So it’s no
surprise the three key BRICS powers have been
under simultaneous attack, on many fronts, for
some time now. On Russia, it’s all about Ukraine
and Syria, the oil price war, the odd hostile
raid over the ruble and the one-size-fits-all “Russian
aggression” demonization. On China, it’s
all about “Chinese aggression” in the
South China Sea and the (failed) raid over the
Shanghai/Shenzhen stock exchanges.
Brazil is
the weakest link among these three key emerging
powers. Already by the end of 2014 it was
clear the usual suspects would go no holds
barred to destabilize the seventh largest global
economy, aiming at good old regime change via a
nasty cocktail of political gridlock (“ungovernability”)
dragging the economy to the mud.
Myriad
reasons for the attack include the consolidation
of the BRICS development bank; the BRICS’s
concerted push for trading in their own
currencies, bypassing the US dollar and aiming
for a new global reserve currency to replace it;
the construction of a major underwater
fiber-optic telecom cable between Brazil and
Europe, as well as the BRICS cable uniting South
America to East Asia – both bypassing US
control.
And
most of all, as usual, the holy of the holies –
connected with Exceptionalistan’s burning desire
to privatize Brazil’s immense natural wealth.
Once again, it’s the oil.
Get Lula or
else
WikiLeaks had already exposed how way back in
2009 Big Oil was active in Brazil, trying to
modify – by all extortion means necessary – a
law proposed by former president Luiz Inácio
Lula da Silva, known as Lula, establishing
profitable state-run Petrobras as the chief
operator of all offshore blocks in the largest
oil discovery of the young 21st century; the
pre-salt deposits.
Lula
not only kept Big Oil – especially ExxonMobil
and Chevron – out of the picture but he also
opened Brazilian oil exploration to China’s
Sinopec, as part of the Brazil-China (BRICS
within BRICS) strategic partnership.
Hell
hath no fury like Exceptionalistan scorned. Like
the Mob, it never forgives; Lula one day would
have to pay, like Putin must pay for getting rid
of US-friendly oligarchs.
The
ball started rolling with Edward Snowden
revealing how the NSA was spying on Brazilian
President Dilma Rousseff and top Petrobras
officials. It continued with the fact that the
Brazilian Federal Police cooperate, receive
training and/or are fed, closely, by both the
FBI and CIA (mostly in the anti-terrorism
sphere). And it went on via the two-year-old
“Car Wash” investigation, which uncovered a vast
corruption network involving players inside
Petrobras, top Brazilian construction companies
and politicians from the ruling Workers’ Party.
The
corruption network is real – with “proof,”
usually oral, rarely backed up by documents,
obtained mostly from artful dodgers-cum-serial
liars who rat on someone as part of a plea
bargain.
But for
the “Car Wash” prosecutors, the real deal was,
from the beginning, how to ensnare Lula.
Enter the
tropical Elliott Ness
That
brings us to the Hollywood spectacular enacted
last Friday in Sao Paulo that sent shockwaves
around the world. Lula “detained,” interrogated,
humiliated in public.
This is how I analyzed it in detail.
Plan A
for the Hollywood-style blitz on Lula was an
ambitious double down; not only to pave the way
for the impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff
under a “guilty by association”
stretch, but to “neutralize” Lula for
good, preventing him from running for office
again in 2018. There was no Plan B.
Predictably – as in many an FBI sting – the
whole op backfired. Lula, in a political master
class of a speech beamed live across the
country, not only convincingly clad himself as
the martyr of a conspiracy, but also
re-energized his troops; even respectable
conservatives vocally condemned the Hollywood
show, from a minister in the Supreme Court to a
former justice minister, as well as top
economist Bresser Pereira, one of the founders
of the PSDB – the former social democrats turned
Exceptionalistan-allied neoliberal enforcers and
leaders of the right-wing opposition.
Bresser
actually stated the Brazilian Supreme Court
should intervene on Car Wash to prevent abuses.
Lula, for instance, had asked for the Supreme
Court to detail which jurisprudence was relevant
to investigate the accusations against him.
Moreover, a lawyer on center stage during the
Hollywood blitz said Lula answered all questions
during the almost four-hour interrogation
without blinking – questions he had already
answered before.
Lawyer
Celso Bandeira de Mello, for his part, went
straight to the point: the Brazilian upper
middle classes – which include a largely
appalling lot wallowing in arrogance, ignorance
and prejudice, whose dream is a condo in Miami -
are fearful and terrified to death that Lula may
run, and win again, in 2018.
And
that brings us to the judge and executioner of
the whole drama: Sergio Moro, Car Wash’s leading
actor.
Moro’s
academic career is hardly exciting. He’s not
exactly a theorist heavyweight. He graduated as
a lawyer in 1995 in a mediocre university in the
middle of nowhere in one of Brazil’s southern
states and made a few trips to the US, one of
them financed by the State Department to learn
about money laundering.
As I
noted before, his chef-d’oeuvre is an article
published way back in 2004 in an obscure
magazine (in Portuguese only, titled
Considerations about Mani Pulite, CEJ
magazine, issue number 26, July/September 2004),
where he clearly extols “authoritarian
subversion of juridical order to reach specific
targets” and using the media to intoxicate
the political atmosphere.
In a
nutshell, judge Moro literally transposed the
notorious 1990s
Mani Pulite (“Clean Hands”) investigation
from Italy to Brazil – instrumentalizing to the
hilt mainstream media and the judiciary to
achieve a sort of “total delegitimization” of
the political system. But not the whole
political system; just the Workers’ Party, as if
the comprador elites permeating Brazil’s
rightwing spectrum were cherubic angels.
So it
comes as no surprise that Moro’s prime sidekick
as Car Wash unrolled is the Marinho family’s
oligopoly, the Globo media empire – a nest of
reactionary, and not very clever, vipers who
entertained very cozy relations with the
Brazilian military dictatorship from the 1960s
to the 1980s. Not by accident, Globo was
informed about Lula’s Hollywood-style “arrest”
way before the fact, allowing it to invest in
CNN-style blanket coverage.
Moro is
viewed by legions in Brazil as an indigenous
Elliot Ness. Other lawyers who have closely
followed his work though hint he harbors the
warped fantasy of a Workers’ Party as a mob
leeching and plundering the state apparatus with
the aim of delivering it, in pieces, to trade
unions.
According to one of these lawyers who talked to
Brazilian independent media, a former president
of the Lawyers’ Association in Rio, Moro is
surrounded by a bunch of young fanatical
prosecutors, with little juridical knowledge,
and posing as the Brazilian Antonio di Pietro
(but without the solidity of the “Clean Hands”
Milanese prosecutor). Worse, Moro is oblivious
that the implosion of the Italian political
system led to the rise of Berlusconi. In Brazil,
it would certainly lead to the rise of a
clown/village idiot supported by the Globo
empire, whose oligopolistic practices are quite
Berlusconian.
The digital
Pinochets
A case
can be made that the Hollywood blitz on Lula
holds a direct parallel to the first attempt at
a coup d’etat in Chile in 1973, which tested the
waters in terms of popular response before the
real deal. In the Brazilian remix, assorted
Globo media maggots pose as digital Pinochets.
At least many a street in Sao Paulo now bears
graffiti to the effect of “Military coup –
Never again.”
Yes,
because this is all about a white coup – in the
form of a Rousseff impeachment and sending Lula
to the gallows. But old (military) habits die
hard; Globo media maggots are now extolling the
Army to take to the streets to “neutralize”
popular militias. And this is just the
beginning. Right-wingers are getting ready for a
national mobilization on Sunday calling for –
what else – Rousseff’s impeachment.
Car
Wash’s merit is to investigate corruption,
collusion and traffic of influence in abysmally
corrupt Brazil. But everyone, every political
faction, should be investigated – including
those representing Brazilian comprador elites.
That’s not the case. Because the political
project allied with Car Wash couldn’t care less
about “justice”; the only thing that matters is
to perpetuate a vicious political crisis as a
means to drag the seventh largest economy in the
world into the mud and reach the Holy Grail: a
white coup, or good ol’ regime change. But 2016
is not 1973, and the whole world by now knows
who’s a sucker for regime change.