By
Tim Anderson
Antony
Loewenstein is confused. Flushed with the success of his first book, My
Israel Question, he has ventured into the wider world of global politics
and has stumbled.
His
first book presented the perspective of a young Australian Jew, reflecting critically
on Israel. His second book, The
Blogging Revolution, attempts a wider analysis of the cyber-media and
democracy, by reference to six countries: Iran, Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Cuba and China.
For
those of us who sense that we live in a propaganda age, linked to war and ideological
domination, this choice of countries should ring warning bells. China remains the subject of a
broad US strategy of ``containment’’
and the US State Department maintains Cuba, Iran and Syria are ``state sponsors of
terrorism’’. All six countries are
amongst the fifteen listed by the US government funded group
Reporters without Borders (RSF) as ``enemies of the internet’’.
The
Bush administration, in turn, has trumpeted these RSF ``findings’’ in support
of its campaigns to de-legitimise regimes and, at the right moment, overthrow
them. In its efforts to create a ``new American century’’ the US administration has
focused heavily on domination of communications systems and the ``embedding’’
of mass media, in attempts to attach moral legitimacy to their appalling
interventions.
In
2005, US secretary of defence
Donald Rumsfeld said that the Pentagon was going to use the internet “as if it
were a weapon of war”. A
recent minor war in Lebanon revolved around the US-backed
Lebanese government efforts to seize Hezbollah’s communications centres. US concern for absolute
surveillance of the internet has seen it develop Operation Echelon which, for
two decades, has intercepted most telephonic and digital communications in the
world.
And having blocked Cuba’s internet fibre-optic
cable access for many years, the US now criticises it for
denying widespread internet access.
There
is little hint of such geopolitics in Antony’s book which, on the
contrary, shadows RSF’s ``Enemies of the Internet’’ campaign, and their Handbook for Bloggers and Cyber-Dissidents,
and adopts much of that ideological baggage. His focus is on the heroic
individual blogger, as a force of participatory democracy to change the world.
This
is a ``third way’’ approach to cyber-media and democracy, with many of the
contradictions of other such ``third’’ ways. On the one hand, he reviles the
media monopolies and says he wants to “challenge the western-centric
perspectives of the mainstream media and its elite” (p. 211). On the other
hand, he admires the “reach” and diversity of the US media and argues “our
role should be to engage individuals from across the political spectrum who
believe in open debate”. His ``blogging revolution’’ thus seeks to “unite”
otherwise marginalised and repressed individual voices, as beacons of hope. No
mention of the differing interests and politics of these bloggers. No mention
of organised resistance. The perspective is standard Western individualism, tagged
as cross-cultural “revolution”.
As
if to highlight the dilemma, Antony opens his book with an
admission that he was “transfixed” by the rhetoric of US President George W. Bush
on media freedom. While he considers himself of the ``left’’, he found Bush “perversely
enjoyable … Bush’s words resonated with me” (pp. 1-2). And so he resolves to
venture out (with an advance from his publisher) in search of solidarity with
bloggers in Iran, Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Cuba and China.
Putting
aside the political perspective, could this not be an interesting exercise in
journalistic tourism? What about the simple experiences of bloggers in
different cultures? But Antony claims a lot more than
this, and his method is not up to it.
The
principal basis for his assertions on the internet and general politics of each
country is that he spent a week or two in each of these six countries. Yet it
seems he barely speaks a word of any of the relevant languages (Persian,
Arabic, Spanish and Chinese). He reads the English press in each country,
speaks to a few English-speaking bloggers and select contacts, complains about some
government officials’ lack of English (p.143), then relies on English-language
(mostly US) journalistic sources.
I
will comment more on his chapter on Cuba, as it is the only one
of these countries I know, having travelled there five times in the past decade,
using the internet on each occasion. I maintain email contact with about forty
people in Cuba.
Antony
begins his Cuba chapter with the assertion that famous novelist Gabriel Garcia
Marquez and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, because they have expressed strong
admiration for Fidel Castro, are “either deluding themselves or lying” (p. 141).
No evidence precedes this striking judgement. In the following two pages his
references are to President George Bush, a remark by a UN official (who appears
not to have visited Cuba) and his own experience
with Cuban officials. This direct contact with the ``repressive regime’’ is the
one light moment in a chapter that relies mostly on encounters with a few of
the famous Cuban ``dissidents’’.
Having
been informed by a US journalist that the
Cubans had “tightened the screws on gaining information from sources”, Antony finds himself
interrogated “in a windowless room” at his hotel by immigration officials. In
the event they “seem[ed] friendly enough”, he says he is just a tourist, and
they leave (p. 143).
The
background to this official scrutiny is not made clear, but the chapter helps
explain it. Antony was in the country not as a tourist
but as a journalist.
Further, he was in Cuba to interview a group of
self-titled ``independent journalists’’, who do not work as journalists in Cuba but are paid by Miami-based
groups. In 2003, several of these people were charged and convicted of
collaborating with the US to overthrow the Cuban
constitution.
Antony notes that several had been jailed
but does not explain the charges. It is not clear if he does not know or does
not care. However Elizardo Sanchez had been closely linked to the late Jorge
Mas Canosa
and had received payments from Miami organisations funded
under US government programs set
up to overthrow the Cuban constitution.
Similarly, Oscar Espinosa Chepe had been jailed (and released after 18 months)
for receiving payments from the US. He was arrested with $13,000,
but receipts proved $7000 in payments over 2002-03 from those same Miami-based organisations.
Antony was not alone in ignoring such
details, and accepting the ``dissidents’’ denials at face value. The US-based Human
Rights Watch and Amnesty USA (whose members are banned
under US law from visiting Cuba) also supported the
jailed ``dissidents’’. However this is an example of the ``western-centric
perspective’’ Antony purports to reject.
Certainly the US and Australia would arrest any person
paid by organisations which specifically aimed to overthrow their constitution.
What
of the internet in Cuba? This was supposedly the
subject of the chapter. Well on my anecdotal experience, since the year 2000,
internet access is slow and expensive, except in workplaces where it is slow
and free. The satellite connections have sped it up a little, between 2000 and
2008, but not by much. Home computer and internet usage rates are very low, but
almost all professionals and all the university students I have spoken to in
recent years have internet access at work or at college.
As
Antony correctly notes, the US economic blockade of Cuba is the main bottleneck
on access and bandwidth. The debate is really over how much more the government
might be restricting access, or blocking sites. Antony produces no evidence on
this, just hearsay assertion. I have not personally experienced any limits,
either from hotel internet, public internet cafes or when using a computer at a
workplace, and I have looked up the US State Department and the Miami-based
groups, from many Havana-based computers. My first port of call on a computer
is always Google and Google News, and I have had no problems in accessing these
sites.
My
experience does not mean no restrictions exist but, where they exist, we need
to consider whether these are for reasons of bandwidth or of censorship.
Indeed, in Australia, there is a wide range
of internet restrictions in workplaces, to stop such practices as music
downloading and Facebook timewasters clogging up the lines. Students in Cuba do not seem to be able
to access YouTube, but this seems to be bandwidth problem.
Any
serious analyst (as opposed to a lazy journalist) must look beyond anecdotes
and hearsay to the broader evidence. What is the available evidence? On the UN
figures, which Antony quotes, internet usage in
Cuba seems very low – around
2% by the 2007-08 Human Development Report.
However the UNDP acknowledges that these figures “can be misleading owing to
multiple prepaid internet accounts, free internet access accounts or public
internet access such as internet cafes”.
That is, what has been measured is personal access.
However,
Cuba is a socialist country, shared
facilities are given priority, and measures which relate to individual benefits
do not always fit. There are more than ten times the number of computers in
workplaces (79,636 in 2006) than in private houses (7402 in 2006) and there are
youth centres with free computer access (600 in 2006).
Internet café costs range from $1 to $6 per hour but a number of libraries also
provide free internet access. About
one third of people have some access to computers (34% in rural areas and 37%
in urban areas) -- mainly through
workplaces, schools and colleges -- and an increasing number of these are being
connected to the internet. Most professionals seem to have access and Cuba has five times Latin America’s rate of professionals.
Cuba estimated the number of
people with access to email as 360,000 in 2002, 790,00 in 2004 and 990,000 in
2006.
That would put over 10% of the Cuban population on email today.
Based
on this data, I would estimate that, while only around 2% of Cubans have
personal or home access, those with access through schools, libraries and
workplaces seems to be about five times this. The notion, then, put out by the
US government and echoed by Antony, that the Cuban government is denying
internet access to Cubans (the most highly educated population in Latin
America) to shield them from the world is simply baseless. The central problem
is bandwidth or capacity and, given the US blockade, this will not
be solved until the fibre-optic cable between Venezuela and Cuba is laid, in late 2009 or
early 2010.
Antony incorrectly attributes the use of
an intranet in Cuba to measures of
censorship. In fact it is a bandwidth measure. To take pressure off satellite
internet capacity, those accessing Cuban sites (including the excellent health
site at http://www.sld.cu) can do so by intranet as well as by internet. A few
years ago there was also a cheaper email service with no web access, but this
too was a bandwidth measure.
None
of this is to say that there is no censorship in Cuba. But journalists should cite
proper evidence to back their claims. The most obvious and visible forms of
censorship come from the US, and one of these
receives brief attention in Antony’s chapter. He notes that
Google Earth has been “made inaccessible by Google itself and apparently not by
the [Cuban] authorities” (160). Indeed, access to Google Earth is not just
blocked to Cubans; US law blocks access to residents of Syria, Iran and other countries.
Further,
a number of US-based companies, including McAffee, under US law, block browsers from
Cuban-identified servers. The US government has even
closed down third-party websites which advertise travel to Cuba. Steve Marshall, a
British resident in Spain and with no operations
in the US, complained that his
travel agency sites have been blacklisted by the US Treasury for their
commercial links with Cuba.
Antony’s ignorance of Cuba is extensive. There
would be little wrong with this if he did not pretend to know so much. For
example he adopts the US media line that Raul Castro
is less ``dogmatic’’ than his older brother, because Cuban state television
showed “the acclaimed [US] gay cowboy film Brokeback Mountain” in 2008. He seems to
have missed the fact that the Cuban state funded the famous Cuban gay film Strawberries and Chocolate in 1992.
He
repeats recent US media claims that Cubans
are ``finally’’ able to stay in Cuba’s tourist hotels. Not
so. They are now able to pay in hard currency for this privilege. For several
years Cuban companies and workplaces have been sending their workers to tourist
hotels, in the off season, when they are not filled with tourists. The Cubans
pay nothing, or much lower rates. It is a fringe benefit of employment. A three-star
hotel I stayed in at Varadero in 2005 was half full of Cubans, on such a plan.
Antony’s assertions on Cuba, if they are read, will
add reassuringly to the cloud of misinformation actively promoted, in corporate
media monopolies, which oppose any system which rejects privatisation. This is
hardly subversion of the ``western-centric’’ view of the world, as he claims.
He
quotes the anti-Cuban ``dissidents’’ and Miami-linked bloggers. Yet for good
critical yet pro-socialist blogs on Cuba the reader is advised
visit Circles Robinson’s site
or/and the I Am My Own Reporter website, set up by Glen Roberts. The
latter, a self-confessed ``political tourist’’, speaks Spanish and has been
visiting Cuba for 20 years. Glen has
some pertinent advice:
“I don't advise you to go to Cuba at
all if you don't speak Spanish, haven't seen enough of the horrors of the Third
World to realize you're not seeing them in Cuba, and haven't got enough sense
to know when you're being conned by a hustler who tells you what he thinks
Americans want to hear hoping you'll adopt him for a week.”
Discerning
readers will recognise that analysis of any of these countries by one brief
visit and compilation of mainly US media reports has some
limitations. When Antony speaks of
``self-determination’’ and rejecting ``western-centric’’ views he has got some
of the lyrics right; but with the baggage he brings to the exercise he isn’t ``singing
the song’’.
[Tim Anderson is a senior lecturer in political economy at Sydney University. He recently made Doctors of Tomorrow, a film about Cuba's assistance to train doctors in Timor Leste.]
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See also:
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Comments
An entire genre of political journalism
There is an entire genre of political journalism that people like Loewenstein seem to be attracted to. My distaste for their regurgitation of mainstream propaganda is only exceeded by an almost paralysing exasperation when confronted by their inconsistencies and laziness and their apparent contempt for the reader.
Thanks to Tim Anderson for having the energy to debunk this latest attempt at a snow job on Cuba.
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