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Critique: The Media's Nicaragua
| Article
# : |
10703 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
1 / 1986 |
4,294 Words |
| Author
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Allan C. Brownfeld Allan C. Brownfeld is a Washington-based journalist and the
author of five books, the latest of which is The Revolution
Lobby (with J. Michael Waller). He is also associate editor
of The Lincoln Review. |
The American media has, from the beginning, portrayed the Sandinistas of Nicaragua--before they assumed power and in the years since--as being worthy of American support. On the other hand, the anti-communist Nicaraguan Contras who seek democracy and freedom for their country are portrayed in the harshest negative terms. Even a brief look at the record shows the role the media has played.
Earl E. T. Smith, who was U.S. ambassador to Cuba at the time Castro came to power, told a 1979 conference sponsored by Accuracy in Media that the press had played a vital role in The Sandinistas' rise to power in Nicaragua, as it had in Castro's overthrow of the government of President Batista. He described how The New York Times correspondent Herbert Matthews had rescued Castro from obscurity and likened him to Abraham Lincoln.
Smith's conclusion: "The media are doing everything in their power to overthrow rightist dictators who are pro-American and anticommunist. They look with favor on leftist dictators who are pro-Communist."
At this same conference in 1979, Max Kelly, who served as President Somoza's personal secretary during his last year in office, charged that the media had been a major factor in the overthrow of the Somaza regime. He said: " I know for a fact--from monitoring of Telex, satellite and telephone lines--that a good number of stories filed from Nicaragua that were either objective or favorable to the government never got printed or shown."
He asked: "Can this country afford to have its foreign policy influenced by this type of
... (1992 of 26124 Characters)
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