
The CNN column (4/30/19) helpfully clarifies: “Rooting for the Venezuelan people means hoping that Maduro will step down peacefully.”
It’s Groundhog Day again in Venezuela, as the local conservative opposition has launched another attempt to oust President Nicolás Maduro from power. Surrounded by a few hardcore supporters, Washington-backed self-appointed president Juan Guaidó on April 30 called on the military to rise up and overthrow the democratically elected Maduro. Guaidó, a man who has never even stood for president, attempted the same thing in January, and the opposition has attempted to remove Maduro, and his predecessor Hugo Chávez, on many occasions, including in 2017, 2014, 2013, 2002 and 2001.
Despite bearing the clear hallmarks of a coup—defined as “the violent overthrow or alteration of an existing government by a small group”—US media have overwhelmingly supported it, as they have past attempts (FAIR.org, 1/25/19, 5/16/18, 4/18/02). CNN (4/30/19) told the United States that it must “root for the people” of Venezuela, before explicitly stating, “Rooting for the Venezuelan people means hoping that Maduro will step down”—thus underlining the phenomenon noted by FAIR (1/31/19) that to corporate media, “the people” of Venezuela are whoever agrees with the US government. CNN (4/30/19) also used images of Guaidó’s paramilitaries (identifiable by their blue armbands) to illustrate a report claiming the forces of “socialist dictator” Maduro were “mowing down citizens in the streets.”
Not a Coup, but a…

And the award for Most Awkward Euphemism goes to…the Washington Post (4/30/19)!
Framing how readers see an issue is an incredibly powerful tool of persuasion. It’s not carpet bombing, it’s surgical strikes. And people are more likely to accept advanced interrogation techniques than they are torture.
In their efforts to refrain from using the negative—but accurate—term “coup” to describe events they support, the media have sometimes had to go to bizarre, roundabout and garbled lengths to dance around it. The Washington Post (4/30/19) used the clunky phrase “opposition-led military-backed challenge.” The Post (4/30/19) also published an article in support of Guaidó headlined “Is What’s Happening in Venezuela an Attempted Coup? First, Define ‘Coup,’” arguing that there were such things as “noble” and “democratic coups.”
Other outlets also refused to use the most logical word to describe events. CBS (4/30/19), Reuters (5/1/19) and CNN (5/1/19) chose the word “uprising,” NPR (4/30/19) and the New York Times (4/30/19) “protest,” and Yahoo! News went with the phrase “high-risk gamble” (5/1/19). Meanwhile, the Miami Herald (4/30/19) insisted that the “military rebellion” in Venezuela “can be called many things. But don’t call it a ‘coup attempt.’”
Even international organizations like the BBC (5/1/19), the Guardian (5/1/19) and Al-Jazeera (5/1/19) only used the word “coup” in quotations, characterizing it as an accusation attributed to government officials media have been demonizing for years (Extra!, 11–12/05; FAIR.org, 5/28/18, 4/11/19). This despite the fact that Al-Jazeera (4/30/19) reported on the day of the coup that Erik Prince, CEO of the private military contractor Blackwater, tried to persuade Donald Trump to let him send 5,000 mercenaries to Venezuela to “remove” Maduro.
Stenographers for Power
The reasons for the reluctance of the media to use the word “coup” can be found in official announcements from the government. With all the credibility of an armed man in a mask repeatedly shouting “this is not technically a bank robbery,” national security advisor John Bolton told reporters on April 30, “This is clearly not a coup,” but an effort by ”the Venezuelan people” to “regain their freedom,” which the US “fully supports.” Likewise, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that what we are seeing in Venezuela “is the will of the people to peacefully change the course of their country from one of despair to one of freedom and democracy.”
Soon after Bolton’s comments, Bloomberg published a series of articles (4/30/19; 4/30/19; 4/30/19), all by different writers, on why the events did not constitute a coup attempt. This, despite Bloomberg’s reporter Andrew Rosati revealing that coup leader Leopoldo Lopez told him and the rest the international media core that he wants the US to formally govern Venezuela once Maduro falls.

“We lied, we cheated, we stole,” Pompeo declared—but trust him, Maduro only stayed in power because Putin told him to (CNN, 5/1/19)!
Pompeo made waves in April after publicly admitting at an event at Texas A&M University that he was a serial liar, cheat and thief. As CIA director, he declared, “We lied, we cheated, we stole. We had entire training courses [on it]!” Nevertheless, the media credulously repeated his astonishing claims, made in an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer (5/1/19), that Maduro, who has survived multiple coup attempts and assassinations, had been on the airport tarmac on his way to Cuba, “ready to leave” Venezuela for good, only for Russia to tell him to stay. This dubious, unverified and officially contested assertion made headlines around the world (Daily Beast, 4/30/19; Newsweek, 4/30/19; Times of London, 5/1/19; Deutsche Welle, 4/30/19), with few questioning its credibility.
This is not the first time the media have lined up behind the government on a Venezuelan coup. As detailed in my book, Bad News From Venezuela: Twenty Years of Fake News and Misreporting, the US media also endorsed the April 2002 coup against Chavez, using euphemisms such as “popular uprising” (Miami Herald, 4/18/02), “unrest” (New York Times, 5/23/02) or “Chavez’s temporary downfall” (New York Times, 4/29/02) to frame events more positively. Only after an official White House spokesperson used the word “coup” on April 15, 2002, was the word frequently used in the media, suggesting a close synergy between government officials and those supposedly employed to hold them to account.
After barely 12 hours, the most recent coup attempt appeared to have failed under the weight of its own unpopularity. According to the New York Times (4/30/19), Guaidó failed to attract meaningful support from the military, his co-conspirator Leopoldo Lopez had sought refuge first in the Chilean then in the Spanish embassy, and 25 of his paramilitaries had done the same in the Brazilian one. Guaidó did not win over the Venezuelan majority, who had previously chased his motorcade out of a working class district when he tried to enter. Ordinary Venezuelans continued their lives, or even rushed to the defense of the government. As USA Today (5/1/19) summed up:
Guaidó called it the moment for Venezuelans to reclaim their democracy once and for all. But as the hours dragged on, he stood alone on a highway overpass with the same small cadre of soldiers with whom he launched a bold effort to spark a military uprising.
It appears that the main base of support for the coup was the US government…and the media. The press’s extraordinary complicity, lining up with the State Department’s version of the world in the face of empirical evidence, highlights the worrying closeness between media and government. When it comes to foreign policy, there is often no difference between deep state and fourth estate.
Featured image: AP photograph of a coup supporter in front of a burning bus (photographer: Fernando Llano).






Coup de tached from reality
Said it best
Thanks again AM for the reality version of events in Venezuela!
PS – Weirdly enough, shortly after posting above comment, I was channel-surfing and happened to stop at the local Fox affiliate which had one of those ‘crawl lines’ at the bottom of the screen and was surprised to see that text saying something about “…attempted coup failed in Venezuela.” I realize that local stations aren’t necessarily as right-wing as the Fox News network, but here in Wisconsin it’s been pretty conservative lately so I wasn’t expecting them to be as honest about this, even on a text-line.
I seem to remember that a major reluctance of the Obama admin to call Ukraine, Honduras, Egypt, and other coups “coups” was a law that would’ve prevented the US from arming or providing diplomatic or other aid to the post-coup government.
Yes–which should have been a major point of FAIR’s article. It’s the why of all Fair wrote about.
It is embarrassing to be an American. The parrot press is sadly parroting the fairy tales ,and so many news organizations speak loudly, but merely carry a paper machie STICK!
Let us sing: “My country tis I see, land of insanity—-to that we cling.” I wonder where we will end up?
You article is completely incorrect. Maduro is not the legitimate president. As Venezuelan, I have watched my people and my family suffer for 20 years. You can call it a coup if you want, but when 90% of the Venezuelan people want Maduro out, because he has stole the presidency many times, changed the constitution illegally, formed his own congress illegally, then it justifiable. FAIR? Yea, right. Get your facts straight. Go to Venezuela or speak with other Venezuelans.
So how come none of the supposed 90%, apart from the usual guarimbero or two, turned up to help Guaidog carry out his “coup”, huh?
1. If you’re suffering, it’s largely because of the U.S. embargo and sanctions.
2. Maduro was re-elected in 2018 in a closely-monitored election. Where was your “90%” on that day?
FDont you lapdogs ever get sick of repeating these scripted lies ? You and the crackpots say that Maduro has “stolen the presidency many times” ..this would be a joke if the US weren’t supporting it…Maduro has won elections, every 6 years, over and over, in what most all of the many global observers call one of the most secure and accurate electoral processes in all the world.. ..you people claim the opposite but begged the UN not to send election monitors (which they did anyway) because the truth is, you and your criminal patrons rely on the darkness, the ABSENCE of truth to sow your serial lies.
Seems perfectly reasonable to me that Guaidó’s backers refuse to call it a “coup”, I mean against whom can he, the “interim president”, organise a coup? Surely not Maduro, if he’s not the president?
CIA mis-info-troll claiming 90% of Venezuelans support GuidiDog is truly laughable. A LIE simply based on the math. ROFLMAO
CIA mis-info-troll claiming 90% of Venezuelans support GuidiDog is truly laughable. A LIE simply based on the math. ROFLMAO
thank you very much Alan, and FAIR ! This is a french version of your analysis: https://t.co/P3Iu0lZjIn?amp=1
Vice News via HBO should be included on this list of active parrots and provocateurs, as well. Their segments have been one-sided and dubious, to say the least.
Thanks for this article and the continued work.
Someone tell the WaPo this was merely an “attempted opposition-led military-backed challenge”
Les explico algo nosotros los que habitamos este pais llamado Venezuela somos quienes sufrimos las consecuencias de una banda criminal que ha nombre de una pseudo revolucion secuestro sus instituciones y lanzo millones de Venezolanos a una diaspora increible en muchas partes del planeta. No son ni de izquierda ni de derecha ni CI o CD . Son unos hampones que han convertido a uno de los paises mas ricos del mundo en un pais muy pobre. Sus talentos se han fugado. el secuesto del poder politico ha colocado a bandas hamponiles en todo el territorio nacional. Vengase a Venezuela y toque sus caminos y ciudades, conversen con la gente de los pueblos. Yo los recibo y los paseo …. los espero
It would have been a lot simpler to say that because the powers that be in D.C. have declared that neither Madura in Venezuela, or Assad in Syria are the “legitimate” heads of state, no action against them can be called a coup. At the dawn of America’s Imperial Era, just before the Spanish American War, the Hearst and Pulitzer papers waged a circulation war to see who cold stoke the fires for war the hardest(“Yellow Journalism”)- the American public lapped it up. What is interesting is that not one of today’s TV or print MSM have taken a contrary view. American foreign policy now seems to be trolling 24/7 for mines to sink the Maine and kick things off- as usual for the benefit of the MIC.