Arrest of Gov’t Critic and Journalist Max Blumenthal Signals Escalation in War on Alternative Media
Alan Macleod • November 1, 2019
Max Blumenthal, the editor of independent media outlet The Grayzone, was secretly arrested on October 25 in a “SWAT-style”
morning raid on his Washington D.C. home. He was held in D.C. Central
Detention Facility for two days incommunicado, without the ability to
communicate to the
outside world, having been refused a phone call. He claims
to have been shackled by his hands and ankles for some time and kept in
a series of cages and cells. Blumenthal was arrested on a
five-month-old assault charge stemming from an incident that took place
during the D.C. Venezuelan Embassy siege.
A Venezuelan opposition supporter, Naylet Pacheco, claims
that Blumenthal kicked her in the stomach several times during a
conflict between the embassy protectors and supporters of opposition
leader Juan Guaído, who proclaimed himself President of Venezuela in
January. At the time of the incident, The Grayzone was publishing a series of investigative reports and news
updates that contradicted the Trump administration’s narrative, noting
how much of the supposedly grassroots uprising, was, in fact, funded by
Washington and exposing the corruption and violent tactics of opposition
members. The warrant for the charge had initially been rejected. It
was, however, revived later without Blumenthal’s knowledge.
“If
the government had at least told me I had a warrant I could have
voluntarily surrendered and appeared at my own arrangement. I have
nothing to fear because I’m completely innocent of this bogus charge,” he said.
“Instead, the federal government essentially enlisted the DC police to
SWAT me, ensuring that I would be subjected to an early morning raid and
then languish in prison for days without even the ability to call an
attorney.”
A War on Dissent
When asked for comment, political comedian and TV show host Lee Camp told MintPress News that this was the latest example of the government trying to silence dissenting opinion and controlling the media:
“This
is the continued descent into a fascist state. When the US government
is arresting journalists in dramatic fashion clearly because their
reporting is threatening to the power elite, then what else can one call
it?”
Corporate media largely applauded U.S.-backed regime change efforts in Venezuela, refusing to even call them a “coup” and instead preferring to frame
them as a people’s “uprising,” taking the same line as the Trump
administration that they claim to “resist.” Many of those same media
outlets have also begun to partner with the government in a stated
effort to fight fake news. The primary consequence
of which has been to undermine and reduce the reach of alternative
media, a vital counterweight to the corporate message. In response to a call to arms in the Washington Post,
algorithm changes to Facebook, Google, YouTube, Bing, and others have
led to independent news sites being de-ranked, disincentivized, and
sometimes, deleted.
Despite
his ordeal, Blumenthal has still been treated better than others who
ran afoul of the U.S. government. Chelsea Manning is still held in
prison, Edward Snowden is in exile, while Julian Assange, whose
condition in solitary confinement is deteriorating,
faces a highly uncertain future. On Assange, mainstream media largely
applauded his April arrest, describing it as a “long overdue” (Washington Post) and “satisfying” (Saturday Night Live) detention of an “anti-American” (National Review) “narcissistic” (Washington Post) “Internet Troll” with an “outsized view of his own importance” (the Times) leaving his “voluntary confinement” (the Daily Beast) to finally “face justice” (Daily Mail) for his “indisputable crime” (New York Times).
The Embassy Siege
The
Trump administration refused to recognize the results of the January
2019 elections that awarded Nicolás Maduro another term in office.
Instead, it announced its support for self-appointed President Juan
Guaído as the rightful head of Venezuela. This, despite the fact that
Guaído has never stood for the office and that over 80 percent
of the country didn’t even know who he was. Following Guaído’s
self-declaration of his presidency, the Trump administration demanded
that all Venezuelan diplomats leave the United States, so those in
Venezuela’s Washington D.C. embassy formally invited peace activists to
enter and protect the integrity of the building.
Just
as Guaído attempted to take the presidential palace in a coup attempt
in April, supporters of the far-right anti-President tried to storm the
Venezuelan embassy in D.C., an event closely covered by The Grayzone, and by MintPress News’ Alex Rubenstein,
who was amongst those invited to protect the building. Rubenstein
detailed how the attackers attempted siege and intimidation tactics to
the embassy protectors out and enjoyed
the tacit support of the local security services, who refused to
protect the embassy’s territorial integrity, a serious diplomatic
violation.
Radio silence from Corporate Media
The
dramatic story of a SWAT team bursting into a dissident journalist’s
home, bundling him into a car and holding him incommunicado for days
appears not to have interested either corporate media or professional
press freedom groups like Reporters Without Borders or the Committee to
Protect Journalists. When pushed for comment, the US Press Freedom
Tracker excluded this case on a technicality, stating:
There has been exactly zero
mainstream coverage or commentary of the government’s arrest of a
prominent critic, meaning that for those relying on corporate media to
inform and shape their worldview, the event did not happen. This is all
the more remarkable considering Blumenthal is an award-winning, New York Times
bestselling author, comes from a well-connected family of elite former
White House insiders (his father was a senior aide to President
Clinton), and boasts a huge following on social media.
The silence from the mainstream press contrasts the considerable attention that the event has received in alternative media and the outpouring of support from independent journalists. His colleagues at The Grayzone immediately came to his defense; Aaron Maté stated:
Meanwhile, Anya Parmpil (another embassy protector) noted
that she was assaulted in broad daylight by Guaído supporters and in
front of the secret services, who did nothing to protect her.
Many
saw the action as part of a wider government campaign aimed at
silencing dissenting opinions. “The establishment has declared war on
anti-imperialist journalists,” declared Kerry-Anne Mendoza, Editor-in-Chief of The Canary, “There should be global outrage.” Middle East specialist Jonathan Cook agreed, claiming it was “the latest example of the growing crackdown on independent journalism.” Electronic Intifada’s Ali Abunimah offered his support to Blumenthal, decrying the U.S. government’s “clear retaliation and intimidation” tactics.
Others
criticized the mainstream press’ reaction to the arrest of a prominent
critic of the U.S. government. Mark Ames, the founder of the
Moscow-based outlet the eXile, noted that
Blumenthal’s treatment reminded him of “the worst of Russia”, except
for the fact when opposition journalists like Ivan Golunov were
arrested, even the Putin-friendly press decried it. Meanwhile,
journalist and filmmaker Abby Martin offered a thought experiment, tweeting:
In
fact, a similar event did happen in Venezuela; earlier this year
freelance American journalist Cody Weddle was detained and deported by
Venezuelan authorities. The incident made worldwide headlines, for
example, in the New York Times, Washington Post, USA Today, Reuters and the Guardian, and drew immediate condemnation from Reporters Without Borders, Human Rights Watch and the Committee to Protect Journalists, highlighting the selective outrage of the corporate press and the human rights industry.
A History of Violence
Blumenthal
is uncompromising in his position regarding the accusation: “This
charge is a 100 percent false, fabricated, bogus, untrue, and malicious
lie,” he declared. “It is clearly part of a campaign of political persecution designed to silence me and The Grayzone for our factual journalism exposing the deceptions, corruption and violence of the far-right Venezuelan opposition.”
Far
from the wholesome image they enjoy in much of the press, the Venezuelan
opposition has a long and exceptionally violent history of attacking
political opponents, including journalists. Their many campaigns to oust
President Maduro from power have included beheading innocent passers-by and roasting Afro-Venezuelans alive in the street in an attempt to terrorize the population into surrender.
After reporting on this violence in 2017, journalists Abby Martin and Mike Prysner were the subject
of a viral fake news campaign that claimed they were informants
gathering information on the opposition for the secret police. They
received dozens of death threats as part of a campaign in Venezuela to find and lynch them. The two escaped unharmed but others were not so lucky. TeleSur’s Adriana Sivori was shot in the back
by the same opposition movement while wearing a bulletproof vest and
helmet marked “press.” Meanwhile, journalists for the Globovisión
network were covered with gasoline by far-right protestors who attempted to
set them on fire. This “warm welcome” is extended to those in the press
who the U.S.-backed opposition feel will not present them as positively
as corporate media does.
These
incidents were not mentioned, let alone condemned, by human rights or
press freedom groups, indicating, as does the Blumenthal arrest, that
some consider the right to free speech as dependent on who is doing the
talking and what they are saying.
Filmmaker Dan Cohen described Blumenthal’s treatment as a “blatant attempt to stifle and suppress” The Grayzone’s
reporting on the U.S.’ attempts to overthrow the Venezuelan government,
adding, “Everyone who cares about press freedom in the US should speak
out against this.”
Judging by their silence, very few in the mainstream media do.
Feature photo | Graphic by Claudio Cabrera
Alan MacLeod is a MintPress contributor as well as an academic and writer for Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting. His book, Bad News From Venezuela: Twenty Years of Fake News and Misreporting was published in April.
(Republished from Mint Press News by permission of author or representative)
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