With no one eager to talk about the revelations, the
question is what will ex-president Lula do about it
By Pepe Escobar
July 27, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Two decades after a
political earthquake, a powerful aftershock that should
be rocking Brazil apart is being met with thunderous
silence.
What is now termed “the Banestado
leaks” and “CC5gate” is straight out of vintage
WikiLeaks: a list, published for the first time in full,
naming names and detailing one of the biggest corruption
and money laundering cases in the world in the past
three decades.
This scandal allows for the healthy practice of what
Michel Foucault characterized as the archeology of
knowledge. Without understanding these leaks, it’s
impossible to place in proper context events ranging
from the sophisticated assault by Washington on Brazil –
initially via NSA spying on President Dilma Roussef’s
first term (2010-2014) – all the way to the “|Car Wash”
corruption investigation that jailed Luis Inácio Lula da
Silva and opened the way for the election of neofascist
patsy Jair Bolsonaro as president.
Credit for the scoop on this George
Orwell-does-hybrid-war plotline is due, once again, to
independent media. The small website Duplo
Expresso, led by young, daring, Bern-based
international lawyer Romulus Maya, first published the
list.
An epic five-hour podcast assembled the
three key protagonists who denounced the scandal in the
first place, back in the late 1990s, and now are able to
re-analyze it: then-governor of Parana state Roberto
Requiao, federal prosecutor Celso Tres and now retired
police superintendent Jose Castilho Neto.
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Previously, in another podcast, Maya and
anthropologist Piero Leirner, Brazil’s foremost analyst
of hybrid war, briefed
me on the myriad political intricacies of the leaks
while we discussed geopolitics in the Global South.
The CC5 lists are here, here ,
and here .
Let’s see what makes them so special.
The mechanism
Way back in 1969, the Brazilian Central Bank created
what was described as a “CC5 account” to facilitate
foreign companies and executives to legally wire assets
overseas. For many years the cash flow in these accounts
was not significant. Then everything changed in the
1990s – with the emergence of a massive, complex
criminal racket centered on money laundering.
The original Banestado investigation started in 1997.
Federal prosecutor Celso Tres was stunned to find that
from 1991 to 1996 Brazilian currency worth no less than
US$124 billion had been wired overseas. Eventually the
total for the whole life of the racket (1991-2002)
ballooned to a whopping $219 billion – placing Banestado
as one of the largest money laundering schemes in
history.
Tres’s report led to a federal investigation focused
in Foz do Iguacu in southern Brazil, strategically
situated right at the Tri-Border of Brazil, Argentina
and Paraguay, where local banks were laundering vast
amounts of funds through their CC5 accounts.
Here is how it worked. US dollar dealers in the black
market, linked to bank and government employees, used a
vast network of bank accounts under the names of
unsuspecting
smurfs and phantom companies to launder illegal
funds from public corruption, tax fraud and organized
crime, mainly through the Banco do Estado do Parana
branch in Foz do Iguacu. Thus “the Banestado case.”
The federal investigation was going nowhere until
2001, when then-police superintendent Castilho
ascertained that most of the funds were actually landing
in accounts at the Banestado branch in New York.
Castilho arrived in New York in January 2002 to
turbo-charge the necessary international money
tracking.
Through a court order, Castilho and his team reviewed
137 accounts at Banestado New York, tracking $14.9
billion. In quite a few cases, the beneficiaries’ names
were the same as those of Brazilian politicians then
serving in Congress, cabinet ministers and even former
presidents.
After a month in New York, Castilho was back in
Brazil carrying a hefty 400-page report. Yet, despite
the overwhelming evidence he was removed from the
investigation, which was then put on hold for at least a
year. When the new Lula government took power in early
2003, Castilho was back in business.
In April 2003, Castilho identified a particularly
interesting Chase Manhattan account named “Tucano” – the
nickname of the PSDB party led by former president
Fernando Henrique Cardoso, who had been in power before
Lula and who always kept very close ties to the Clinton
and Blair political machines.
Castilho was instrumental in the setup of a
parliamentary inquiry commission over the Banestado
case. But, once again, this commission led nowhere –
there was not even a vote on a final report. Most
companies involved negotiated deals with the Brazilian
Internal Revenue Service and thus ended any possibility
of legal action in regard to tax evasion.
Banestado meets Car Wash
In a nutshell, the two largest political parties –
Cardoso’s neoliberal PSDB and Lula’s Workers’ Party,
neither of which ever really faced down imperial
machinations and the Brazilian rentier class – actively
buried an in-depth investigation.
Moreover Lula, coming right after Cardoso, and
mindful or preserving a minimum of governability, made a
strategic decision not to investigate “Tucano”
corruption, including a slew of dodgy privatizations.
New York prosecutors went so far as to prepare a
special Banestado list for Castilho with what really
mattered for criminal prosecution to go through: the
full circle of the money laundering scheme, with funds
first illegally remitted out of Brazil using the CC5
accounts, next passing through the New York branches of
the Brazilian banks involved, then reaching offshore
bank accounts and trusts in tax havens (e.g., Cayman,
Jersey, Switzerland) and finally going back to Brazil as
– fully laundered – “foreign investment,” for the actual
use and enjoyment of the final beneficiaries who had
first removed the not-accounted-for money from the
country using the CC5 accounts.
But then Brazilian Justice Minister Marcio Thomaz
Bastos, appointed by Lula, nixed it. As superintendent
Castilho metaphorically puts it, “This deliberately
prevented me from going back to Brazil with the murdered
body.”
While Castilho never got hold of this critical
document, at least two Brazilian congressmen, two
senators and two federal prosecutors who would later on
rise to fame as Car Wash investigation “stars” –
Vladimir Aras and Carlos Fernando dos Santos Lima –
did get it.
Why and how the document – call it the “body bag” –
never found its way into the criminal proceedings back
in Brazil is an extra mystery wrapped up inside the
whole enigma.
Meanwhile, there are “unconfirmed” reports (several
sources would not go on record on this) that the
document might have been used for outright extortion of
the individuals, mostly billionaires, featured on the
list.
Extra sauce in the judicial sphere comes from the
fact that the provincial judge in charge of burying the
Banestado case was none other than Sergio Moro, the
self-serving Elliot Ness figure who in the next decade
would rise to superstar status as the capo di tutti
i capi of the massive Car Wash investigation and
subsequent justice minister under Bolsonaro.
Moro ended up resigning and is now de facto already
campaigning to be elected president in 2022.
And here we hit the toxic Banestado-Car Wash
connection. Considering what is already public domain
about Moro’s
modus operandi on Car Wash, as he altered names in
documents with the single-minded objective of sending
Lula to jail, the challenge now would be to prove how
Moro “sold” non-convictions related to Banestado. He had
a very convenient legal excuse: With no “body” brought
back to criminal proceedings in Brazil, no one could be
found guilty.
As we plunge into excruciating details, Banestado
increasingly looks and feels like the Ariadne’s thread
that may reveal the beginning of the destruction of
Brazil’s sovereignty. A tale full of lessons to be
learned by the whole Global South.
Black market dollar king
Castilho, in that epic podcast, did ring alarm bells
when he referred to $17 million that had transited in
the Banestado branch in New York and then was sent to,
of all places, Pakistan. He and his team found that out
only a few months after 9/11. I’ve sent him some
questions about it, and his answered, through Maya, is
that his investigators will dig it all up again, as a
report did indicate the origin of these funds.
This is the first time such information has surfaced
– and the ramifications may be explosive. We’re talking
about dodgy funds, arguably from drugs and weapons
operations, leaving the Triple Border, which happens
historically to be a top site for CIA and Mossad black
ops.
Financing may have been provided by the so-called
king of the black market dollars, Dario Messer, via CC5
accounts. It’s no secret that black market operators at
the Tri-Border are all connected to cocaine trafficking
via Paraguay – and also to evangelicals. That is the
basis of what Maya, Leirner and I have already described
as
Cocaine Evangelistan.
Messer is an indispensable cog in the recycling
mechanism built into drug trafficking. Money travels to
fiscal paradises under imperial protection, is duly
laundered, and is gloriously resurrected on Wall Street
and in the City of London, with the extra bonus of the
US easing some of its current account deficit. Cue to
Wall Street’s “irrational exuberance.”
What really matters is free circulation of cocaine.
Why not, hidden in the odd soya cargo, something that
comes with the extra benefit of securing the well being
of agro-business. That’s a mirror image of the CIA
heroin ratline in Afghanistan that I detailed here.
Most of all, politically, Messer is the notorious
missing link to Moro. Even mainstream O Globo newspaper
was forced to admit, last November, that Messer’s
shadowy businesses were “monitored” nonstop
for two decades by different US agencies out of
Asuncion and Ciudad del Este in Paraguay. Moro for his
part is an asset for two different US agencies – FBI and
CIA – plus the Department of Justice.
Messer may be the joker in this convoluted plot. But
then there’s the Maltese Falcon: There’s
only one Maltese Falcon, as the John Huston classic
immortalized it. And it’s currently lying in a safe in
Switzerland.
I’m referring to the original, official documents
submitted by construction giant Odebrecht to the Car
Wash investigation which have been undisputedly
“manipulated,” “allegedly” by the company itself.
And “maybe”, in collusion with then-judge Moro and the
prosecution team led by Deltan Dallagnol.
Not only, possibly, for the purpose of incriminating
Lula and persons close to him, but also – crucially –
deleting any mentions of individuals who should never be
brought to light. Or to justice. And, yes, you guessed
it right if you thought about the (US-backed) black
market dollar king.
The first serious political impact after the release
of the Banestado leaks is that Lula’s lawyers Cristiano
and Valeska Zanin have finally, officially requested
Swiss authorities to hand
over the originals.
The real, not adulterated Odebrecht list of people
involved in corruption is crammed with big names –
including the judiciary elite.
Confronting the two versions, Lula’s lawyers may
finally be able to demonstrate the falsification of
“evidence” that led to the jailing of Lula and also,
among other developments, to the exile of Ecuador’s
former president Rafael Correa, the imprisonment of his
former vice-president, Jorge Glas, the imprisonment of
Peru’s former president Ollanta Humala and wife and,
most dramatically, the suicide of Peru’s former two time
president Alan
Garcia.
Brazilian Patriot Act
The big political question now is not to uncover the
master manipulator who buried the Banestado scandal two
decades ago.
As anthropologist Leirner detailed it, what matters
is that the leaking of the CC5 accounts focuses on the
mechanism of the corrupted Brazilian bourgeoisie, with
the help of their political and judicial partners –
national and foreign – to solidify itself as a rentier
class, but still always submissive to and kept in check
by “secret,” imperial files.
Banestado leaks and the CC5 accounts should be seen
as a political opening for Lula to go for broke. This is
all-out (hybrid) war – and blinking is not an option.
The geopolitical and geoeconomic project of destroying
Brazil’s sovereignty and turning it into an imperial
sub-colony is winning – hands down.
A measure of the explosiveness of Banestado leaks and
CC5gate has been the reaction by assorted limited
hangouts: thundering silence, and that encompasses
leftist parties and alternative, supposedly progressive
media. Mainstream media, for which former judge Moro is
a sacred cow, at best spin it as “old story,” “fake
news” and even a “hoax.”
Lula is facing a fateful decision. With access to
names so far shadowed by Car Wash, he may be able to
unleash a neutron bomb and pull off a reset of the whole
game – exposing a rash of Car Wash-linked Supreme Court
judges, prosecutors, district attorneys, journalists and
even generals who received funds from
Odebrecht overseas.
Not to mention bring black market dollar king Messer
– who controls the fate of Moro – to the frontline. This
means directly pointing a finger at the US deep state.
Not an easy decision to make.
It’s now clear that creditors of the Brazilian state
were, originally, debtors. Confronting different
accounts it’s possible to square the circle on Brazil’s
legendary “fiscal imbalance” – exactly as this plague is
brought up, once again, with the intent of decimating
the assets of the ailing Brazilian state. Finance
Minister Paulo Guedes, a neo-Pinochetist and Milton
Friedman cheerleader, has already warned he’ll keep
selling state companies like there’s no tomorrow.
Lula’s plan B would be to clinch some sort of deal
that would bury the whole dossier – just the way the
original Banestado investigation was buried two decades
ago – to preserve the leadership of the Workers’ Party
as domesticated opposition, and without touching on the
absolutely essential issue: how Guedes is selling out
Brazil.
That would be the line favored by Fernando Haddad,
who lost the presidential election to Bolsonaro in 2018
and is a sort of Brazilian version of Michelle Bachelet,
Chile’s former President. He’s an ashamed neoliberal
sacrificing everything to have yet another shot at power
possibly in 2026.
Were Plan B to happen it would galvanize the wrath of
trade unions and social movements – the flesh and blood
Brazilian working classes, which are on the verge of
being totally decimated by neoliberalism on steroids and
the toxic collusion of the US-inspired Brazilian
version of the Patriot Act with military schemes to
profit from Cocaine Evangelistan.
And all that after Washington – successfully – nearly
destroyed national champion Petrobras, an initial
objective of NSA spying. Zanin, Lula’s lawyer, also adds
– maybe too late – that the “informal cooperation”
between Washington and the Car Wash op was in fact
illegal, according to decree number 3.810/02.
What will Lula do?
As it stands, as a development of the Banestado
leaks, a first Banestado
“VIP list” was gathered. It includes the current
President of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, who also
serves as a Supreme Court justice, Luis Roberto Barroso,
bankers, media tycoons and industrialists. Car Wash
prosecutor Deltan Dallagnol happens to be very
close to the neoliberal Supreme Court justice in
question.
The VIP list should be read as the road map for the
money laundering practices of the Brazilian 0.01% –
roughly estimated to be 20,000 families who own the close
to one trillion dollar Brazilian internal debt. A
large part of those funds had been recycled back to
Brazil as “foreign investment” through the CC5 scheme
back in the 1990s. And that’s exactly how Brazil’s
internal debt exploded.
Still no one knows where the Banestado-enabled
torrent of dodgy money actually landed, in detail. The
“body bag” was never formally acknowledged to have been
brought back from New York and never made its way into
the criminal proceedings. Yet money laundering is almost
definitely still in progress – and thus the limitation
period does not apply – so somebody, anybody, would have
to be thrown in the slammer. It doesn’t seem that will
be the case anytime soon, though.
Meanwhile, enabled by the US deep state,
transnational finance and local comprador elites – some
in uniform, some in robes – the slow-motion hybrid war
coup against Brazil keeps rambling on, day by day
inching closer to full spectrum dominance.
Which bring us to the key, final question: what will
Lula do about it?
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