More Than 100 Latin America Experts Question Human Rights Watch's Venezuela Report




South America: Media has become a political battleground

From Argentina to Venezuela, [social change] governments have [rightly] identified the media as a political obstacle.

Editors’ Note: This piece is published for informational/topical value. Readers must keep in mind the Guardian (U>K>) is a liberal not radical publication.  As such it gives undue credit to Reporters Sans Frontières, an organization of equivocal allegiances being used tacitly or wittingly by US propaganda agencies.  During Dr. Salvador Allende’s tragic tenure, the Chilean media was vicious in its flagrant agitation for a coup and constant slander of the revolutionary objectives and major leaders.  The nation’s main media group then, headed by El Mercurio (equivalent to the New York Times), was unceasing in its tendentious, inflammatory coverage.  Years later, the Church committee hearings in the U.S. corroborated the treacherous role played by the Chilean media barons, including the fact  that El Mercurio was receiving ample support from the CIA, which it scarcely needed anyhow.

By Rory Carroll [print_link]

The Guardian (U.K.)

1/4/10

HRW-jose_miguel_vivanco

Television networks, radio stations and newspapers have become political battlegrounds pitting media owners and journalists against governments in South America. Charismatic presidents in the Andean states, and in Argentina, have identified the media as a principal obstacle to their efforts to transform the region. The subjects of clashes range from Caribbean slums, where journalists are accused of exaggerating crime, to icy Patagonian resorts, where they are accused of confecting corruption scandals.

South America’s media war started, and remains most intense, in Venezuela. When Hugo Chávez swept to power a decade ago, promising to oust discredited elites, the media feted him. But they turned with a vengeance and backed a coup that briefly ousted him in 2002.

Chavez struck back: he expanded the state’s media empire and cowed private broadcasters. This year he shut dozens of radio stations and said Globovision, the last critical TV voice, would follow. It promoted his assassination, he said, and hyped murder rates in the slums. [What Guardian says here as if it were only a dubious claim is a fact. —Eds]

BenoJosé Miguel Vivanco, Americas director at Human Rights Watch, goes further: “With the exception of Cuba, Venezuela is the only country in the region that shows such flagrant disregard for universal standards of freedom of expression.”

Ecuador’s president, Rafael Correa, described the media as his “greatest enemy” and denounced journalists as “corrupt, mediocre, shameless”. He sent police to seize two TV stations in a debt dispute and promised to shake up the awarding of radio and television frequencies.

Correa proposed a bill to create a media watchdog and oblige those who work in the industry to have a journalism degree. Critics dubbed it the ley mordaza, gag law, and have delayed it in congress.

Colombia ostensibly has a free press despite insurgencies by narco-trafficking leftist guerrillas. But big private media groups are controlled by a few rich families and muffle criticism of President Álvaro Uribe, an ally of the US.

Outspoken journalists who expose government links to rightwing paramilitary death squads are often killed or exiled. A Bogotá media seminar co-sponsored by the British NGO Cafod was awash with stories of self-censorship, intimidation and threats.

In Argentina, President Cristina Kirchner won a bitter battle against Grupo Clarín, one of Latin America’s biggest media conglomerates, by opening the airwaves to new players. Clarín, which also lost its contract to broadcast championship football, said the president was punishing critical news coverage, including stories about the first couple’s alleged dodgy land deals in Patagonia. Analysts said Kirchner had a political agenda but that broadcast reform was overdue.

CONTROVERSY:

 




ANIMAL DEFENSE—Muscles and a good heart may not be enough

Exclusive from ANIMAL PEOPLE,  November/December 2009:

“Reality TV” & Rescue Ink Unleashed

National Geographic Channel:  10 p.m. Fridays.  Debuted September 25,  2009  [print_link]

BY MERRITT CLIFTON

rescueInk-ensembleAFTER THE SUCCESS OF Animal Precinct, So-called “reality” TV scraps the costs of scripting, choreographing,  and hiring professional actors,  in favor of editing impromptu footage into something with enough semblance of a plot to hold viewers through the commercials.  Yet,  despite the pretense of being “real” because it is unrehearsed,  “reality” TV tends to closely parallel the conventions of scripted TV,  which evolved in the first place because those conventions work.

Early “reality” crime shows,  like Animal Precinct,  which debuted in 2001,  follow actual law enforcement personnel on their actual rounds.  After Animal Precinct became a smash hit came virtual copies:  Animal Cops Detroit,  Animal Cops Houston,  Miami Animal Cops,  Animal Cops San Francisco,  Animal Planet Heroes:  Phoenix, Animal Cops South Africa,  and Animal Cops Philadelphia.

Then came cartoon time.  Much as the private detective genre follows the cop show,  with protagonists who have more liberty to violate the constraints of real-life law enforcement,  the Rescue Ink rescuers aid animals without having to observe warrant requirements and carefully maintain a chain of custody of evidence.  Instead of being neatly outfitted and clean-shaven public servants,  the Rescue Ink characters are tattooed bikers,  with the muscle-bound bodies of power lifters.  Rather than driving mundane animal control vans, they are shown with flamboyantly painted motorcycles and hot rods. At times they use language that animal control officers cannot use on the job.

Mostly,  on camera at least,  they do things like feed pit bull terriers whose person is hospitalized,  drive animals to sanctuaries,  take animals to be sterilized,  and talk about how they feel about animals.  The image they project,  however,  constantly cultivated by the voice-over narration,  is that they are vigilantes on behalf of abused animals,  who at any moment might knuckle a bad guy’s head.

Like Animal Precinct,  Rescue Ink Unleashed is videotaped in New York City.  Knowingly or not,  it follows a tradition begun locally by ASPCA founder Henry Bergh.  On November 21,  1870,  Bergh coordinated a police raid on a dogfight at Kit Burns’ Tavern,  the animal fighting venue depicted in the 2002 Martin Scorcese film Gangs of New York.   One of the raiders,  apparently a Captain Allaire, dropped through a skylight into mid-ring in mid-fight to call an abrupt halt to the proceedings.

Later renditions of the raid,  including on the ASPCA web site,  mis-attribute the plunge to Bergh himself,  who at six feet tall,  age 47,  probably could not have fit through the skylight and made the hard landing safely enough to confront the dogfighters. Bergh loved to tell the story,  though,  to impress upon animal abusers and potential donors that if diplomacy failed–and Bergh himself was a former diplomat–any means would be taken to bring perpetrators to justice.

The tradition of the tough guy for the animals has played out through countless variations since,  including the quasi-piracy of Paul Watson and the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society,  the undercover videography of Steve Hindi and SHARK,  the nightrider tactics of various factions operating as the “Animal Liberation Front,”  and the feral cat feeding done by the late New York City crime boss Vicente Gigante.  Though examples exist everywhere,  New York City seems to produce a disproportionate number–at least of those that get high-profile media attention.      Of note as a possible antecedent for Rescue Ink Unleashed was The Witness,  a 1999 Tribe of Heart video,  much aired at animal rights conferences during the next few years,  which dramatized the animal rescue work of then-Brooklyn building contractor Eddie Lama, an ex-convict portrayed as a tough guy.  Actually a soft-spoken fellow who acknowledged the decades of work of many little known rescuers before him,  Lama even at the peak of his transient celebrity tended to stand in the back of the room at conferences and listen attentively to the other speakers.  His most confrontational activity appeared to be airing animal rights videos to sidewalk passers-by on a widescreen TV mounted in the back of his van.     Lama and partner Eddie Rizzo,  also an ex-convict,  in 1998 founded the Oasis Sanctuary in Callicoon,  New York.  Rizzo died in 2004.  Donations fell as The Witness was shown less and less.  By mid-2009 Lama was trying to find other homes for the remaining animals,  and trying to sell the property,  after paying $25,000 in back property taxes.  “The plan remains to relocate,”  Lama told ANIMAL PEOPLE in November 2009,  “but unfortunately that can not take place unless we sell some of the property.  Our concern is that unpaid property taxes will once again put our place in jeopardy.”

Animal advocates,  frustrated by the slow pace of trying to bring abusers to justice through often inadequate laws and a clogged, sometimes indifferent judicial system,  tend to like the idea of tough guys for the animals meting out vigilante justice.     Yet,  while this is the image that Rescue Ink Unleashed plays up,  reality is that the show frequently illustrates the limits of the tough-guy approach.The alleged cat-shooter they confront in the early episodes is a scrawny apparent immigrant who stands up to them and calls the police on them.  They yell in the man’s face,  and offer him non-violent help to keep cats out of his garden,  but appear to be no more successful in amending his outlook and his ways than the neighbors who summoned Rescue Ink.

Neither do the men of action accomplish anything extraordinary in two afternoons of trying to help an animal control officer catch four free-roaming chickens.  Instead of baiting and netting them all at once,  as successful chicken-catchers do every day all over the world,  Rescue Ink chases the chickens all over the neighborhood.  The chickens are finally caught,  but only after the Rescue Ink members demonstrate many ways to stress already frightened animals–albeit animals who soon receive good homes at a sanctuary.

Polling other animal rescue agencies,  Patrick Whittle of Long Island Newsday found Rescue Ink praised by Associated Humane Societies of New Jersey chief executive Roseann Trezza and Katie’s Critters Small Animal Rescue founder Wendy Culkin,  but criticized by Michelle Curtin of Second Chance Wildlife Rescue and Suffolk County SPCA chief Roy Gross.  Rescue Ink members had crashed a Suffolk County SPCA press conference a few days earlier to denounce how the agency had handled a major serial cruelty and neglect case,  and argued with Curtin at the scene–in front of local TV news cameras.

rescueInk-bigant

"Big Ant" (Anthony) is one of the team's most engaging members.

Regardless of the apparent sincere intent and efforts of the rescuers,  Rescue Ink Unleashed  is more about television than humane work.  But there is also some real-life crime drama behind the TV scenes,  exposed on November 14,  2009 by Mark Harrington of Long Island Newsday.

“Robert Misseri,  40,  has alternately been described as the executive director,  organizer,  dispatcher,  CEO and principal” of Rescue Ink,  Harrington began.     Rescue Ink itself is nonprofit,  but “two separate entities, Rescue Ink Productions and Rescue Ink Publications, are for-profit enterprises that pay members for participation in the TV show” and a book deal,  Harrington explained.  “Misseri is managing partner of both companies.”

The book was co-authored by former Newsday reporter and columnist Denise Flaim.

Misseri told Harrington that he has donated at least $12,000 of his money to the nonprofit Rescue Ink entity,  said the production company pays expenses for the show,  including ‘payments to all participants,'”  Harrington added.     “In a 2000 indictment against him and 10 others,”  Harrington revealed,  “Misseri was accused by federal prosecutors of directing the ‘Galasso-Misseri crew’ of the Colombo organized crime family. But as the case neared trial,  the charges against him largely disintegrated.  According to the indictment,  a witness had accused Misseri of being in a car during the 1994 murder of Louis Dorval,  an accused mobster.  Prosecutors have since charged a Long Island gym owner,  Christian Tarantino,  who was not among the original 11 defendants,  with ordering Dorval killed. Tarantino’s lawyer said he denies it.”

Misseri was also charged with arson.   “The arson accusation involved a fire at the Have-A-Home Kennel in Old Brookville,”  wrote Harrington,  “in which Misseri denied any role.  A police report made no mention of him having been in a car of men who confessed to the crime,  court papers said.”     The murder and arson charges were dropped,  but Misseri pleaded guilty to alleged money-laundering in 2002.  “In addition to 37 months in prison, Misseri was sentenced to three years supervised release and ordered to pay $109,349 in restitution, court papers say. He was given credit for time served,  and he says he served 32 months,”  Harrington wrote.

Another Rescue Ink cofounder,  Joseph Panzarella,  allegedly survived an attempted mob “hit.”  According to Harrington,  “In court papers filed in the 2008 racketeering and murder trial of convicted mobster Charles Carneglia,  Panzarella is described by prosecutors in Brooklyn as a ‘Gambino family associate who was shot in a 1995 mob conflict.  Carneglia,  according to the papers,  sought to avenge the shooting of Panzarella by another accused mobster.  The court papers in a footnote describe Panzarella as an ‘unnamed co-conspirator’ in five racketeering acts of the Carneglia case.  He has not been charged with any crime.”

In April 2000,  when Misseri was jailed for five months awaiting trial,  “the North Fork Animal Welfare League recalled [in a letter to the court] how Misseri and his wife happened to be driving by when a dog escaped from its kennel,” Harrington noted.  The Misseris helped to slow traffic and recapture the dog.

Thus there is some evidence that Misseri and friends were always tough guys for the animals.  But the most serious work done against animal abuse in New York City is still done by the direct successors of Henry Bergh et al,  the ASPCA officers featured in Animal Precinct,  who have badges,  search warrants,  and gather evidence that stands up in court.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR





THE USUAL HIDDEN CRIMINALS THAT SHAPE MEDIA CONTENT

Hollywood enlists in Bush’s war drive

We reproduce here an article by David Walsh, a leading art/cinema critic for the World Socialist Web Site in keeping with our tradition of reposting pieces of lasting interest.

“Samuel Johnson’s saying that patriotism is the last refuge of scoundrels has some truth in it but not nearly enough. Patriotism, in truth, is the great nursery of scoundrels, and its annual output is probably greater than that of even religion. Its chief glories are the demagogue, the military bully, and the spreaders of libels and false history. Its philosophy rests firmly on the doctrine that the end justifies the means—that any blow, whether above or below the belt, is fair against dissenters from its wholesale denial of plain facts.”—H. L. Mencken

By David Walsh
Original dateline: 19 November 2001  [print_link]

h-wood-shari.sumnerRedstoneviacom.600

All in the family: Viacom's boss Sumner Redstone with daughter Shari. Under Redstone's reactionary bottom-line mentality quality at Paramount, CBS and UPN has sunk even further.


On November 11 (2001) more than forty top Hollywood executives met for two hours with Karl Rove, George W. Bush’s chief political advisor, to discuss ways in which the film industry could contribute to the “war on terrorism.” Here truly was a meeting of great minds!

Present were some of the most powerful figures in the motion picture industry and corporate figures whose holdings include entertainment companies, such as billionaire Sumner Redstone of Viacom Inc. (which owns Paramount, CBS and UPN). All the major studios were represented—Warner Bros., Twentieth Century Fox, Columbia Pictures, Universal Studios, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and DreamWorks SKG—as were the US television networks—ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, UPN and WB—and the film industry unions.

Rove is a right-wing ideologue and dirty trickster, one of those who played a key role in Bush’s hijacking of the presidential election last year. The film executives, most of them Democratic Party loyalists, are extravagantly paid mediocrities, in large part responsible for a seemingly endless supply of banal and vulgar products. Studio films in recent years have scrapped most traces of oppositional sentiment, except of the most anti-social and retrograde variety, and reveled in militarism, chauvinism and general reverence for all the institutions—police, church, business—of American capitalism. To ask more of Hollywood seems a daunting challenge! What further contribution could it make to the cause of conformism and political reaction?

During the two-hour meeting at the lavish Peninsula Hotel in Beverly Hills, Rove reportedly outlined seven themes: that the US campaign in Afghanistan is a war against terrorism, not Islam; the government’s call for “community service” should be publicized; US troops and their families need to be supported; the September 11 attacks were global attacks requiring a global response; the US campaign is a “war on evil”; the government and the film industry have the responsibility to reassure children of their safety; propaganda should be avoided.

After the meeting, following up on the last point, everyone involved hastened to assert that the Bush administration was not attempting to dictate in any fashion the content of Hollywood’s films. “The industry decides what it will do and when it will do it,” Rove told reporters. Apparently lost on the media commentators was the obvious redundancy of reassurances that the government would not impose its views in an arena where its policies find absolutely no opposition.

Rove did not elaborate on how filmmakers should grapple with the problem of a “war on evil.” He left that task to the creative minds at the film studios’ disposal. Nor did he explain how children (or anyone else) were to be made to feel safe when the government promises to conduct a war of indefinite length and scope using the entire lethal arsenal of modern weaponry against enemies it defines as it goes along.

Jack Valenti, the long-time president of the Motion Picture Association of America and an attendee at the November 11 gathering, suggested that Hollywood’s contribution could begin with a series of public service announcements, to be broadcast in the US and abroad, making “clear to the millions of Muslims in the world that this is not an attack on Muslims—this is an attack on people who murder innocent people.”

After a previous meeting on October 17 between lower-level Bush administration figures and Hollywood executives, right-wing producer Lionel Chetwynd commented, “There was a feeling around the table that something is wrong if half the world thinks we’re the Great Satan, and we want to make that right. There’s a genuine feeling that we as Americans are failing to get our message across to the world.” That the US is seen as an oppressor by “half the world” is a remarkable admission and a reality that is not likely to be cleared up by a round of public service announcements.

The film studio executives assembled on November 11 responded enthusiastically to Rove’s appeal. Sherry Lansing, Paramount Pictures chairwoman, told the media following the meeting, “All of us have this incredible need, this incredible urge to do something.”

The “incredible need” and “incredible urge” to go along with the Bush administration’s campaign of lies and propaganda has apparently been felt by virtually the entire film industry. Not a single leading figure has been capable of condemning the terror attacks in New York and Washington and at the same time opposing the slaughter in Afghanistan and the sweeping assault on democratic rights in the US.

 

Sherry Lansing

Paramount's Sherry Lansing with protegé Tom Cruise. “All of us have this incredible need, this incredible urge to do something.”

The universal response among Hollywood’s “left” (i.e., tepid liberal Democrats) has been to drop all criticism of George W. Bush and throw in their lot with the war drive. Not one of these stalwarts can apparently find it in himself or herself to resist the tide of media-driven right-wing opinion. There is nothing so terrifying for an American “celebrity” as the thought of being excluded from the limelight and facing even temporary isolation. There is a certain logic to these fears: how much would be left of most of these people if the element of celebrity were removed?

From the point of view of the film studio executives, as Jon Friedman of CBS.MarketWatch.com put it, the “big challenge now is figuring out how it can look like a do-gooder [i.e., toe the Bush line politically] while it actually focuses on its ongoing obsession: making money.” Tom Pollock, former vice chairman of MCA, bluntly told a panel at the recent New York Film Festival: “We live in a capitalist society, and what motivates the studios is making money.”

Hollywood has been notoriously poor in recent years at predicting popular tastes. It has managed to satisfy or please almost no one with its increasingly bland and bombastic works. Whichever direction, or combination of directions, the studios choose to take—ever lighter fare, patriotic and nationalistic rubbish, moral uplift—the further degeneration of their products is virtually guaranteed.

(It should be noted, along these lines, that the inimitable Sylvester Stallone, whose last film success no one can or probably wants to remember, has reportedly been considering reviving his Rambo persona and taking on the Taliban in a new film, skydiving into Afghanistan to challenge terrorism. This could have unfortunate consequences as it might stir up memories of Rambo III (1988), in which Stallone’s one-man army fought against the Soviet army in Afghanistan alongside the Mujaheddin, described as “freedom fighters”—in other words, as an ally of Osama bin Laden—in a work generally described as unintentionally hilarious.)

Films made under the conditions Rove and his friends in the film industry envision, more or less on orders from a warmongering ruling elite out for world domination, cannot possibly have serious artistic or human value. Meaningful works will increasingly be those that are made in the teeth of official disapproval and on the basis of a thought-out criticism of the entire social order, including its ideology, its morals and its art.

The attempt to align Hollywood more closely with the political and ideological needs of the American ruling elite did not begin on September 11, despite the claims of various superficial observers. For example, Bernard Weinraub in the New York Times (“The Moods They Are A’Changing In Films; Terrorism Is Making Government Look Good”) suggests that “For more than 30 years, a staple of popular culture in movies, books and television has been the depiction of the government as a hostile, corrupt, even evil force spinning elaborate conspiracies to manipulate and suppress Americans. … By every account, the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, and the war being waged against Afghanistan, has changed the way the entertainment industry portrays the government, at least for the moment.” Not to be outdone, Deborah Solomon advanced the same notion in the Times in relation to the visual arts in “Once Again, Patriotic Themes Ring True as Art.”

This claim, that “everything changed” on September 11, is belied by Weinraub’s own account. He notes that several television series about the CIA and other intelligence agencies were scheduled to air this autumn, and that “Even before the terrorist attacks, entertainment executives and academics had noted a new patriotism and support for government in popular culture.” He refers to Steven Spielberg’s Saving Private Ryan, the action films Air Force One and Independence Day, the “Band of Brothers” television series and books by Stephen Ambrose and Tom Brokaw, as well as “The West Wing,” about “a decent and liberal president who serves as a sort of father figure to his staff members.”

The steady rightward movement of prominent filmmakers and others in the arts and entertainment field is one aspect of a generalized social trend: the lurch to the right by privileged layers of the upper middle class, increasingly isolated from and hostile to the working population. It is not for nothing that the policeman, in one guise or another, has become an almost omnipresent protagonist on television and cinema screens. Instinctively, film producers, writers and directors seek to flatter and idealize one of the principal social types to whom they entrust the task of defending their wealth and position.

It was not always thus. As Weinraub indicates, “Throughout the 1960s and 70s, the anti-government fervor accelerated. The Nixon presidency, its collapse, and the end of the war in Indochina made it improbable, if not unthinkable, to release films that depicted the government—or the establishment—in positive ways.” He refers to such works as Bonnie and Clyde, Three Days of the Condor, The Graduate, Dr. Strangelove, Five Easy Pieces, Chinatown, The Godfather and A Clockwork Orange, and at a later date, J.F.K. One might add All the President’s Men and The Parallax View, as well as—for their warning about the threat represented by the military high command—films like Seven Days in May and Fail Safe. And there are many others, in a general anti-establishment vein, including Robert Altman’s work in the 1970s, the films of John Cassavetes and certain early films by Martin Scorsese.

The above-mentioned films were hardly all works of genius, nor did they necessarily demonstrate great social insight. Nonetheless they sought, in one way or another, to examine American life in a critical fashion. Weinraub makes the extraordinary comment: “With the exception of The Godfather, such movies would probably not be made today because they would be seen as too dark, too downbeat.” If Weinraub is correct (and he probably is), what a devastating indictment of the American film studios!

There has been some discussion in the press of the possibility or advisability of reproducing “the kind of intensive collaboration Hollywood had with Washington during World War II, when acclaimed filmmakers such as Frank Capra created inspirational movies and documentaries on the conflict” (Washington Post). Capra produced and directed a seven-part film series, Why We Fight (1942-45), for screening to US troops.

Capra’s series was unabashed propaganda, but it appealed to and played upon the democratic instincts of those who had joined the military to take up a struggle against fascism. It could, in other words, tell at least a portion of the truth. For example, in Part 2— The Nazis Strike —the filmmakers examined the growth and ambitions of the Nazi movement, its military buildup and conquest of eastern Europe. The Battle for Russia (Part 5) was obliged to pay tribute to the titanic resistance of the Soviet people and the Red Army, which had “shattered the whole legend of Nazi invincibility.”

How would Hollywood approach the same theme today? Perhaps Why We Fight in Afghanistan could begin with the Unocal or Halliburton logo flashed on the screen. In any event, a serious discussion of the origins of the Taliban or the recent history of Afghanistan, impossible without examining the role of the US in fomenting and financing Islamic fundamentalism, would be entirely out of bounds. Any film produced today on the conflict in Afghanistan would be nothing but a tissue of lies and apologies for barbarism.

The basis for the sort of democratic-patriotic appeal made during World War II has not simply been undercut by the openly predatory character of American interventions overseas, but also by the transformed social relations within the US. The creation of a deeply polarized society, in which vast wealth is possessed by a brazen handful, has undermined patriotic sentiment. The power of appeals to the traditions of the American Revolution and the Civil War depended, in the final analysis, on the ability of the population to improve its living standards and the maintenance of what one might call a generally democratic atmosphere, one that at least encouraged the notion that the people had some say in political affairs. The open consolidation of American oligarchic rule has put paid to all that. Subsequent events will demonstrate how shallow the reserve of patriotism has become in the US.

Even the New York Times’ Clyde Haberman was obliged to note that the government’s manipulative conduct in regard to the war effort in Afghanistan insured that “finding a latter-day Frank Capra may not be easy. … Essentially, all that the American public knows is what the government wants it to know. Some critics ask if the line between information and propaganda has been uncomfortably blurred.”

In the long run the result of the present rush by the film and music industries to throw themselves at the feet of the imperialist politicians in Washington, D.C. will be a salutary one. A great deal of dead wood will be sorted out: overrated screen idols of both sexes, rock and roll stars that no one cares about any more, a legion of hack directors and writers, assorted hangers-on. Those who adopt the aims and insatiable appetites of the US ruling elite as their own will sooner or later become the objects of popular scorn and disgust. Their appearance will coincide with their essence: human zeroes.

World Socialist Web Site.



The Nation magazine and the Obama Doctrine

Dateline: 12 December 2009  [print_link]

The Nation's editor and part-owner, Katrina Vandenheuvel

The Nation's editor and part-owner, Katrina vanden Heuvel

By Joseph Kishore

Bristling with imperialist arrogance, Obama’s speech amounted to a full-throated defense of US aggression and a brief for the unlimited use of military violence to recolonize large parts of the world. Delivered by a president who only a week before had announced an escalation of the war in Afghanistan and Pakistan that will lead to the deaths of many thousands, the speech essentially asserted the right of the United States to invade any country in the world.

“The instruments of war do have a role to play in preserving the peace,” Obama insisted. The US, he said, has the right to “act unilaterally if necessary” and to launch wars whose purpose “extends beyond self-defense or the defense of one nation against an aggressor.” This was a reassertion of the Bush administration’s doctrine of preemptive war, which is a violation of international law.

Obama referred to the historical concept of “just war,” which maintains that wars must be waged only in self-defense, must employ proportional force and do so in a manner that avoids civilian casualties. He then said it was necessary to “think in new ways” about these notions, implying that such quaint ideas had to be rejected and the world had to accept the right of the US and other imperialist powers to inflict death and destruction on targeted populations as they saw fit.

Obama was not just defending the ongoing wars in the Persian Gulf and Central Asia. As in his December 1 West Point speech, he made clear that these are only the first of many future wars. Speaking in Oslo, he singled out as potential targets a series of countries, including Iran, North Korea, Somalia, Sudan, Congo, Zimbabwe and Myanmar.

In an implicit threat to rival powers, Obama made a point of referring to the US as “the world’s sole military superpower.”

The White House clearly decided to use Obama’s Nobel acceptance speech as an opportunity to stage an international defense of American militarism and imperialist war. It was confident that the different factions of the US political and media establishment could be brought on board behind a policy—dubbed by media commentators the “Obama Doctrine”—that both reiterates and extends that elaborated by the Bush administration.

On the right, the speech won the support of the former Republican speaker of the House of Representatives, Newt Gingrich, House Minority Leader John Boehner, Karl Rove and Sarah Palin, among others. One Republican strategist, Bradley Blakeman, remarked, “The irony is that George W. Bush could have delivered the very same speech. It was truly an American president’s message to the world.”

The Wall Street Journal wrote that the speech put paid any notion that Obama would give a “wooly-headed address about peace in our time.” Instead, Obama “stated clearly that sometimes war is necessary…”

“Congratulations, Mr. President,” wrote the organ of the Republican right.

The New York Times, the voice of American liberalism, said the speech was “appropriately humble” as well as “somber and soaring,” It drew particular attention to Obama’s defense of the war in Afghanistan as “morally just and strategically necessary.”

Hastening to align itself with the imperialist establishment and declare its support for the speech was the Nation magazine, the main organ of what passes for “left” liberalism. John Nichols, one of the magazine’s principal commentators, in a blog entry published almost immediately after the speech and featured as the lead item on the magazine’s web site, wrote that it was “an exceptionally well-reasoned and appropriately humble address.”

Nichols gushed, “The president’s frankness about the controversies and concerns regarding the award of a Peace Prize to a man who just last week ordered 30,000 US new troops into the Afghanistan quagmire, and the humility he displayed…offered a glimpse of Obama at his best.”

“As such,” he continued, “the speech was important and, dare we say, hopeful.”

In an interview on National Public Radio’s “All Things Considered” news program, the Nation’s editor, Katrina vanden Heuvel, praised the speech’s supposed “humility and grace.” The host of the show, evidently expecting more criticism, noted that vanden Heuvel “seemed to be resolving the conflict between the wartime president…and the speech about peace rather easily…”

Vanden Heuvel responded with blather about the “complexity” of American life. It was a “complex speech,” she said, and she was “interested in its complexity.”

Contrary to vanden Heuvel, there was nothing “humble” or “graceful” about Obama’s speech. Nor was it complex. It was an open brief for unrestrained aggression and colonial oppression.

There should be no confusion as to the position of the Nation and the privileged upper-middle-class layers for which the magazine speaks, including former radicals and one-time critics of US imperialism. They have moved squarely into the camp of American imperialism. They support Obama’s wars in Central Asia and Iraq and, more generally, the efforts of the United States to assert global hegemony.

In the run-up to the 2008 elections, the Nation was among the most enthusiastic supporters of the Obama campaign, presenting his victory as the first stage in a radical reform and revitalization of American democracy. It vouched for Obama’s supposedly antiwar credentials.

One year later, the candidate of “change” and “hope” presides over a right-wing administration that is expanding US military aggression while it bails out Wall Street and attacks the jobs and living standards of the working class.

The unmasking of Obama before the entire world has not in any way lessened the support he receives from the Nation. On the contrary, the coming to power of an African-American president has served as the vehicle for American liberalism, including its supposedly “left” wing, which long ago abandoned any serious reform agenda and rejected class as the basic category of social life in favor of race, gender and other categories of identity politics, to lurch further to the right.

It has provided the means by which the Nation has completed its passage into the camp of American imperialism and political reaction.

Remarking on Obama’s speech, Walter Russell Mead, the Henry Kissinger senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, remarked, “If Bush had said these things the world would be filled with violent denunciations. When Obama says them, people purr.”

The “purring” of the Nation comes at a time of growing popular opposition to the Obama administration and its policies. In his speech, Obama himself made reference to the fact that his expansion of war is deeply unpopular, noting the “disconnect between the efforts of those who serve and the ambivalence of the population.” He made clear, however, that this “disconnect” will have absolutely no effect on the policy of his government.

What will happen as the “disconnect” turns into anger and opposition? How will the Nation respond? Its greatest concern is the growth of a political movement that breaks free of the Democratic Party. While it responds now with lies and political hucksterism, under different conditions the Nation will support repression—the purring kitten will turn out to have sharp claws.

The evolution of the Nation underscores the fact that a genuine movement against imperialist war must develop in opposition to the defenders of the Obama administration, the Democratic Party and American capitalism.

As the economic crisis intensifies and aggressive war expands, the working class will emerge as the leading political force in the opposition to war and imperialism. The critical task is the construction of a political leadership based on the understanding that imperialist war is rooted in the capitalist system, and that the fight against war must be an international struggle linked to the socialist reorganization of society.

Joseph Kishore is a senior political analyst with the World Socialist Web Site.