CIA connections) and ex-Cuban rum
maker Bacardi - PADF has worked in Latin America and the Caribbean since
1962, generally focusing on economic development and disaster relief.
Its mission statement, however, does leave open the possibility of getting
into the 'democracy promotion' racket: The online mission statement
says the organisation 'empowers disadvantaged people and communities'
not only 'to achieve sustainable economic and social progress' but also
'to strengthen their ... civil society' (emphasis added). 'Strengthening
civil society', like 'promoting democracy', is NGO-speak for meddling
in another country's politics, even promoting so-called regime change.
As one of the documents notes, for example, PADF has worked in PADF
emphasised its solid connections and years of experience in its bid
to work as the State Department's intermediary. In one grant proposal,
the organisation described itself as 'affiliated with the OAS' and said
it 'operates independently of bureaucratic obstacles that could otherwise
slow implementation and sub-grant approvals'. PADF added that it already
had 'over two years of experience working in PADF
furthermore advertised that it has access to many sources of cash flow:
'In addition we can facilitate private sector cash and in-kind donations
from both US and in-country donors to complement project resources,
if and when needed. PADF's partnerships with regional business and civil
society associations and other regional groupings further enhance our
capabilities. They provide for rapid access to international agencies,
hemispheric leaders and networks of corporate donors and NGO partners.'
PADF even offered a novel way of evading the official Venezuelan exchange
rate. 'By using PADF's new "bond swap" system to transfer
funds to The
revelations that the United States is funding journalism in Venezuela
and elsewhere in the hemisphere come on the heels of a report released
in May by the centre-right think tank FRIDE (fride.org), based in Madrid,
which found that since 2002, the United States has funnelled an estimated
$3 million to $6 million every year to 'small projects with political
parties and NGOs' in Venezuela through an alphabet soup of shifting,
intertwined channels. (The FRIDE report was removed from the group's
website soon after it was publicised in June.) Thus, the government
support for media fits together with a larger, long-term Today's
The
'successful' As
the research of Peter Kornbluh shows, the CIA in less than a year spent
$1.95 million on El Mercurio, which was also funded by the ITT Corporation,
the CIA's main private collaborator in After
the congressional investigations in the 1970s, the burden of funding
overseas media shifted to entities like USAID and the NED, the latter
described by the New York Times as 'a quasi-governmental foundation
created by the Reagan Administration in 1983 to channel millions of
Federal dollars into anti-Communist private diplomacy'. One of the NED's
first major projects was supporting La Prensa, a major pro-US newspaper
in By
early 1987, NED delegations were openly visiting La Prensa. During the
1990 presidential campaign, NED provided the newspaper with at least
$1 million, with much of the funding being funnelled through Venezuelan
and Costa Rican pass-throughs. Thanks in part to this and other Domestic manipulation The
'Records and interviews,' the Times wrote, 'show how the Bush administration has used its control over access and information in an effort to transform the analysts into a kind of media Trojan horse - an instrument intended to shape terrorism coverage from inside the major TV and radio networks.' To date, none of the networks that featured these undisclosed Bush administration publicists - ABC, CBS, NBC, MSNBC, CNN, and Fox - have mentioned the Times story, which won a Pulitzer Prize. Although
these commentators failed to disclose their arrangements with the At a time when US journalism is widely acknowledged to be in decline - with thousands of people laid off from the industry since 2008 - it is ironic that the government has seen fit to pump millions of tax dollars into developing the profession elsewhere, even as calls for a government 'bailout' of domestic journalism are ignored or ridiculed as socialistic. Another irony is that undisclosed foreign state support for ostensibly independent reporting violates basic principles of journalism's professional integrity, yet much of the US funding has been undertaken in the name of fostering professionalism and inculcating journalistic standards. Reporters
in Jeremy
Bigwood is an investigative reporter whose work has appeared in American
Journalism Review, The Village Voice, and several other publications.
He covered Latin American conflicts from 1984 to 1994 as a photojournalist.
This article is reproduced, excluding endnotes, from NACLA Report on
the *Third World Resurgence No. 240/241, August-September 2010, pp 66-69 |
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