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The U.S.’ War on Democracy
Interview with John Pilger
By: Pablo Navarrete
John Pilger is an award-winning journalist, author and
documentary filmmaker, who began his career in 1958 in his
homeland, Australia, before moving to London in the 1960s. He
has been a foreign correspondent and a front-line war reporter,
beginning with the Vietnam War in 1967. He is an impassioned
critic of foreign military and economic adventures by Western
governments.
"It is too easy," Pilger says, "for Western journalists to
see humanity in terms of its usefulness to 'our' interests and
to follow government agendas that ordain good and bad tyrants,
worthy and unworthy victims and present 'our' policies as always
benign when the opposite is usually true. It's the journalist's
job, first of all, to look in the mirror of his own society."
Pilger also believes a journalist ought to be a guardian
of the public memory and often quotes Milan Kundera: "The
struggle of people against power is the struggle of memory
against forgetting."
In a career that has produced more than 55 television
documentaries, Pilger's first major film for the cinema, The War
on Democracy, will be
released in the United Kingdom on May 11, 2007. Pilger spent
several weeks filming in Venezuela and The War on Democracy
contains an exclusive interview with Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez.
05/02/07 "Venezuelanalysis.com"
-- - PN: Could you begin by telling us what
your new film ‘The War on Democracy’ is about?
JP: I happened to watch George Bush’s second inauguration
address in which he pledged to “bring democracy to the world.”
He mentioned the words “democracy” and “liberty” twenty one
times. It was a very important speech because, unlike the purple
prose of previous presidents (Ronald Reagan excluded), he left
no doubt that he was stripping noble concepts like “democracy”
and “liberty” of their true meaning – government, for, by and of
the people.
I wanted to make a film that illuminated this disguised truth
-- that the United States has long waged a war on democracy
behind a facade of propaganda designed to contort the intellect
and morality of Americans and the rest of us. For many of your
readers, this is known. However, for others in the West, the
propaganda that has masked Washington’s ambitions has been
entrenched, with its roots in the incessant celebration of World
War Two, the “good war”, then “victory” in the cold war. For
these people, the “goodness” of US power represents “us”. Thanks
to Bush and his cabal, and to Blair, the scales have fallen from
millions of eyes. I would like “The War on Democracy” to
contribute something to this awakening.
The film is about the power of empire and of people. It was
shot in Venezuela, Bolivia, Chile, and the United States and is
set also in Guatemala and Nicaragua. It tells the story of
“America’s backyard,” the dismissive term given to all of Latin
America. It traces the struggle of indigenous people first
against the Spanish, then against European immigrants who
reinforced the old elite. Our filming was concentrated in the
barrios where the continent’s “invisible people” live in
hillside shanties that defy gravity. It tells, above all, a very
positive story: that of the rise of popular social movements
that have brought to power governments promising to stand up to
those who control national wealth and to the imperial master.
Venezuela has taken the lead, and a highlight of the film is a
rare face-to-face interview with President Hugo Chavez whose own
developing political consciousness, and sense of history (and
good humour), are evident. The film investigates the 2002 coup
d’etat against Chavez and casts it in a contemporary context. It
also describes the differences between Venezuela and Cuba, and
the shift in economic and political power since Chavez was first
elected. In Bolivia, the recent, tumultuous past is told through
quite remarkable testimony from ordinary people, including those
who fought against the piracy of their resources. In Chile, the
film looks behind the mask of this apparently modern, prosperous
“model” democracy and finds powerful, active ghosts. In the
United States, the testimony of those who ran the “backyard”
echo those who run that other backyard, Iraq; sometimes they are
the same people. Chris Martin (my fellow director) and I
believe “The War on Democracy” is well timed. We hope people
will see it as another way of seeing the world: as a metaphor
for understanding a wider war on democracy and the universal
struggle of ordinary people, from Venezuela to Vietnam,
Palestine to Guatemala.
As you say, Latin America has often been described as the
U.S.’ backyard. How important is Latin America for the U.S. in
the global context?
Latin America’s strategic importance is often dismissed.
That’s because it is so important. Read Greg Grandin’s recent,
excellent history (I interview him in the film) in which he
makes the case that Latin America has been Washington’s
“workshop” for developing and honing and rewarding its imperial
impulses elsewhere. For example, when the US “retreated” from
Southeast Asia, where did its “democracy builders” go to reclaim
their “vision”? Latin America. The result was the murderous
assaults on Nicaragua, El Salvador and Guatemala, and the
darkness of “Operation Condor” in the southern cone. This was
Ronald Reagan’s “war on terror”, which of course was a war of
terror that provided basic training for those now running the
Bush/Cheney “long war” in the Middle East and elsewhere.
Noam Chomsky
recently
said that after five centuries of European conquests, Latin
America was reasserting its independence. Do you agree with
this?
Yes, I agree. It’s humbling for someone coming from
prosperous Europe to witness the poorest taking charge of their
lives, with people rarely asking, as we in the West often ask,
“What can I do?” They know what to do. In Cochabamba, Bolivia,
the population barricaded their city until they began to take
control of their water. In El Alto, perhaps the poorest city on
the continent, people stood against a repressive regime until it
fell. This is not to suggest that complete independence has been
won. Venezuela’s economy, for example, is still very much a
“neo-liberal” economy that continues to reward those with
capital. The changes made under Chavez are extraordinary – in
grassroots democracy, health care, education and the sheer
uplifting of people’s lives – but true equity and social justice
and freedom from corruption remain distant goals. Venezuela’s
well-off complain endlessly that their economic power has been
diminished; it hasn’t; economic growth has never been higher,
business has never been better. What the rich no longer own is
the government. And when the majority own the economy, true
independence will be in sight. That’s true everywhere.
U.S. Deputy Secretary of State,
John Negroponte, recently called Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez “a threat to democracy” in Latin America. What are you
views on this?
This is Orwellian, like “war is peace.” Negroponte, whose
record of overseeing Washington’s terrorism in Central America
is infamous, is right about Hugo Chavez in one respect. Chavez
is a “threat” – he’s the threat of an example to others that
independence from Washington is actually possible.
President Chavez talks about building "socialism of the
21st Century" in Venezuela. To what extent do you think this
project is different to the socialist experiences in the
twentieth century?
In the time I spent with Chavez, what struck me was how
unselfconsciously he demonstrated his own developing political
awareness. I was intrigued to watch a man who is as much an
educator as a leader. He will arrive at a school or a water
project where local people are gathered and under his arm will
be half a dozen books – Orwell, Chomsky, Dickens, Victor Hugo.
He’ll proceed to quote from them and relate them to the
condition of his audience. What he’s clearly doing is building
ordinary people’s confidence in themselves. At the same, he’s
building his own political confidence and his understanding of
the exercise of power. I doubt that he began as a socialist
when he won power in 1998 – which makes his political journey
all the more interesting. Clearly, he was always a reformer who
paid respect to his impoverished roots. Certainly, the
Venezuelan economy today is not socialist; perhaps it’s on the
way to becoming something like the social economy of Britain
under the reforming Attlee Labour government. He is probably
what Europeans used to be proud to call themselves: a social
democrat. Look, this game of labels is pretty pointless; he is
an original and he inspires; so let’s see where the Bolivarian
project goes. True power for enduring change can only be
sustained at the grassroots, and Chavez’s strength is that he
has inspired ordinary people to believe in alternatives to the
old venal order. We have nothing like this spirit in Britain,
where more and more people can’t be bothered to vote any more.
It’s a lesson of hope, at the very least.
************
'The War on Democracy' is to be released in UK cinemas on
Friday 15th June. There will be a special preview in London on
Friday 11th May. The film is released in Australia in September
2007. For more info visit:
www.johnpilger.com or
www.warondemocracy.net
This item was first Published by
Venezuelanalysis.com
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