As Greg Grandin writes, Otto Reich, head of the administrationโ€™s Orwellian propaganda outfit known as the Office of Public Diplomacy, informed the public network that his office had contracted โ€œa special consultant service [to listen] to all NPR programsโ€ on Central America. Dependent on state funding, NPR promptly buckled under pressure, reassigning reporters viewed as โ€œtoo easy on the Sandinistas,โ€ and hiring conservative pundit Linda Chavez to provide โ€œbalance.โ€

NPR: A Fugitive In His Own Country, Venezuela's Juan Guaidรณ Insists His Movement Is Strong

NPR (5/30/19) says Juan Guaidรณ is โ€œrecognized by dozens of countries as Venezuelaโ€™s rightful head of stateโ€โ€”without mentioning that he was unknown to most Venezuelans when he proclaimed himself president.

Today, NPR needs no state coercion to toe Washingtonโ€™s regime change line on Venezuela.

NPR published an exclusive interview on May 30 with Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidรณ, in which the self-proclaimed โ€œinterim presidentโ€ was described as โ€œa fugitive in his own countryโ€ confronting โ€œauthoritarian President Nicolรกs Maduro.โ€

The article went on to state that Venezuela โ€œis suffering from hyperinflation, power outages, and chronic shortages of food, medicine and fuel.โ€ Strangely absent is any reference to illegal US sanctions, which have played an indisputable role in severely exacerbating the countryโ€™s crisis to the detriment of ordinary Venezuelans.

Additionally, the exclusion of Chavista voices is likewise endemic to NPRโ€™s coverage of Venezuela, in gross violation of the outletโ€™s own ethics handbook.

An abused adjective

When it comes to covering Venezuelaโ€™s elected Maduro government, it appears that NPRโ€™s favorite adjective is โ€œauthoritarian.โ€

The public news network has referred to President Nicolรกs Maduro and his administration as โ€œauthoritarianโ€ and/or a โ€œregimeโ€ no less than 26 times since December, with no explanation why the Venezuelan government merits an editorialized moniker that ideologically justifies US intervention.

Moreover, when the fact that Maduro was reelected last year is mentioned, it is generally accompanied by a vague reference to โ€œfraud.โ€

Usually no effort is made to elaborate on the fraud allegationsโ€”which the opposition never presented substantive public evidence to supportโ€”and when additional context is provided, it generally amounts to a reference to NPRโ€™s mendacious 2018 election reporting.

At the time, NPRโ€™s Phillip Reeves (5/20/18) denied the legitimacy of the vote by claiming, โ€œNicolรกs Maduro controls most of the media, the electoral authorities.โ€ He ignored the fact that most Venezuelan media is private and pro-opposition, while the National Electoral Council is headed by the same officials who oversaw the oppositionโ€™s 2015 landslide parliamentary victory.

NPR: Venezuela's Maduro Wins Boycotted Elections Amid Charges Of Fraud

NPRโ€˜s headlined claim of โ€œfraudโ€ (5/21/18) rests heavily on the unsubstantiated assertions of โ€œmany independent observers.โ€ The 6 million votes received by President Nicolรกs Maduro are in line with the support found for the government in independent polling.

Similarly, NPRโ€™s Scott Neuman (5/21/18) wrote, โ€œThe oppositionโ€™s most popular leadersโ€ฆwere barred from running,โ€ in reference to Leopoldo Lรณpez and Henrique Capriles. The claim that these were the most popular potential opposition candidates is false: Datanalisis, the international corporate mediaโ€™s most widely cited pollster, at the time had opposition presidential candidate Henri Falcon polling significantly above Capriles and Lรณpez, at around 38%, in May 2018. By comparison, a Pew Research study conducted later in the year amid accelerating hyperinflation found that 33% of Venezuelans โ€œtrust their government,โ€ roughly equivalent to the 31% of the electorate that voted for Maduro on May 20, 2018.

NPR suggests that Lรณpez and Capriles were barred for extralegal political reasons, neglecting to mention that Lรณpez was convicted of inciting violence during the 2014 protests aimed at ousting the government, while Capriles was previously indicted for allowing opposition supporters to lay siege to the Cuban Embassy in 2002, and was later barred from office by the comptroller general over alleged corruption, for which he is also being investigated by the opposition.

Moreover, NPR and other mainstream outlets do not regularly refer to Brazilโ€™s 2018 presidential election as โ€œfraud-marred,โ€ despite the countryโ€™s most popular politician, Lula da Silva, having been jailed and banned from running in a baseless, politically motivated court case, as Glenn Greenwald has exposed. Lula did not participate in violent foreign-backed coup attempts, unlike Lรณpez and Capriles, both of whom were active in the 2002 coup against Chavez.

This myth of electoral fraud embraced by NPR was โ€œmade in USA,โ€ when the Trump administration threw its weight behind an opposition boycott, preemptively refusing to recognize the vote and threatening to sanction the independent opposition candidate. But no amount of US interference invalidates an election in the view of Western journalists, as the classic example of Nicaraguaโ€™s 1990 election of Violeta Chamorro illustrates. In 2018โ€”as in Venezuelaโ€™s 2013 presidential election, which was recognized by every government in the world except the Obama administrationโ€”it would seem that a vote is only โ€œfree and fairโ€ when Washingtonโ€™s candidate is elected.

This systematic bias ridicules NPRโ€™s professed commitment to โ€œstick to facts and to language that is clear, compelling and neutral,โ€ while the omissions and blatant factual distortions compromise its accuracy and completeness.

Lying by omission: US sanctions

NPRโ€™s ethics handbook states:

Errors of omission and partial truths can inflict great damage on our credibility, and stories delivered without the context to fully understand them are incomplete.

While NPR has made scattered but repeated reference to US economic sanctionsโ€”predominately in the wake of the Trump administrationโ€™s January 28 oil embargoโ€”nowhere does NPR bring up the fact that the unilateral measures are illegal under both US and international law, while only in a few cases does the public encounter a passing acknowledgement of the negative humanitarian toll. In the vast majority of stories, NPR rarely dedicates more than one line to US economic sanctions, which are routinely presented as โ€œaimed squarely at [the] Venezuelan governmentโ€ (8/25/17), ignoring the repercussions for ordinary Venezuelans. In no case does NPR present the public with perspectives opposing US sanctions as a matter of principle.

NPR: Blackout In Venezuela Leaves Its Leaders Casting Blame In The Dark

An NPR report (3/8/19) concludes with Sen. Marco Rubio mocking the idea that the US could be behind electrical grid failures in Venezuelaโ€”though the US openly boasts of conducting cyber warfare against electrical systems in official enemy nations (New York Times, 6/15/19).

In a report on the nationwide March blackouts, NPRโ€™s Sasha Ingber (3/8/19) manages to avoid naming sanctions as one of the key factors behind the outages, relegating them to an insignificant tertiary element โ€œlikely to increase the countryโ€™s economic plight,โ€ but in no way responsible for Venezuelaโ€™s dramatically worsening crisis since Trump imposed direct economic sanctions in August 2017. In fact, according to economist Francisco Rodrรญguez of Torino Capital, sanctions not only prevented Venezuela from paying foreign companies for vital maintenance work on its electrical grid, but also barred it from importing sufficient diesel fuel needed to power thermoelectric generators.

The pattern is repeated in NPRโ€™s coverage of Venezuelaโ€™s economic crisis through the lens of out-migration (6/21/19, 6/7/19), school truancy (6/29/19) or alleged โ€œintimidationโ€ of private charities (6/11/19). Here sanctionsโ€”which are set to cause Venezuelaโ€™s economy to contract by 37% this yearโ€”are either completely ignored, or their devastating social impact is  presented as a dubious โ€œclaimโ€ by Caracas officials.

Like virtually every other mainstream international outlet (FAIR.org, 6/26/19), NPR has yet to citeโ€”let alone actually report onโ€”a recent study by acclaimed economists Mark Weisbrot and Jeffrey Sachs, which found US sanctions on Venezuela to constitute a form of โ€œcollective punishmentโ€ responsible for as many as 40,000 deaths through 2018. This omission is not surprising, given that NPR had previously joined major corporate outlets in systematically censoring the impact of Trumpโ€™s August 2017 financial sanctions, which cost the country at least $6 billion in lost oil revenue over the subsequent twelve months.

Exhibit A of this erasure is an article headlined โ€œVenezuelaโ€™s Health System Ready to Collapse Amid Economic Crisisโ€ (NPR, 2/1/19), in which Samantha Raphelson treats sanctions as a conspiracy theory on which โ€œMaduro blames the countryโ€™s growing crisis,โ€ despite the fact that US financial blacklisting, as well as plummeting revenue due to sanctions, hampered Caracasโ€™ ability to import vital medicine and medical  equipment. At this point, NPR can easily cite the US government itself as a source for the claim that Washington is exacerbating the Venezuelan crisis, with the State Department publishing (and subsequently hiding) a fact sheet that boasted that โ€œkey outcomesโ€ of US efforts included the freezing of โ€œroughly $3.2 billion of Venezuelaโ€™s overseasโ€ assets, and a 36% reduction in Venezuelan oil production in February/March 2019 (Venezuelanalysis, 5/6/19).

Silencing Chavista and critical voices

NPR: Assessing NPR's Recent Venezuela Coverage

In answer to the question, โ€œHow can reporting of current news also take account of decades of historical context surrounding US intervention in Latin America? NPR public editor Juliette Rocheleau (4/9/19) concludes: โ€œIt depends.โ€

In an assessment of NPRโ€™s Venezuela coverage (4/9/19), the networkโ€™s public editor, Juliette Rocheleau, recognizes an โ€œimbalanceโ€ in which โ€œopposition voices have outnumbered those of Maduro supporters in NPRโ€˜s reporting.โ€ The slant is fairly overwhelming, since Rocheleau can only name four occasions that NPR interviewed government supporters.

The public editor justifies NPRโ€™s pro-opposition โ€œimbalanceโ€™โ€ on the grounds of journalistsโ€™ safety, quoting senior international editor Will Dobson:

โ€œWe want to plunge the depths of the pro-Maduro supporters.โ€ But Dobson said NPRโ€˜s responsibility to keep its journalists and sources safe is the top priority, and reporting safely from Venezuela is extremely difficult: Venezuela ranks 143 out of 180 countries in press freedom, with journalists risking violence at the hands of the state and some of its supporters.

This is a self-serving canard. Various independent outlets such as Venezuelanalysis (where Iโ€™m an editor), the Real News and Grayzoneโ€”all with far fewer resources than NPRโ€”have frequently interviewed Chavistas from various political walks of life. The notion that Chavista โ€œviolenceโ€ keeps Western reporters at bay is rather fantastical, given that itโ€™s opposition demonstrations, not pro-government ones, that have been the site of mob lynchings and attacks on journalists, including those from pro-opposition private outlets. Even if we take at face value NPRโ€™s safety concerns, this should not stop the network from interviewing experts opposed to US regime change in Venezuela, such as Noam Chomsky, Mark Weisbrot, Jeffrey Sachs, Alfred De Zayas and Miguel Tinker Salas, whose voices are conspicuously absent, despite making regular appearances in independent progressive media.

Perhaps a more realistic explanation for NPRโ€™s admitted โ€œimbalanceโ€ is professional class bias. It seems that Western journalists bear an instinctual aversion to poor black and brown people organizing to defy the US Empire. Their natural sympathies appear to lie with lighter-skinned (preferably English-speaking) professionals or members of the elite who make them feel more comfortable. Despite their โ€œprogressiveโ€ reputation, NPR journalists are little different than their mainstream corporate counterparts when it comes to repeating Washington and the oppositionโ€™s anti-Chavista propaganda, in flagrant breach of their own ethics.


You can send a message to NPRโ€˜s public editor here (or via Twitter: @NPRpubliceditor). Please remember that respectful communication is the most effective. Feel free to leave a copy of your message in the comments thread of this post.

Featured image: Venezuelan President Nicolรกs Maduro on NPR.org (8/25/17).

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Lucas Koerner is a journalist at Venezuelanalysis based in Caracas, Venezuela.