Friday, 13 March 2015

NED Official Meets with Venezuelan Opposition Figures


The official changed her appearance upon arrival in Venezuela, used a pseudonym, and traveled with illegal license plates.
A high-ranking official from the National Endowment for Democracy recently traveled to Venezuela
under suspicious circumstances to meet with right-wing opposition politicians, the president of the
 Venezuelan National Assembly Diosdado Cabello revealed Wednesday.
During his weekly television program, Cabello said the NED's Director for Latin America and the
Caribbean Miriam Kornblith arrived in Venezuela Feb. 28, and upon her arrival she opted to disguise
 her appearance, going so far as to dye her hair.
Kornblith then traveled to Bolivar City to meet with opposition politicians and representatives of a 
nongovernmental organization, registering at a hotel under the pseudonym Sarah Collins.
“If she is acting in good faith, why does she feel the need to change her name and dye her hair?” 
asked Cabello. The Venezuelan official also said that Kornblith traveled in a vehicle using license
 plates belonging to a different car.
Cabello stated that Kornblith's mission in Venezuela was to resolve an issue regarding the allocation
 of money from the NED between opposition parties. After returning to Caracas, she allegedly held
 a four-hour meeting with opposition leader Ramon Jose Medina at the offices of an opposition 
political party.
Cabello called Kornblith's employer, the NED, “an institution used by North American 
imperialism to finance subversive terrorist groups that operate as so-called NGOs.”
In Context: Kornblith and the National Endowment for Democracy
Although the NED claims to be a private foundation, its resources come from the U.S. Congress
 by way of the State Department. The NED has been widely accused of being a tool of U.S. foreign
 policy, funding groups that oppose governments that U.S. governments oppose.
According the NED website, in 2014 alone, the foundation gave US $2,381,824 to organizations 
operating in Venezuela, ostensibly for things such as training in the use of social media, and the 
monitoring of human rights. A cursory examination of grant recipients reveals that the money mostly
went to groups opposing the democratically-elected government of President Nicolas Maduro.
Kornblith does not hide her own political views concerning Venezuela. In 2013 she wrote in the 
NED's scholarly journal an article entitled, “Latin America’s Authoritarian Drift: Chavismo after 
Chavez?” In the article Kornblith heavily criticizes Venezuela under Chavez for allegedly undermining
 democracy in the country, citing analysis by the conservative Freedom House think tank.
She also questions the legitimacy of elections in Venezuela – which have been praised by prominent 
groups such as the Carter Center – and lauds the political arrangement that existed in Venezuela
 before ChavezKnown as the Punto Fijo Pactunderthat system two traditional parties would alternate in powerdeliberately excluding the
 voices of Venezuela's poor majority.
In addition, Kornblith distorts history and misrepresents facts to make her argument. For example
, she makes an unsourced claim that military officers refused an order from Chavez to use force
 against demonstrators before the 2002 coup that briefly ousted him from power.

http://blogs.rediff.com/mkbhadrakumar/2015/03/11/chasing-the-chimera-of-afghan-peace/

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