2 March, 2007
NYT Hypes Venezuelan Threat
Comparison of 'arms spending' doesn't include all arms
spending
A February 25 report in the New
York Times on
Venezuela's international
arms purchases ("Venezuela Spending on Arms Soars to
World's Top Ranks") used selective information and an
alarmist tone to suggest that Venezuela's military spending
was a potential threat to regional stability.
Reporter Simon Romero's alarming lead read, "Venezuela's
arms spending has climbed to more than $4 billion in the past
two years, transforming the nation into Latin America's largest
weapons buyer and placing it ahead of other major purchasers
in international arms markets like Pakistan and Iran."
By putting Venezuela in the company of Pakistan and Iran—whose
military programs have attracted global suspicion—the
report was clearly intended to stir alarm and frighten readers
about Venezuela's military designs.
But there are several problems with this piece. First of
all, as the article reveals further down, it was based on
information provided by the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency.
The Pentagon has a well-earned credibility problem when it
comes to making intelligence claims about the threats posed
by official enemies, and the fact that it was the source of
the article's assertions should have been mentioned in the
lead.
The article also used a confusing and highly misleading measure
of arms expenditures. When it uses the phrase "Venezuela's
arms spending," it does not mean the amount Venezuela
spends on arms, but the amount that it spends buying arms
from other countries. If one is interested in the military
threat posed by a particular country, its total spending on
its military is a more relevant statistic; indeed, all other
things being equal, a country that has to buy most of its
weapons from overseas might be seen as less of a threat than
a country with a large domestic arms industry.
But it's clear why the Defense Intelligence Agency would
stress overseas arms purchases as a gauge of Venezuela's military
potential: When one looks at the more comprehensive figure
of total military spending, Venezuela does not seem to constitute
much of a threat at all. In Latin America, according to figures
compiled by the Center
for Arms Control and Nonproliferation, Argentina
spends almost twice as much on its military as Venezuela,
Colombia spends more than three times as much, and Brazil
spends about 12 times as much.
Iran and Pakistan, whose overseas arms purchases the Times
compares to Venezuela's, spend much more on their military
overall than Venezuela does as well. The United States, as
the world's biggest miltary power, has a military budget roughly
500 times the size of Venezuela. None of this crucial context
made it into Romero's piece, though the article does note,
in the 19th of 26 paragraphs, that Brazil's army is far larger
than Venezuela's.
But the article may be inaccurate as well as misleading.
Though the article claimed that Venezuela's $4 billion in
arms purchases over the last two years eclipsed Pakistan's
weapons spending, the Times reported just a few months ago
(11/11/06)
that Pakistan had "placed a $5 billion order for advanced
F-16 jets made by the Lockheed Martin Corporation." Pakistan
would seem to have outspent Venezuela on the international
arms market in a single deal with the American company. In
the February 25 piece, Romero cited an estimate from the Pentagon's
Defense Intelligence Agency that claimed Pakistan had spent
just $3 billion over the past two years, which is obviously
at odds with the Times' report from November, which was also
based on Pentagon data.
The Times' numbers on Venezuelan military spending don't
seem to add up, either. The article reported that Venezuela's
total military budget was $1.3 billion in 2004, "the
last year for which comparative data were immediately available."
(This is slightly more than the figure given by the Center
for Arms Control and Nonproliferation.) It also said that
Venezuela's overseas arms spending was $4.3 billion over the
past two years, and that it was up 12.5 percent in 2006. That
would mean the country bought slightly more than $2 billion
in weapons abroad in 2005.
Given that Venezuela spends at least some portion of its
military budget domestically, this would imply a huge increase
in military spending between 2004 and 2005--at least 50 percent,
and perhaps more than doubling. Such a remarkable jump is
hard to believe, particularly without Romero and his DIA sources
calling attention to it, and raises doubts about the credibility
of the article's entire premise.
ACTION! WHAT YOU CAN DO:
Please contact New York Times public editor and ask him to
look into the article's omission of crucial context and apparent
contradiction with other New York Times reporting.
CONTACT:
New York Times
Byron Calame, Public Editor
Email: public@nytimes.com
Phone: 212-556-7652
This action alert was prepared by FAIR,
Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting. Thank you for your
support!
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