The Economist has spent the past week blaming the left for the coup in Chile, and insisting that everybody move on from it.
Remember that The Economist helped to prepare the ground for Salvador Allende's removal, and welcomed the Augusto Pinochet regime.
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During the 1970s, The Economist's Latin American editor was a man named Robert Moss.
Declassified UK files show that Moss was "an IRD contact". In other words, he was an asset of the Foreign Office's secret propaganda unit, the Information Research Department.
In 1972, Moss travelled to Chile to write a CIA-funded book about Allende's Popular Unity government.
Moss had been recommended to the CIA by Brian Crozier, an MI6 "alongsider" whose Institute for the Study of Conflict (ISC) was being secretly funded by the IRD.
From Chile, Moss wrote "negative stories on Allende almost every week" for The Economist, attacking his embrace of "Cuban terrorists" and economic record.
Moss also lectured at CIA think tanks and rubbed shoulders with Chilean military officials. columnblog.com/p/the-economis…
The Economist's hit jobs against Allende carried no byline, meaning nobody knew who was actually writing them.
Worse still, the IRD was probably providing Moss with propaganda material which could be used to attack Allende.
In April 1972, Salvador Allende personally intervened by writing a series of letters to the Chilean press.
He complained that newspapers like "La Tercera de la Hora" were uncritically regurgitating The Economist's reports.
"Your newspaper has been publishing articles... that present a warped image of Chile's reality, and which are not signed by any responsible journalist, but a 'special correspondent' of The Economist", Allende wrote.
"Imposters like this cause considerable harm to our nation".
Allende, of course, was correct.
Robert Moss (pictured below) operated within a shady network of US and British intelligence officials, and his work was actively contributing to the destabilisation of the Chilean government.
Moss' campaign did not end here.
Following the brutal 1973 coup in Chile, Moss transformed his CIA-funded book on Allende into an apologia for the Pinochet regime.
The military's "decision to intervene had nothing to do with Washington", he declared.
Moss' book was so favourable to the Pinochet regime that the Chilean junta bought 9,750 copies of it for distribution through its embassies.
The Economist also helped to usher in the Pinochet regime. From 15 September 1973:
"The blame lies clearly with Dr. Allende... Their coup was homegrown, and attempts to make out that the Americans were involved are absurd".
As historian Alexander Zevin wrote, upon hearing the news of Chile's coup, Moss danced down the corridors of The Economist chanting: "My enemy is dead!".
Pablo Sepúlveda Allende is the grandson of Salvador Allende. He recently spoke about Moss' reaction:
"The unfortunate thing is that certain parts of the press are not independent – they’re financed or form part of major economic interest groups". declassifieduk.org/50-years-after…
Moss would go on to become a speechwriter for Margaret Thatcher, whose friendship with Augusto Pinochet is now infamous.
Brian Crozier also went on to advise Thatcher, and helped Pinochet to write the 1980 Chilean constitution.
This vignette, and many others, will feature in our forthcoming documentary "Britain and the Other 9/11".
It's about the UK's secret campaign against Allende, and subsequent support for the Pinochet regime.
In Kissinger's view, Allende posed such a severe threat because the "example of a successful elected Marxist government in Chile would surely have an impact on... other parts of the world".
He added: "The imitative spread of similar phenomena would... affect the world balance".
Thread on some of the appalling things that Churchill - "the greatest Briton" - said throughout his lifetime:
Churchill on Benito Mussolini, 1926:
"If I had been an Italian I am sure I would have been wholeheartedly from start to finish with Fascismo's triumphant struggle against the bestial appetites and passions of Leninism".
Churchill on Mussolini again:
"I could not help being charmed by his gentle, simple bearing and his calm, detached poise".
New: With Venezuela's gold still frozen in the Bank of England, the UK courts have granted the "Maduro Board" permission to appeal a July judgment which ruled in favour of the "Guaidó Board".
Justice Cockerill, the judge overseeing the case, noted that the legal issues at stake here are "effectively unprecedented".
She thus allowed the "Maduro Board" to appeal her own decision - a rare judgment. 2/
The "Maduro Board" argued in court that, if the "Guaidó Board" was allowed to give instructions to the Bank of England regarding Venezuelan assets, these assets could then be transferred to the personal accounts of Guaidó and his associates. 3/
Britain promised to help Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet "with medical treatment in London" in return for Chile's help during the Falklands War, according to a newly declassified UK file.
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In 1998, Britain was served by Spain with an extradition request for Pinochet, who was receiving medical treatment in London.
The charges concerned crimes against humanity committed during Chile's military dictatorship (1973-1990), including murder, torture, & hostage-taking. 2/
Faced with an extradition request, Britain's offer of "medical treatment" to Pinochet years earlier seemed to complicated things.
"It would obviously be embarrassing if all this came out", PM Tony Blair was told. 3/
Breaking: The UK High Court has ruled in favour of the Juan Guaidó board in the Venezuelan gold case
Venezuela's highest court (STJ) quashed Guaidó's appointment of an "ad-hoc board" to the Central Bank of Venezuela, but the UK court ruled that STJ judgments cannot be recognised
However, the judge did not accept that non-recognition of STJ judgments means that Guaidó can now give instructions to the Bank of England concerning Venezuela's gold reserves.
The gold thus remains frozen in the Bank of England, awaiting a further hearing in October 2022.
The judge also ruled that, while STJ judgments "are not capable of being recognised", the Guaidó board's attack on the institutional independence of the STJ failed to meet "the hurdle of cogent evidence".
Venezuela's gold is still frozen in the Bank of England. The issue returns to the UK courts this week, and the UK government just reaffirmed its recognition of Juan Guaidó.
The UK courts are effectively being asked to legitimate piracy.
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This week's hearing will centre on whether the UK's recognition of Juan Guaidó allows it to transfer Venezuelan state assets to Guaidó's 'interim government'.
The UK courts thus have to decide whether they can ignore the judgments of the Venezuelan Supreme Tribunal of Justice.
This has always been a political case.
According to John Bolton, former UK foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt was "delighted" to freeze Venezuela's gold in support of US destabilisation efforts.
Bolton recently admitted to and laughed about planning the coup in Venezuela.