One thing I learned early on as a foreigner who sometimes appears in the press here in Spain was to never, ever, under any circumstances make a public statement about Catalonian independence. Never! You may remember the former U.S. Ambassador James Costos, who made a seemingly innocuous statement about how if Catalonia separated from Spain, American companies would “make adjustments accordingly.” This kicked up quite a frenzy of speculations about whether this represented an official departure from longstanding U.S. policy until he walked his comments back later that same day on Twitter stating that it is “an internal matter for Spain.”
So, while I have spent years carefully sidestepping the issue, I find it curious that these days, both Catalonian pro-independence leaders and the Spanish government have taken this internal dispute global. Why does Spain care so much about the world's opinion on this?
To be fair, the Catalonian leaders went on the international offensive first in the fall of 2017, bashing Spain's government as undemocratic wherever they could get an interview or op-ed published. It was frustrating to see this well-planned strategy play out in the international press as Rajoy's government mostly sat on their hands. These op-eds and interviews gave the impression that the international media was biased towards Catalonia—a consistent complaint among my friends and students and something I've been hard-pressed to find any real evidence of.
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