US satellite telephone tracking located the site. Washington signed off on the mission. Over 20 people were killed, including 16 or more FARC-EP members while they slept. Key among them was Raul Reyes, the FARC-EPs second-in-command, key peace negotiator and public voice, and lead figure in the Chavez-led hostage negotiations with Colombia.
The action was a clear act of aggression and premeditated murder. Its not how the dominant media played it.
Hostile verbal exchanges took place between Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa on the one hand, and Colombian President Alvaro Uribe and US President George Bush on the other. US presidential candidates, as expected, supported the White House and Bogota.
Tensions heightened further when Colombias vice-president, Francisco Santos Calderon, revealed his nations army recovered three laptops and other material at the FARC-EP camp with provocative evidence on their hard drives.
He claimed it showed Chavez and Correa have links to the FARC-EP, and Venezuela provided weapons, munitions, and US$300 million or so to the rebel group.
In addition, the FARC-EP was accused of acquiring 50 kilograms of uranium that it wishes to sell it for a radioactive dirty bomb, that it sold 700 kilograms of cocaine for about $1.5 million and more.
Inventing evidence
The story is preposterous, but the media grabbed hold of it. No evidence exists, so they invent it.
In March, Colombian authorities asked Interpol to examine the computer files for authenticity. The organisation released its report on May 15.
On its web site, it states that secretary-general Ronald Noble advised senior Colombian law enforcement officials that INTERPOLs team of forensic experts discovered no evidence of modification, alteration, addition or deletion in the user files of any of the three laptop computers, three USB thumb drives and two external hard disks seized during a Colombian anti-narcotics and anti-terrorist operation on a FARC camp on 1 March 2008.
But Interpol admitted that lacking evidence doesnt prove there was no tampering. In fact, some files had future date stamps and other indications of data alteration.
It questions their authenticity, and Interpol (deep in its report) acknowledged that Columbia likely manipulated the contents with an explanation needing close reading to understand.
This delegitimises Colombian claims and would get an international court to dismiss them out of hand. Reporters doing their job should as well. Data accuracy cant be verified or worse they may be entirely fraudulent, and made-in-Washington mischief may be behind it.
Interpols report continued saying between 1 and 3 March, direct access to the seized computer exhibits
did not follow internationally recognized principles in the handling of electronic evidence under ordinary circumstance.
In short, the hard drive data prove nothing and may, in fact, be fake. With US involvement clear, it wouldnt be the first time and Washington is rich in talent to do it.
Independent computer experts are also troubled, believing that failure to follow standard evidence handling procedures seriously jeopardises its reliability. With care, forensic specialists or computer professionals can add, delete or alter hard drive material without leaving a footprint.
Dominant media reports ignored this and more. They passed over or played down key findings, including Interpols statement that its experts didnt evaluate the accuracy or the source of the exhibits content.
How could they? The volume was enormous amounting to the equivalent of 39.5 million pages in Microsoft Word
At the rate of 100 pages a day, it would take more than 1000 years to read.
Given this, how, in a few days or even weeks, were Colombian authorities able to analyse the data to discover provocative information therein?
That notion also got no attention in the dominant media.
How Big Media spins the news
Heres how the Rupert Murdoch-owned
Wall Street Journal played it on May 16. Its editorial page said Interpols May 15 report wont make Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavezs day.
It reported Interpols claim about no evidence of file tampering, but ignored the issues of authenticity, accuracy, manipulation or impossible speed-reading skills of Colombian verifiers.
It concluded that Interpols certification proves that Mr. Chavez is trying to destabilise a US ally [and is a] proven supporter of terrorism.
The
New York Times Simon Romero was little better. His May 16 article was headlined: Files Tying Venezuela to Rebels Not Altered, Report Says. He called Interpols report a setback for Venezuela, which had claimed that the computer files
were fabrications. It may advance efforts under way in the Congress to add Venezuela to the United States list of state sponsors of terrorism.
Well down in his report, Romero admitted that Interpol could not vouch for the accuracy of the files and that a Colombian antiterrorism unit had seized them improperly and in violation of internationally recognized rules on handling electronic evidence. No further comment was added.
Romero played up US State Department spokesperson, Sean McCormack, saying these are serious allegations about Venezuela supplying arms and support to a terrorist organization
that has deep implications for the people of the region.
He had to acknowledge, however, what credible experts agree on. Given the importance of US and Venezuelan relations, chances of declaring the country a state sponsor of terrorism is highly remote particularly without more evidence of the countrys support of the FARC.
Latin American history professor Greg Grandin goes further. He believes: Almost all of Latin America and most of the world would take Venezuelas side in this dispute. Any move [against Venezuela] would further isolate the United States in a region where it has been hemorrhaging influence.
That doesnt phase Romero, whose speciality is piling on, not truth. He returned on May 18 with a provocative feature story headlined: Chavez Seizes Greater Economic Power.
Chavez-bashing
With no Chavez supporters voice in sight, some key points in it are: Chavez is intensifying state control of the Venezuelan economy through a wave of takeovers of private companies and creation of government-controlled ventures with allies like Cuba and Iran; fears are intensifying (over) more nationalizations.
This is happening just months after voters rejected a referendum to give the president sweeping constitutional power. while he has argued that (he aims) to correct social injustices
his critics say his moves are instead compounding these troubles. To avoid outright confiscation Chavez is offering some compensation.
It goes unmentioned that the compensation is the fair market price and that nothing was, is or will be confiscated.
He ignores Venezuelas successes. Along with Argentina, its the fastest growing regional economy and one of the fastest in the world at a time of economic weakness. Its employment growth is impressive with most of it coming in the private sector. He ignores the countrys huge social gains and Chavezs immense popularity and growing world stature.
Instead, Romero lists problems high inflation, less foreign investment, food shortages, capital flight and more that are only mitigated by high oil prices.
True to form, Romero ends with some provocative quotes about Chavez stimulating a pre-insurrectional climate, and that his nationalisations aim to annihilate the productive apparatus so that we depend more on petroleum, which is to depend more on the state, or in other words, to depend more on Chavez.
For the dominant US media, Chavez-bashing is full-time.
Washington Post writers excel at it on any pretext, and Juan Foreros May 16 Interpol report article was typical. Its headlined, FARC Computer Files Are Authentic, Interpol Probe Finds.
He said files seized contain e-mails (Interpol never mentioned any) and other documents that show how Venezuelas populist leader had formed such a tight bond with guerrilla commanders that his key lieutenants had offered help in obtaining sophisticated weaponry such as surface-to-air missiles while delivering light arms. The files also document links between FARC [and] Correa, a close ally of Chavez.
Ridiculous
In response, Hugo Chavez dismissed the allegations as ridiculous. He urged Uribe to have a moment of reflection and added, The government of Colombia is capable of provoking a war
to justify a US intervention in Venezuela. He also called Colombias assertion a new act of aggression.
Reuters reported May 15 that Venezuela is deeply revising diplomatic, economic and political relations with Colombia following Interpols report and the Uribe governments allegations.
Correa was abroad in France, but took time to say the computer file documents prove absolutely nothing. We have information that the Colombian government had the computers for some time and prepared all this.
Quite possibly because the entire story is unraveling. But dont expect Big Media to report it.
While the propaganda attacks continued, the Pentagon announced in April that its resurrecting its Fourth Fleet in Latin America and the Caribbean after a 60 year hiatus. It was created during WWII and disbanded in 1950. Reasons given were vaguely stated to conduct varying missions including a range of contingency operations, counter narco-terrorism, and theater security cooperation activities.
US Naval Forces Southern Command chief Admiral James Stevenson said the move would send a message to the entire region, not just Venezuela. Commander of the National War College, General Robert Steel added that: "The United States obsession with Venezuela, Cuba and other things indicates they are going to use more military force, going to use that instrument more often.
Bolivian President Evo Morales called the move Fourth Fleet
intervention.
The fleet begins operating in July and will be headquartered out of Floridas Mayport Naval Station. Its strength will be formidable aircraft carriers, submarines, various attack ships and several nuclear-armed ones.
With no Latin American threat, why then this move, and why now with an administration nearing its end and bogged down in two unwinnable wars?
Venezuela alone is why.
Its proved oil reserves were just raised to 130 billion barrels, but include whats uncounted and theyre far higher. On its website, the US Department of Energy estimates the countrys extra-heavy oil at 1.36 trillion barrels, or 90% of the worlds total. Thats more than all proved world reserves combined.
Rumour also is that the Pentagon plans building a Colombian military base near Venezuelas border. Washingtons Colombian ambassador, William Brownfield, said its construction possible if the US base at Manta, Ecuador is closed when its lease expires next year.
Correa says the only way for the US to keep its Manta base is to grant Ecuador equivalent basing rights in South Florida in other words, no.
Chavez is justifiably alarmed at the prospect of US troops on his border. He warned Colombia not to do it and said this action will force Venezuela to revive a decades-old territorial conflict over its possible La Guajira location.
He further added: We will not allow the Colombian government to give La Guajira to the empire. Stationing US troops there will be a threat of war at us.
Chavez is justifiably wary. But US dominance is weakening. Neoliberal pillage caused it, the Bush administration accelerated it. Bolivarianism challenges it, so muscular militarism may replace diplomacy to restore it.
Colombias belligerency, the FARC-EP files, Fourth Fleet reactivation, continued funding of Venezuelas opposition, CIAs covert mischief, disruptive street violence, and other planned schemes are troublesome. Theyre to reassert regional control. Everything tried so far failed. Even worse, its been counterproductive. Chavez has enormous stature and immense popular support.
That makes him an even greater threat and hints at something bigger coming. Stay tuned, expect surprises, and be assured the months ahead wont be boring.
[Abridged from May 19
http://venezuelanalysis.com. Visit Stephen Lendmans blog at
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com. He can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.]