Hillary Clinton and a Venezuelan Murder Mystery:
Who Killed Luis Manuel Díaz?
By Mark Weisbrot
December 05, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "HP"
- On November 30, Hillary Clinton stated that she was
"outraged at the cold blooded assassination of
Luis Manuel Díaz on stage at a rally last week." She was
referring to the killing of a local opposition leader in Venezuela
on November 25. It was clear from her remarks that she was blaming
the government for the murder. Her statement appeared to be part of
an
international campaign to delegitimize Sunday's congressional
elections in Venezuela, and it spread quickly throughout the global
media.
Clinton is familiar with these types of
international campaigns for regime change. In her recent book, "Hard
Choices" she
acknowledges her role in helping prevent the
democratically-elected president of Honduras, overthrown in a
military coup, from returning to office in 2009; and recently
released emails
add further detail.
This shooting and its aftermath are worth looking
at in some detail because they provide a compelling, if typical,
example of how the international media has been manipulated, for
more than 15 years, to create an image of Venezuela that conforms to
certain objectives of U.S. foreign policy.
Within hours of the killing, facts began to emerge
that cast doubt on the widely disseminated version of events.
Venezuelan authorities started investigating the murder, and issued
statements claiming that Díaz was part of a local mafia and was
killed by rivals in revenge for a murder that he was implicated in.
For a day or two, these statements did not even
appear in the English language media. As the days passed, more
details began to emerge.
According to these reports, Díaz, the victim, who was the local
secretary general of the opposition party Acción Democrática (AD) in
Guarico state, was himself on trial for involvement in a murder. He
was allegedly a member of a local criminal group, "Los Plateados,"
involved in a turf war with a rival gang, "El Maloni." The 2010
murder in which he was accused of participating involved two members
of the rival gang. According to witnesses, he rarely went out of his
house for fear for his life. The man accused of killing him at the
political rally, Oscar de Jesús Noguera Hernández, was a member of
"El Maloni."
Clearly there are two narratives: the government
narrative that this was a mafia killing, resulting from a dispute
between rival gangs; and the Hillary Clinton/Venezuelan
opposition/international media narrative that it was a political
killing linked to the government, intended to intimidate the
opposition. Which one is most likely true?
One clue can be found by looking at the Venezuelan
opposition's response to the news and investigative reports about
the involvement of Diaz and his accused killers in organized crime.
Opposition politicians, who had quickly blamed the government for
the murder when it happened, haven't said anything. They are
normally not shy about ridiculing the government for putting its
spin on events. According to press reports, politicians from Acción
Democrática, a Venezuelan political party, did not show up at Díaz's
funeral. The overall silence has been deafening. This could be
because everyone has concluded that the government's version of the
story is basically true.
And reporters for the international and Venezuelan
opposition media have shown no interest in the criminal
investigation or related facts. Since this was a major event that
has shaped perceptions of the electoral process in Venezuela in the
middle of a hotly-contested campaign, one might think it would be of
interest to reporters covering the campaign. (Another missed story:
how did Acción Democrática end up with an organized crime figure as
their statewide secretary general?)
So far, no journalist has even bothered to ask
opposition politicians, or supporters such as Hillary Clinton or OAS
Secretary General Luis Almagro, if they believe this was a political
killing in light of the criminal investigation. Almagro has been
campaigning against Venezuela since the election campaign started.
Immediately after the murder, he issued a statement that strongly
implied that the government was responsible.
On Thursday, Venezuela's attorney general released
a statement that one of the arrested suspects, Ronald Hernandez,
had confessed to having fired the bullets that killed Díaz. As of
this writing, no major English language news outlet has reported
this news.
The wheels of justice grind slowly in Venezuela,
so it will probably be a while before there is a trial of the
accused perpetrators. But for the U.S. government, Hillary Clinton,
and their opposition allies, it is mission accomplished. Probably 98
percent of the world who has heard anything about the Venezuelan
elections now thinks that the Venezuelan government is assassinating
political opponents. Proponents of "regime change" will take
international public opinion into account when they decide whether
to recognize the results of Sunday's election, or take to the
streets with violent demonstrations
as they did in the 2013 presidential elections.
This is how public opinion is shaped when the U.S.
government targets a country for regime change, whether it is a
dictatorship like Iraq or a democracy like Honduras or Venezuela. It
is good to keep this in mind when you are reading the international
news.
Mark Weisbrot is a co-director of the
Center for Economic and
Policy Research in Washington, D.C., and the president of
Just
Foreign Policy. He is also the author of the new book "Failed:
What the 'Experts' Got Wrong About the Global Economy" (2015,
Oxford University Press).