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Tuesday, June 24, 2025

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Thursday, June 19, 2025

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Wednesday, June 11, 2025

The National Endowment for Democracy (NED) Abides in Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba - for a Change?

Regime Change in Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba is on The U.S. Agenda


CIA is NED?


US Reinstates Funding to Propaganda Outlet: NED - Weaponizes “Democracy” in Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba


By John Perry and Roger D. Harris


The brief freeze and rapid partial reinstatement of National Endowment for Democracy (NED) funding in early 2025 helped expose it as a US regime-change tool.  Created to rebrand CIA covert operations as “democracy promotion,” the NED channels government funds to opposition groups in Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba, meddling in their internal affairs.

Regime change on the US agenda

In 2018, Kenneth Wollack bragged to the US Congress that the NED had given political training to 8,000 young Nicaraguans, many of whom were engaged in a failed attempt to overthrow Nicaragua’s Sandinista government.  Wollack was praising the “democracy-promotion” work carried out by NED, of which he is now vice-chair.  Carl Gershman, then president of the NED and giving evidence, was asked about Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega, who had been re-elected with an increased majority two years prior.  He responded: “Time for him to go.”

Seven years later, Trump took office and it looked as if the NED’s future was endangered.  On February 12, the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) under Elon Musk froze disbursement of its congressionally approved funds.  Its activities stopped and its website went blank.  On February 24, Richard Grenell, special envoy to Venezuela, declared that “Donald Trump is someone who does not want to make regime changes.”

Washington’s global regime-change operations were immediately impacted and over 2,000 paid US collaborating organizations temporarily defunded.  A Biden-appointed judge warned of “potentially catastrophic harm” to (not in her words) US efforts to overturn foreign governments.  The howl from the corporate press was deafening.  The Associated Press cried: “‘Beacon of freedom’ dims as US initiatives that promote democracy abroad wither.”

However, the pause lasted barely a month.  On March 10, funding was largely reinstated.  The NED, which “deeply appreciated” the State Department’s volte face, then made public its current program which, in Latin America and the Caribbean alone, includes over 260 projects costing more than $40 million.

US “soft power”

Created in 1983 under President Ronald Reagan following scandals involving the CIA’s covert funding of foreign interventions, the NED was to shift such operations into a more publicly palatable form under the guise of “democracy promotion.”  As Allen Weinstein, NED’s first acting president, infamously admitted in 1991: “A lot of what we do today was done covertly 25 years ago by the CIA.”  In short, NED functions as a “soft power arm” of US foreign policy.

The NED disingenuously operates as a 501(c)(3) private nonprofit foundation.  However, it is nearly 100% funded by annual appropriations from the US Congress and governed mainly by Washington officials or ex-officials.  In reality, it is an instrument of the US state—and, arguably, of the so-called deep state.  But its quasi-private status shields it from many of the disclosure requirements that typically apply to taxpayer-funded agencies.

Hence we encounter verbal gymnastics such as those in its “Duty of Care and Public Disclosure Policies.”   That document loftily proclaims: “NED holds itself to high standards of transparency and accountability.”  Under a discussion of its “legacy” (with no mention of its CIA pedigree), the NGO boasts: “Transparency has always been central to NED’s identity.”

But it continues, “…transparency for oversight differs significantly from transparency for public consumption.”  In other words, it is transparent to the State Department but not to the public.  The latter are only offered what it euphemistically calls a “curated public listing of grants” – highly redacted and lacking in specific details.

NED enjoys a number of advantages by operating in the nether region between an accountable US government agency and a private foundation.  It offers plausible deniability: the US government can use it to support groups doing its bidding abroad without direct attribution, giving Washington a defense from accusations of interference in the internal affairs of other countries.  It is also more palatable for foreign institutions to partner with what is ostensibly an NGO, rather than with the US government itself.

The NED can also respond quickly if regime-change initiatives are needed in countries on Washington’s enemy list, circumventing the usual governmental budgeting procedures.  And, as illustrated during that congressional presentation in 2018 on Nicaragua, NED’s activities are framed as supporting democracy, human rights, and civil society.  It cynically invokes universal liberal values while promoting narrow Yankee geopolitical interests.  Thus its programs are sold as altruistic rather than imperial, and earn positive media headlines like the one from the AP cited above.

But a look at NED’s work in Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba suggests very much the opposite.

Venezuela

Venezuela had passed an NGO Oversight Law in 2024.  Like the US’s Foreign Agents Registration Act, but somewhat less restrictive, the law requires certification of NGOs.  As even the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) – an inside-the-beltway promoter of US imperialism with a liberal gloss –  admits: “Many Venezuelan organizations receiving US support have not been public about being funding recipients.”

The pace of Washington’s efforts in Venezuela temporarily slowed with the funding pause, as US-funded proxies had to focus on their own survival.  Venezuelan government officials, cheering the pause, viewed the NED’s interference in their internal affairs as a violation of Venezuelan sovereignty.  In contrast, the US-funded leader of the far-right opposition, Maria Corina Machado, begged for international support to make up for the shortfall from Washington.

WOLA bemoaned that the funding freeze allowed the “Maduro government to further delegitimize NGOs” paid by the US. Hundreds of US-funded organizations, they lamented, “now face the grim choice of going underground, relocating abroad, or shutting down operations altogether.”

With the partial reinstatement of funding, now bankrolling at least 39 projects costing $3.4 million, former US senator and present NED board member Mel Martinez praised the NED for its “tremendous presence in Venezuela… supporting the anti-Maduro movement.”

Nicaragua

Leading up to the 2018 coup attempt, the NED had funded 54 projects worth over $4 million.  Much of this went to support supposedly “independent” media, in practice little more than propaganda outlets for Nicaragua’s opposition groups.  Afterward, the NED-funded online magazine Global Americans revealed that the NED had “laid “the groundwork for insurrection” in Nicaragua.

One of the main beneficiaries, Confidencial, is owned by the Chamorro family, two of whose members later announced intentions to stand in Nicaragua’s 2021 elections.  The family received well over $5 million in US government funding, either from the NED or directly from USAID (now absorbed into the State Department).  In 2022, Cristiana Chamorro, who handled much of this funding, was found guilty of money laundering.  Her eight-year sentence was commuted to house arrest; after a few months she was given asylum in the US.

Of the 22 Nicaragua-related projects which NED has resumed funding, one third sponsor “independent” media.  While the recipients’ names are undisclosed, it is almost certain that this funding is either for outlets like Confidencial (now based in Costa Rica), or else is going direct to leading opponents of the Sandinista government to pay for advertisements currently appearing in Twitter and other social media.

Cuba

In Latin America, Cuba is targeted with the highest level of NED spending – $6.6 million covering 46 projects.  One stated objective is to create “a more well-informed, critically minded citizenry,” which appears laughable to anyone who has been to Cuba and talked to ordinary people there – generally much better informed about world affairs than a typical US citizen.

Cuba’s Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez criticized the NED’s destabilizing activities, such as financing 54 anti-Cuba organizations since 2017.  He advised the US administration to review “how many in that country [the US] have enriched themselves organizing destabilization and terrorism against Cuba with support from that organization.”

Washington not only restored NED funding for attacks on Cuba but, on May 15, added Cuba to the list of countries that “do not fully cooperate with its anti-terrorist efforts.”

The NED: Covert influence in the name of democracy

Anyone with a basic familiarity with Washington’s workings is likely to be aware of the NED’s covert role.  Yet the corporate media – behaving as State Department stenographers and showing no apparent embarrassment – have degenerated to the point where they regularly portray the secretly funded NED outlets as “independent” media serving the targeted countries.

Case in point: Washington Post columnist Max Boot finds it “sickening” that Trump is “trying [to] end US government support for democracy abroad.”  He is concerned because astroturf “democracy promotion groups” cannot exist without the flow of US government dollars.  He fears the “immense tragedy” of Trump’s executive order to cut off funding (now partially reinstated) for the US Agency for Global Media, the parent agency of the Voice of America, Radio Marti, and other propaganda outlets.

Behind the moralistic appeals to democracy promotion and free press is a defense of the US imperial project to impose itself on countries such as Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba.  Those sanctioned countries, targeted for regime change, need free access to food, fuel, medicines and funding for development.  They don’t need to hear US propaganda beamed to them or generated locally by phonily “independent” media.


- Roger D. Harris is with the Task Force on the Americas, the US Peace Council, and the Venezuela Solidarity Network.

- Nicaragua-based John Perry is with the Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition and writes for MR Online, the London Review of Books, FAIR and CovertAction, among others.


Source

Thursday, June 5, 2025

The expulsion of Haitians from the Dominican Republic raises serious humanitarian and human rights concerns - particularly when they involve pregnant Haitian women or mothers with very young children

Haiti Humanitarian Country Team deeply concerned about the deportation of pregnant and breastfeeding women from the Dominican Republic


Crisis in Haiti

Humanitarian Crisis in Haiti


The Humanitarian Country Team (HCT) in Haiti expresses deep concern over the rising number of pregnant and breastfeeding women being deported from the Dominican Republic to Haiti, in violation of international standards.
According to the latest data from the International Organization for Migration (IOM), nearly 20,000 individuals — including a growing number of highly vulnerable women — were deported by land in April 2025, marking a record number for a one-month period.  At the Belladère and Ouanaminthe border crossings, the National Office for Migration (ONM) and IOM, in coordination with other partners, have assisted an average of 15 pregnant women and 15 breastfeeding mothers per day since 22 April.
“It is imperative that commitments to protecting vulnerable populations are upheld.  These expulsions raise serious humanitarian and human rights concerns, particularly when they involve pregnant women or mothers with very young children,” said Ulrika Richardson, United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator in Haiti.
These deportations compound an already complex humanitarian crisis affecting millions of people across the country.  Armed violence in several regions has displaced more than one million individuals.
In addition, food insecurity continues to worsen nationwide.  Over 5.7 million people — half the population — are currently facing acute food insecurity, with pockets of near-famine conditions.
In response to this situation, United Nations agencies and their humanitarian partners, in coordination with Haitian authorities, are mobilizing to address the most urgent needs — including through the provision of safe drinking water, adapted hygiene kits, medical care, temporary shelter, psychosocial support, and food assistance.
The Humanitarian Country Team in Haiti calls for migration policies that uphold human dignity and urges enhanced regional solidarity to address a crisis that transcends borders and endangers the rights and lives of thousands.


For more information, please contact: Claire-Emmanuelle Pressoir, Public Information Officer, OCHA Haiti, Port-au-Prince
claire.pressoir@un.org 
This article first appeared in Haiti | ReliefWeb

Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Captain IBRAHIM TRAORE needs more than just Cheerleaders!

Let's Use our Platforms to Support Capt. Ibrahim Traore and become virtual citizens of the Burkina Faso Global Massive



STOP TALKING ABOUT IBRAHIM TRAORE AND TAKE ACTION!



By Professor Gilbert Morris
Nassau, NP, The Bahamas


African and Caribbean people are delusional and talk too much!

Captain Traore
Who cannot love Capt. Ibrahim Traore…when he embodies all we have longed for against both colonialists and our own post-colonial leaders.

But with all that is arrayed against him…why all the celebration and constant feckless barking…vainglorious noise-making!

We have no understanding of power and none of the people speaking loudest and celebrating pan-African nonsense have the power to help him.

He is living under threat for his life: he needs more than cheerleaders.

What Traore needs is time…but there is none.  Those who wish to end his regime are working every angle, whilst his fans are thinking their incessant barking and insipid noise-making is action!

Shut up so he may work in silence.  Don’t poke the imperialist bear until he has had the chance to steel his country against the imperialists who are now trying to defeat him.  Let him go dark and emerge in 300 days having strengthened his defences through deals.

Use your platform to reveal and shame every imperialist who threatens him.  Make sure every post has 100 million likes and shares.

That is action!

You want to make a real practical difference:

1. Create a fund.
2. Use an African app.
3. Raise money for schools and medical care in Burkina Faso.

Everyone…give money to this cause and let’s make ourselves virtual citizens of the Burkina Faso Global Massive!

Support with systems, not talk!

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Intelisys Limited, I Have no Business With You!

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Anti-Money Laundering Regimes are Worthless

Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Policies are Costly and Ineffective


Anti-money Laundering Regimes

I TOLD YOU SO: IDB SAYS ANTI-MONEYLAUNDERING REGIMES ARE INEFFECTIVE! 


By Professor Gilbert Morris
Nassau, NP, The Bahamas


Since 1998, as advisor to the late great Pierre Diarier - then Chairman of the Swiss Private Bankers Association - I travelled the world (more than 100 countries) explaining that:

1. The OECD Tax Competition Initiative was bogus and unconstitutional

2. The OECD has zero authority; is not an international organisation in international law; nor was its spawn the FATF

3. European Union anti-tax competition initiatives were fiats, undermining the multilateral system

4. Tax advoidance is legal and is every individual’s duty to himself

5. Tax Information Exchange Agreements (TIEA) were bogus, unconstitutional and secured by threats and so a violation of the Vienna Convention on Treaties 1969

6. Automatic Information Exchange was a breach of humanrights, inconsistent with any legitimate legal thesis, and replaced judicial authority with administrative tyranny

7. Small states should shed their mortal cowardice, and leverage the multilateral system to demand universal regulations consistent with a rule-governed world; which the late great Eric Crutchley of #Cayman National Bank had the courage to fund

8. The U.S. and U.K. were and are the largest financial centres and the G20 are where 90% of financial crimes are committed

9. The entire AML regime showed a retarded lack of understanding of global money aggregates and the logistics of money movement

10. Small International Financial Centres (IFC) should form an Organisation of International FinancialCentres to research and advocate globally

Of course, governments of every sort whispered to me that I was right, yet few acted to counteract this global junta, issuing its fiats, stealing data from small jurisdictions only, whilst issuing onesided blacklists, greylists and whitelists - each one more bogus than the other - offending every principle of statistical categorisation.

Now the IDB says it’s all bogus: As in the past IFCs will rejoice without admitting their enabling cowardice.  But the powerful don’t retreat without purpose.  That the IDB is making such a bold statement against an AML regime in which billions were wasted and careers were ruined, means the new strategy is not merely afoot, but ‘they’ have devised a means for control and dominance already.  And that is their duty to ride Donkeys where they find them.  It’s our jobs not to continue being the Donkey!

I warned about capitulating from fear rather than from/with strategy; as if our brains stopped when we finished at the same universities with those seeking to impose nonsense upon us.

Now again, as I warned in 1998, I warn here: THIS IS THE FRONT END OF CENTRAL BANK DIGITAL CURRENCIES and AML will be replaced by surveillance.

Therefore, IFCs should launch a comprehensive study - resulting in a White Paper - on “Constitutional Modelling of CBDC” and instead of reacting to global initiatives, cultivate a mandate for the future as responsible members of the global community!

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