Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06BUENOSAIRES538
2006-03-09 12:31:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Buenos Aires
Cable title:  

KIRCHNER TAKES ON TWO INFLUENTIAL DAILIES

Tags:  KPAO OPRC KMDR PREL PHUM AR 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXYZ0000
OO RUEHWEB

DE RUEHBU #0538/01 0681231
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 091231Z MAR 06
FM AMEMBASSY BUENOS AIRES
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 3739
INFO RHMFIUU/CDR USSOCOM MACDILL AFB FL//SCJ2//
RULGPUA/USCOMSOLANT
UNCLAS BUENOS AIRES 000538 

SIPDIS

STATE FOR INR/R/MR, I/GWHA, WHA, WHA/PDA, WHA/BSC
CDR USSOCOM FOR J-2 IAD/LAMA
STATE PASS NSC

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: KPAO OPRC KMDR PREL PHUM AR
SUBJECT: KIRCHNER TAKES ON TWO INFLUENTIAL DAILIES


Summary
-------

UNCLAS BUENOS AIRES 000538

SIPDIS

STATE FOR INR/R/MR, I/GWHA, WHA, WHA/PDA, WHA/BSC
CDR USSOCOM FOR J-2 IAD/LAMA
STATE PASS NSC

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: KPAO OPRC KMDR PREL PHUM AR
SUBJECT: KIRCHNER TAKES ON TWO INFLUENTIAL DAILIES


Summary
--------------


1. President Kirchner recently took his contentious
relationship with the Argentine press to a new level,
publicly and directly attacking Argentina's two most
influential daily newspapers -- Clarin and La Nacion.
Although La Nacion is accustomed to being targeted by
Kirchner, Clarin has enjoyed a more privileged relationship
with the Kirchner administration. Clarin did not back down,
firing back with a written rebuttal. The President's go at
Clarin sets a new precedent that reaches beyond Argentina's
aggrieved journalists into one of the country's most
powerful conglomerates. End Summary.


Tight Control Over the Media
--------------


2. Argentine journalists often complain that President
Nestor Kirchner's press events are, in fact, nothing more
than an opportunity to make statements because he refuses to
take questions. Technically, he has never given a press
conference since being elected. First Lady Cristina
Kirchner never gave one during her 2005 senatorial campaign.
Kirchner's spokesman, Miguel Nunez, rarely speaks to the
press. Cabinet Chief Alberto Fernandez controls the
government's media budget, which is distributed
disproportionately in favor of Pagina 12, a pro-Kirchner
leftwing daily with a tiny circulation of 12,000. These
aspects of Kirchner's tight reins over the distribution of
official information and funding have been increasingly
criticized of late, both from inside and outside Argentina.
The Inter-American Press Association, an NGO that focuses on
the protection of press freedom, the ADC (Asociacion por los
Derechos Civiles, an NGO supported by the Open Society
Institute) and ADEPA (Argentina's Asociacion de Entidades
Periodisticas Argentinas) have all published critical
assessments of press treatment in Argentina. The New York
Times and the Economist have also run articles on the
difficulties faced by the Argentine media.


Clarin's Tax Reform Article Spurs a Battle of Words
-------------- --------------


3. In this atmosphere, a front-page article by Clarin,

citing government sources, reported that the GOA was
studying tax reform, prompted strong criticism from Kirchner
on February 21. In an unexpected, extended harangue against
Clarin's article, the visibly annoyed President accused the
paper of calling him a liar and claimed "no paper or
journalist, or most of them, ever issues an errata or
correction..."


4. Clarin's Chief Editor, Ricardo Kirschbaum, responded with
a stinging editorial: "Journalism -- through its autonomy
and freedom -- is a fundamental piece of the democratic
system." Kirschbaum pointed out that the article never
called the president a liar. He confirmed the article's
information regarding tax reform and the credibility of
official sources. He noted that Clarin -- and he personally
-- regularly issue corrections. Journalists, he insisted,
have the right to publish information as it is, confirmed by
sources, "otherwise, journalism is limited to official
information." Clarin's chief editor interpreted Kirchner's
speech as a reminder to members of his administration that
information is to be centralized "with an iron fist."


5. Daily Clarin is part of the powerful Clarin Group
conglomerate that includes Channels 13 (second in rating)
and TN (cable),Radio Mitre (second in rating),a part of
the DYN wire service (in partnership with La Nacion),its
own paper factory, and the provincial papers La Voz del
Interior (Cordoba) and Los Andes (Mendoza). The Clarin
Group's owners, Ernestina Herrera de Noble and Hector
Magnetto, are viewed as particularly powerful oligarchs in
Argentine politics. Media analysts point to Clarin's
decision to criticize former President Carlos Menem as the
beginning of his fall from public grace.


6. The Clarin Group's relationship with Kirchner was
reportedly set when the government saved the conglomerate
from a creditors' takeover after it almost collapsed in the
wake of the 2001 financial crisis. The government signed
the "law of cultural assets," which prohibited foreign
creditors from taking over Clarin. In May 2005, the
government extended current television licenses, giving 15
years to Clarin (more than others) and buying additional
good will from the company for the government. In this
context, Clarin has had more access than its chief
competitor La Nacion to Kirchner and his government, and has
been less critical. Nevertheless, Clarin's emergence from
financial difficulties has placed it in a position where it
will hesitate less to publicly rebuke the government over
issues that it cares about. Several weeks ago, the paper
strongly criticized the now-adopted reform of the Council of
Magistrates (REFTEL: Buenos Aires 452). The recent riposte,
however, crossed a new line in the Kirchner-Clarin
relationship and required approval from the owners
themselves before publication.


Kirchner Whips La Nacion
--------------


7. Kirchner decided the following day to dress down by name
La Nacion's Joaquin Morales Sola, Argentina's most
prestigious columnist, for his criticism of the reform of
the Council of Magistrates. In Kirchner's dark horse run
for the Casa Rosada in 2003, La Nacion took an officially
neutral position, but was sympathetic to center-right
candidate Ricardo Lopez Murphy and since then has taken a
critical line against many of the government's policies.
Kirchner has occasionally attacked La Nacion since coming to
power, when he accused the paper of failing to report
atrocities committed during the 1976-1983 military
dictatorship. Journalists for La Nacion work with little
access to the presidency. Kirchner later granted a
telephone interview to Morales Sola and La Nacion simply
reprinted the president's original critical comments.

Comment
--------------


8. Kirchner's contentiousness with the press is part of his
operating style of slamming opponents and then making up on
his terms. As long as his popularity ratings remain high,
Kirchner and his advisors will likely continue to believe
that he benefits - or at least loses nothing - by frequently
attacking the media and frustrating journalists with his
tight control over information. What changed in this recent
case was that Clarin - the major media conglomerate
considered to be the barometer of Argentine public sentiment
- decided to fight back for the first time.

GUTIERREZ