The Washington Dissensus: A Privileged Observer’s Perspective on US-Brazil Relations; His Own Man
by Rubens Barbosa, Edgard Telles Ribeiro
Reviewed by Richard Feinberg
Reviewed by Richard Feinberg
Barbosa, who served as Brazil’s ambassador to Washington from
1999 to 2004, assesses U.S. diplomacy with a condescension born of
wounded pride—a common feeling among his peers in Latin American
diplomatic corps. But the distinguished diplomat’s hard-hitting memoir
focuses its main attacks on his own country’s leadership, firing
point-blank shots at then President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and his
foreign minister, Celso Amorim. Barbosa contends that the Lula
administration’s anti-American posture harmed Brazilian national
interests by foolishly wasting many opportunities to make real progress
on promising U.S.-Brazilian agreements and by undermining Brazilian
efforts to win a permanent seat on the un Security Council. In
devastating detail, Barbosa portrays Brazil’s diplomats as confused
about their fundamental purpose and undecided as to just what their
country wants out of its relations with the United States—a lack of
self-knowledge that only exacerbates the mistrust between Brasília and
Washington. Barbosa’s provocative broadside will likely accelerate the
ongoing debate in Brazil over how best to exploit its position as an
emerging regional power.
The troubled U.S.-Brazilian relationship also provides the backdrop for the novel His Own Man. The book’s climactic scene involves a confrontation between the novel’s narrator, a Brazilian diplomat stationed in Los Angeles, and a former chief of the CIA station in Brasília, now retired in La Jolla, California, whose garage is stacked with documents detailing Washington’s covert attempts to foment anticommunist military coups in Latin America in the 1970s. “Maybe that’s why we stand alone today . . . isolated as hell,” the old spook muses, “unable to deal with a world that for the most part despises us.” The historical memories of Americans are famously short, and Ribeiro, a veteran Brazilian diplomat, clearly wants to remind readers in the United States of the cost of U.S. support for the military dictatorship that ruled Brazil from 1964 until 1985—and of the scars carried by people throughout Latin America whose lives were forever altered by the torture and murders carried out during the Cold War by Washington’s authoritarian allies in the region. As His Own Man makes clear, that legacy helps explain the attitudes and behaviors of today’s elites in Brazil—members of the generation that suffered under military rule—and their lingering distrust of U.S. power.
The troubled U.S.-Brazilian relationship also provides the backdrop for the novel His Own Man. The book’s climactic scene involves a confrontation between the novel’s narrator, a Brazilian diplomat stationed in Los Angeles, and a former chief of the CIA station in Brasília, now retired in La Jolla, California, whose garage is stacked with documents detailing Washington’s covert attempts to foment anticommunist military coups in Latin America in the 1970s. “Maybe that’s why we stand alone today . . . isolated as hell,” the old spook muses, “unable to deal with a world that for the most part despises us.” The historical memories of Americans are famously short, and Ribeiro, a veteran Brazilian diplomat, clearly wants to remind readers in the United States of the cost of U.S. support for the military dictatorship that ruled Brazil from 1964 until 1985—and of the scars carried by people throughout Latin America whose lives were forever altered by the torture and murders carried out during the Cold War by Washington’s authoritarian allies in the region. As His Own Man makes clear, that legacy helps explain the attitudes and behaviors of today’s elites in Brazil—members of the generation that suffered under military rule—and their lingering distrust of U.S. power.
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