To save the image
of USAID, Obama selects an expert in deception
Jean-Guy Allard
BY nominating Mark Feierstein as assistant
administrator for Latin America and the Caribbean at
the U.S. Agency for International Development
(USAID), U.S. President Barack Obama, who wanted to
improve the image of this discredited organization,
has shot himself in the foot. The former federal
employee is a specialist in disinformation with the
sulfuric smell of imperial intelligence.
Feierstein’s shady character was exposed on June
5 by Bolivian President Evo Morales, who stated that
he would expel USAID from his country if it
continues giving covert support to organizations
attempting to destabilize the government. And with
reason.
In 2002, Feierstein, an American citizen, acted
as campaign strategist for the electoral campaign of
Gonzalo "Goni" Sánchez de Lozada, ex- president of
Bolivia, and his National Revolutionary Movement
(MNR).
It was "Gońi" who ordered the bloody massacre
which resulted in 67 deaths and 400 injuries during
the so-called gas war of October 2003.
Forced to resign, the president and murderer fled
to the United States, where he received the
protection of George W. Bush and his mafia, who had
organized his rise to the presidency with the help
of Feierstein’s troops.
For some time the Bolivian Government has been
asking the U.S. government for Sanchez de Lozada’s
extradition to stand trial for genocide. An
application that, as is, as is usual for the
criminal friends that they keep, has been ignored by
Bush as well as his successor, Obama.
The U.S. Greenberg Quinland Rosner company "offers
opinion polls (surveys and focus group studies),
television and radio announcements and strategic
advice on campaign tactics, such as debates,
planning, training and research," according to its
website.
Specialists participating in this work include
Israeli political advisor Tal Silberstein.
According to an assessment by the specialist
magazine Covert Action on Greenberg
Quinlan Rosner’s activity in Bolivia, the U.S.
company’s role was to persuade the public that the
country would be submerged in chaos if they failed
to elect a Bush-approved candidate.
When Obama appointed Feierstein as USAID
representative for Latin American and the Caribbean,
the latter was still vice president of Greenberg
Quinland Rosner, the political marketing and survey
firm that secured the election of "Goni" in 2002.
His record, nevertheless, has been soiled with
other stains even harder to clean despite his
expertise in laundering the political careers of
other people.
DIRECTED NED DISINFORMATION CAMPAIGN IN NICARAGUA
In the 90s, Feierstein was project manager in
Nicaragua for the National Endowment for Democracy (NED),
a USAID subsidiary. The purpose of the project was
to overthrow the Sandinistas.
Later he was director for Latin America and the
Caribbean at the National Democratic Institute (NDI),
another tool of imperial interference subsidized by
USAID, which works alongside the International
Republican Institute (IRI) on various
destabilization operations.
The Clinton administration trusted him to the
point of appointing him special advisor to the U.S.
ambassador within the Organization of American
States (OAS), a task associated with the State
Department which demands very specific references.
From this strategic position where continental
geopolitics are discussed, he moved on to USAID,
where he worked at the Elections and Political
Processes (EPP) office, another opinion manipulating
mechanism.
A graduate of the Fletcher School of Law and
Diplomacy, Feierstein is also known as a journalist,
writing occasional opinion columns in The New
York Times, with an undeniable subtlety at the
end of which the enemies of U.S. hegemonic power
seem destined for defeat.
In Venezuela, Feierstein conducted many opinion
polls, always financed by some agency or another of
the State Department, with clear propaganda
objectives. In one of his apparently brilliant
analyses, he did point out that Chávez was extremely
popular among his followers who, nevertheless, "feel
uncomfortable with him."
In the Latin American section of the Greenberg
Quinlan Rosner website, there are references to the
company’s "contributions" to "victorious campaigns,"
such as that of President Manuel Zelaya of Honduras.
Nevertheless, analyzing the coup d’état in
Honduras, Feierstein pretended to lament it in a
peculiar way: The international community’s
rejection of the coup reflects the majority Honduran
opinion, he stated. Mel Zelaya should not have been
removed from power "by force."
Feierstein, his firm’s publicity affirms, has
supervised research into public opinion in more than
30 countries, in which he has acquired great
understanding of people’s points of view all over
the world on a variety of issues. Of this there is
no doubt.
"We are going to expel the U.S. ambassador, the
DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration)," stated Evo
Morales on exposing the U.S. agency and its new capo
for Latin America and the Caribbean. "If the USAID
continues working in this way, my hand will not
falter in signing an expulsion order, because we are
dignified and sovereign, and we are not going to
allow any interference," he added.
Feierstein will occupy the post which was vacated
November 2007 by the corrupt official Adolfo Franco,
who was forced to resign from the organization when
the Government Accountability Office (GAO)
discovered systemic fraud in the accounts of groups
linked with the Cuban mafia, which were subsidized
by USAID.
Back then, Franco was replaced by José R.
Cardenas (aka "Pepe), ex-director of the Cuban-American
National Foundation (CANF), and the man who was
subsequently contracted (July 2009) by the Honduran
dictatorship of Roberto Micheletti to "improve its
image" in Washington.
For his part, President Obama proclaimed his hope
that Feierstein’s nomination would be ratified,
congratulating him on having chosen to dedicate his
talent to serving the American people at an
important moment for the country. The president
elected for "change," affirmed that he hoped to work
with him in the coming months and years.