O que é este blog?

Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida.

Mostrando postagens com marcador William J. Burns. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador William J. Burns. Mostrar todas as postagens

segunda-feira, 5 de julho de 2021

Itamaraty é cobrado sobre a visita do chefe da CIA ao Brasil pela Associação de Juristas pela Democracia

ABJD exige informações sobre visita de chefe da CIA ao governo

Foto: Tom Williams/Reuters
 


A ABJD enviou ofício ao Ministério de Relações Exteriores para apurar informações sobre a visita oficial do chefe da agência de inteligência dos EUA (CIA), William J. Burns, a ministros e ao Presidente da República, Jair Bolsonaro. 

"É de conhecimento público que essa agência de inteligência tem a função de coletar informações que ameaçam a segurança nacional dos EUA e tomar as medidas preventivas cabíveis. O fato da visita não ter sido anunciada publicamente causa estranheza. 

 Nesse sentido, solicitamos informações da pauta das reuniões e encaminhamentos porventura adotados a partir delas, por ser do mais legítimo interesse público", afirma o documento.

Veja a íntegra abaixo:

AO MINISTÉRIO DE RELAÇÕES EXTERIORES DA REPÚBLICA FEDERATIVA DO BRASIL.

Senhor Ministro,

No dia 01 de julho de 2021, foi noticiado nos jornais de grande circulação no território nacional que o chefe da agência de inteligência dos EUA (CIA), William J. Burns, se encontra em território brasileiro, realizando visita oficial a ministros e ao Presidente da República.

Segue o link dos veículos de grande circulação que noticiou esta informação: https://www.cartacapital.com.br/politica/novo-diretor-da-cia-tem-jantar-marcado-com-ministros-de-bolsonaro/; https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/mundo/2021/07/chefe-da-cia-realiza-visita-a-brasilia-e-se-reune-com-governo-bolsonaro.shtml; https://oglobo.globo.com/mundo/em-visita-ao-brasil-diretor-da-cia-se-encontra-com-ministros-de-bolsonaro-1-25085980 e https://www.poder360.com.br/internacional/diretor-da-cia-participa-da-jantar-com-ministros-do-governo-bolsonaro/.

É de conhecimento público que essa agência de inteligência tem a função de coletar informações que ameaçam a segurança nacional dos EUA e tomar as medidas preventivas cabíveis. O fato da visita não ter sido anunciada publicamente causa estranheza. 

Está descrito na nossa Constituição Federal que as relações internacionais se regem pela independência nacional, autodeterminação dos povos, não-intervenção, defesa da paz, entre outros. 

Não tendo havido pronunciamento oficial do governo em relação à referida visita, entendemos ser de interesse público os temas abordados nas reuniões, inclusive em respeito ao princípio da publicidade e do acesso às informações, conforme prevê a Lei de Acesso à Informação - LAI (Lei n° 12.527/2011) 

Nesse sentido, solicitamos informações da pauta das reuniões e encaminhamentos porventura adotados a partir delas, por ser do mais legítimo interesse público.


quinta-feira, 8 de outubro de 2020

A New U.S. Foreign Policy for the Post-Pandemic Landscape - William J. Burns (The Day After, Carnegie Endowment)

 The Day After

a magazine by Carnegie Endowment initiative

https://carnegieendowment.org/publications/the-day-after

 

Navigating the post-pandemic international landscape will pose an enormous challenge for decisionmakers in boardrooms and situation rooms alike.

The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace has convened its global network of more than 150 scholars from twenty countries and six global centers to produce “The Day After: Navigating a Post-Pandemic World”—a digital magazine that provides grounded, fresh analysis and new approaches to some of the most consequential challenges unfolding before us.

 

 

Chapters : 

1)     Post-Pandemic Landscape (William J. Burns)

2)     Asia’s Future

3)     U.S. Middle Class

4)     Resurgent Russia

5)     India’s Path Ahead

6)     Arab Decisions

7)     Europe’s Global Test

8)     Nuclear Arms Control

9)     Securing Cyberspace

10)   Revitalizing Democracy

COMMENTARY; View From Latin America, Moisés Naím


 

A New U.S. Foreign Policy for the Post-Pandemic Landscape

William J. Burns

Carnegie Endowment, October 8, 2020

Link: https://carnegieendowment.org/2020/09/09/new-u.s.-foreign-policy-for-post-pandemic-landscape-pub-82498

 

 

As the global order crumbles, the United States must reinvent its role in the world.

It’s tempting to draw sweeping conclusions about what geopolitics will look like after the coronavirus pandemic. Some argue that we’re witnessing the last gasp of U.S. primacy, the equivalent of Britain’s 1956 “Suez moment.” Others argue that the United States, the main driver of the post–Cold War international order, is only temporarily incapacitated, with a president drunk at the wheel. Tomorrow, a more sober operator can swiftly restore its leadership.

There is a lot we don’t know yet about the virus or how it will reshape the international landscape. What we do know is that we have drifted into one of those rare periods of transition, with U.S. dominance in the rearview mirror and a more anarchic order looming dimly beyond. The moment resembles—in both its fragility and its geopolitical and technological dynamism—the era before World War I, which triggered two global military convulsions before statecraft finally caught up with the magnitude of the challenges. To navigate today’s complicated transition, the United States will need to move beyond the debate between retrenchment and restoration and imagine a more fundamental reinvention of its role in the world.

We have drifted into one of those rare periods of transition, with U.S. dominance in the rearview mirror and a more anarchic order looming dimly beyond.

The wreckage of the global pandemic surrounds us—with more than 650,000 people dead, the ranks of the hungry doubling, and the most severe economic crisis since the Great Depression raging. Well before the coronavirus hit, however, the liberal international order built and led by the United States was becoming less liberal, less ordered, and less American. The pandemic has accelerated that trend and aggravated preexisting conditions.

With the United States and its allies reeling, distracted, and divided by the pandemic, China’s ambition to become the dominant player in Asia has grown, as has its desire to reshape international institutions and rules to suit its power and preferences. The pandemic has also magnified the insecurities of Chinese leadership, amplifying their worries about economic sluggishness and social discontent.

The result is greater domestic repression and an even more pugnacious brand of “wolf warrior” diplomacy. Chinese President Xi Jinping has cracked down hard on Hong Kong, flexed China’s military muscles across the Western Pacific, raised the temperature of border conflicts with India, and discarded the “hide and bide” strategy of his predecessors. Instead of a neat Thucydidean dynamic between rising and established powers, the behavior of China and the United States reflects an uneasy combination of ambition and vulnerability, each prone to bravado to mask gnawing uncertainties.

Always attuned to the weakness of others, President Vladimir Putin is losing sight of Russia’s own weakness. The collapse of the oil market and Putin’s mismanagement of the pandemic have made Russia’s one-dimensional economy and stagnant political system even more brittle. A potent counterpuncher, Putin still sees plenty of opportunities to disrupt and subvert rival countries—the kind of tactics that can help a declining power sustain its status. His margin for error, however, is shrinking.

Europe is caught between an assertive China, a revisionist Russia, an erratic United States, and its own political breakdowns—none more perplexing than Brexit. The drift in the transatlantic alliance is worsening: the United States is looking for Europe to do more with less say, and Europe fears that it will become the grass on which the great power elephants trample.

The pandemic has also intensified the Middle East’s disorder and dysfunction. Hardliners in both Tehran and Washington pose combatively at the foot of a dangerous escalatory ladder. Proxy wars in Yemen and Libya spin on. Syria remains a wreck, and Israel’s impending annexation of portions of the West Bank threatens to bury a two-state solution.

As the pandemic’s wave crests over developing countries, the world’s most fragile societies will become only more vulnerable. Latin America will grapple with the biggest economic decline in the region’s history. Africa—with its growing cities and daunting food, water, and health insecurities—faces greater risks than perhaps any other part of the world.

All of these challenges and uncertainties are further complicated by technological disruption and by ideological and economic competition. The pace of change has outstripped the capacity of faltering, inward-looking leaders to shape the rules of the road. False information spreads with the same alacrity as truth; infectious diseases move faster than treatments and cures. The same technologies that have unlocked so many human possibilities are now being used by authoritarian leaders to lock in citizens, surveil them, and repress them.

With the triumphalism of globalization long behind us, societies struggle with widening inequality and mercantilist impulses. Democracy has been in retreat for more than a decade, the compact between citizens and governments badly frayed. International institutions are beginning to break, paralyzed by too much bureaucracy, too little investment, and intense major power rivalry. Looming above it all is the forbidding menace of climate change, as our planet gradually suffocates on carbon emissions.

This moment screams for leadership to help forge a sense of order—an organizer to help navigate this complicated mess of challenges.

This moment screams for leadership to help forge a sense of order—an organizer to help navigate this complicated mess of challenges and stabilize geopolitical competition, and a mobilizer to help cope with the “problems without passports” that reach beyond the capacity of any one state and ensure at least some modest protections of global public goods.

But now, the United States is living through the worst intersection of man and moment in its history. For President Donald Trump, America First really means Trump first, America alone, and Americans on their own.

The post-pandemic future of the United States is not preordained. We still get a vote, and we still get to make some fateful choices. They are more complicated than those we faced at the end of the Cold War, when our undisputed primacy cushioned us from our mistakes and sustained our illusions. But today’s choices are even more consequential than those of thirty years ago.

The United States must choose from three broad strategic approaches: retrenchment, restoration, and reinvention. Each aspires to deliver on our interests and protect our values; where they differ is in their assessment of American priorities and influence and of the threats we face. Each is easy to caricature, but each deserves an honest look.

RETRENCHMENT

It’s not hard to persuade many Americans—struggling through the human and economic costs of the pandemic, pained by the open wounds of our racial divides, and doubtful about the power and promise of the American idea—to pull up our national drawbridges and retrench. Nor is it hard to make the case that the prevailing bipartisan foreign policy consensus fumbled the United States’ post–Cold War “unipolar moment,” leaving us overstretched overseas and underinvested at home.

Proponents of retrenchment argue that, for too long, friends and foes alike were glad to let the United States underwrite global security while they reaped the benefits. Europe could spend less on defense and more on social safety nets, China could focus on economic modernization, and the United States kept the peace.

The United States may be first among unequals for now, but the notion that its leaders can resurrect the era of uncontested American primacy, prevent China’s rise, or will its diplomatic relationships and tools into exactly their pre-Trump, prepandemic shapes is a mirage.

Retrenchment is easily distorted as a kind of nativist isolationism or pathological declinism. It is often portrayed as a call to throw overboard a sense of enlightened self-interest and focus at long last on the “self” part. The heart of the argument is far less radical: it’s about narrowing our concept of U.S. vital interests, sharply reducing global military deployments, shedding outdated alliances, and reining in our missionary zeal for democracy-building abroad. Retrenchment means jettisoning our arrogant dismissiveness of nationalism and sovereignty, and understanding that other powers will continue to pursue spheres of influence and defend them. And it means acknowledging that the United States can manage threats and adversaries more effectively than it can vanquish them.

The main risk in retrenchment lies in taking it too far or too fast. Any effort to disentangle the United States from the world comes with complicated downsides. Former president Barack Obama’s attempt to shift the terms of U.S. engagement in the Middle East offers an important caution. His thoughtful long game met the unsynchronized passions of the region’s short game, creating significant dislocations and doubts about American power.

There are bigger structural questions too. Even if the United States accepted its relative decline and shrank its external ambitions, where’s the rising ally to whom it can pass the baton, as the British did to the Americans after World War II? However sclerotic some of our alliances have become, how confident are American leaders that they can shape our fate better without them? Isn’t there a danger of the United States becoming an island power in a world inhospitable to islands—with China a more dominant presence on the Eurasian landmass, Russia a weakening accomplice, and Europe an isolated appendage?

And would a United States retrenching in hard power still be able to play the organizing role on issues like climate change, nuclear nonproliferation, and global trade that no other country can play right now?

RESTORATION

A case can be made that American diffidence, not hubris, is the original sin. Warts and all, U.S. global leadership ushered in an era of unprecedented peace and prosperity. We give it up at our peril. Retrenchers subscribe to the diplomat George Kennan’s view that the sooner the United States sheds its paternalistic altruism and becomes just another big country, the better off it will be. Restorationists believe that consigning the United States to such a role, in an otherwise rudderless world, would be a fatal mistake.

They argue that after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the United States failed to take full advantage of its primacy. U.S. leaders naively enabled the rise of our future rivals, thinking they would be satisfied with a seat at our table rather than displacing us at its head. The United States slowed NATO’s expansion to pacify Russian anxieties—only to see an ever more revanchist Russia get back on its feet—and welcomed China into the World Trade Organization as a “responsible stakeholder” yet failed to hold it to account when it continued to behave irresponsibly, breaking the rules while the American middle class broke its back.

Despite our self-inflicted wounds, we still have the world’s strongest military, most influential economy, most expansive alliance system, and most potent soft power.

Restorationists argue that the United States suffers most not when it does too much but when it tries too little. They believe that U.S. leaders feared the uncertain slippery slope of intervention abroad far more than the certain waves of human tragedy that would flow absent American action. They see “leading from behind” as an oxymoron and think the United States failed to appreciate both how much emerging democracies depended on it and how methodically authoritarians would contest the democratic model.

The United States may no longer enjoy unrivaled dominance, but power differentials still lean significantly in our favor. Despite our self-inflicted wounds, we still have the world’s strongest military, most influential economy, most expansive alliance system, and most potent soft power.

Restorationists worry about the risk of overreaction to relative American decline. The contest with China is not another Cold War to avoid but one to fight with confidence and win. The United States should reject any return to a world of closed spheres of influence. It should be clear-eyed about the rise of techno-authoritarianism and push back hard with a new concert of democracies. And although we might need to rebalance our foreign policy tools and avoid the excesses of the post-9/11 era, the risks of slashing our defense budgets and our global military posture outweigh the rewards.

For critics, Saturday Night Live’s “More Cowbell” sketch—admittedly not your standard foreign policy analogy—embodies the restorationist view. To paraphrase the immortal words of the producer Bruce Dickinson: The world has a fever and the only prescription is more U.S. leadership, however discordant and self-involved we can sometimes be and however fatigued our bandmates might be with our prima donna act.

The promised cure, however, leaves many questions unanswered. Do the American people have the stomach and resources right now for a cosmic struggle with authoritarianism or unbounded competition with China? Are the maximalist aims sometimes thrown around in this debate necessary or achievable? How far are U.S. allies willing and able to join in common cause? Will a more assertive international posture accelerate or delay the renewal of the American middle class? Is restraint an invitation to disorder or the best defense against it?

REINVENTION

There lies an alternative between breaking up the band and resigning ourselves to the perpetual din of the cowbell.

We live in a new reality: the United States can no longer dictate events as we sometimes believed we could. The Trump administration has done more damage to America’s values, image, and influence than any other administration in my lifetime. And our nation is more divided by political, racial, and economic tensions than it has been in generations. But even so, assuming we don’t keep digging the hole deeper for ourselves at home and abroad, the United States remains in a better position than any other major power to mobilize coalitions and navigate the geopolitical rapids of the twenty-first century.

We can’t afford to apply a more modest lipstick to an essentially restorationist strategy, or, alternatively, a bolder rhetorical gloss to retrenchment. We must reinvent the purpose and practice of American power, finding a balance between our ambition and our limitations.

Smart foreign policy begins at home, with a strong democracy, society, and economy.

First and foremost, U.S. foreign policy must support domestic renewal. Smart foreign policy begins at home, with a strong democracy, society, and economy. But it has to end there too—with more and better jobs, greater security, a better environment, and a more inclusive, just, and resilient society.

The well-being of the American middle class ought to be the engine that drives our foreign policy. We’re long overdue for a historic course correction at home. We need to push for more inclusive economic growth—growth that narrows gaps in income and health. Our actions abroad must further that goal rather than hamper it. Prioritizing the needs of American workers over the profits of corporations is essential. Leaders must do a far better job of ensuring that trade and investment deals reflect those imperatives.

That doesn’t mean the United States should turn its back on trade or global economic integration, however. Supply chains in some sectors with national security implications will require diversification and redundancy to make them sturdier, but policymakers shouldn’t disrupt global supply chains that benefit American consumers and fuel emerging markets. An improved economic approach might involve elements of industrial policy, focusing more government support on science, technology, education, and research. That ought to be complemented by reform of the United States’ broken immigration system.

A second priority for a reinvented foreign policy involves grand challenges—climate change, global health insecurity, the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and the revolution in technology. All of those problems directly affect the health, security, and prosperity of Americans. None of them can be solved by the United States on its own. All will require international cooperation despite intensifying strategic rivalry.

These challenges require a new multilateralism—a patchwork of arrangements, with coalitions of like-minded states at its core, which the United States is still better placed than any other country to assemble; a hard-nosed approach to reforming international institutions; and agile diplomacy to engage rivals on questions that cut across major power competition. Just as our forward military basing helped deal with threats to security during the Cold War, preventive diplomacy can help cushion our society against inevitable shocks and strengthen its resilience.

A third priority is the United States’ greatest geopolitical challenge: managing competition with China. In recent decades, undisciplined thinking led us to assume too much about the benefits of engaging with China. Today, undisciplined thinking of a different sort is causing us to assume too much about the feasibility of decoupling and containment—and about the inevitability of confrontation. Our tendency, as it was during the height of the Cold War, is to overhype the threat, overprove our hawkish bona fides, overmilitarize our approach, and reduce the political and diplomatic space required to manage great power competition.

Preventing China’s rise is beyond the United States’ capacity, and the two countries’ economies are too entangled to decouple.

Preventing China’s rise is beyond the United States’ capacity, and the two countries’ economies are too entangled to decouple. The United States can, however, shape the environment into which China rises, taking advantage of the web of allies and partners across the Indo-Pacific—from Japan and South Korea to a rising India—who worry about China’s ascendance. That will require working with them—and engaging Chinese leadership directly—to bound rivalry with Beijing, define the terms for coexistence, prevent competition from becoming a collision, and preserve space for cooperation on global challenges.

Everything rides on developing a strategy that reinforces—rather than trades against—these three interrelated priorities. China, obviously, is not the United States’ only geopolitical challenge—just by far the most important. We cannot ignore other regions where we have enduring interests: Europe remains a crucial partner and North America our natural strategic home base, despite the Trump administration’s rare diplomatic feat of alienating the Canadians. Nor can we ignore the inevitable crises at home and abroad that so often derail the neatest of strategies.

Armed with a clear sense of priorities, the next administration will have to reinvent U.S. alliances and partnerships and make some hard—and overdue—choices about America’s tools and terms of engagement around the world. And it will have to act with the discipline that so often eluded the United States during its lazy post–Cold War dominance.

If America First is again consigned to the scrap heap, we’ll still have demons to exorcise—our hubris, our imperiousness, our indiscipline, our intolerance, our inattention to our domestic health, and our fetish for military tools and disregard for diplomacy. But we’ll also still have a chance to summon our most exceptional national trait: our capacity for self-repair. And we’ll still have a chance to shape our future—before it gets shaped for us by other players and forces.


This essay is adapted from an article published by The Atlantic on July 14, 2020.

 

==============

 

COMMENTARY

View From Latin America

Moisés Naím

https://carnegieendowment.org/2020/09/09/view-from-latin-america-pub-82533

 

Latin America faces a critical test: Can it overcome economic crisis without sinking into democratic dysfunction?

Even before the coronavirus pandemic hit, Latin America’s beleaguered economies had brought the region to a crisis point. Plummeting prices of export commodities, falling revenues from remittances and tourism, adverse financial markets, massive capital flight, currency devaluations, and high indebtedness led to a perfect storm of soaring unemployment, greater poverty, and ballooning government deficits.

The pandemic will only exacerbate this dire state of affairs. Latin America’s health systems are grossly inadequate. Ultrapopulist leaders such as Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro and Mexico’s Andrés Manuel López Obrador—whose two countries account for half of the region’s population and economic output—have not only denied the severity of the pandemic but also actively undermined their own government’s response. Asked about soaring COVID-19 deaths, Bolsonaro replied, “So what? I’m sorry. What do you want me to do?” López Obrador insisted that the coronavirus could be neutralized with amulets.

The region’s economic crisis has left even responsible presidents constrained.

The region’s economic crisis has left even responsible presidents constrained. According to the United Nations, the combination of an acute global economic slowdown and Latin America’s preexisting woes will cause the region’s most severe recession since 1914 and 1930.

What political consequences will these twin challenges have on a region that has struggled for more than forty years not to slip back into cycles of breakdown and repair? Typically, the burdens of belt-tightening have fallen disproportionately on the poor, who are pushed deeper into poverty by joblessness, inflation, and draconian cuts in public budgets and social safety nets. This time around, however, the poor will not shoulder the downturn alone. They will be joined by the largest middle class the region has ever had, as tens of millions have been lifted out of poverty in the past twenty years.

Fighting to retain its newfound standard of living is something that this precarious, incipient middle class knows how to do. Its members are highly connected, better informed, and energized. They are adroit in staging demonstrations to defend their rights and demand economic relief. Street protests in BrazilChileGuatemala, and Peru have catalyzed dramatic changes in public policies and even succeeded in ousting presidents.

The geopolitical backyard of the United States is about to enter a turbulent period in which its democracies are tested as never before.

The geopolitical backyard of the United States is about to enter a turbulent period in which its democracies are tested as never before. After the Great Depression, Latin America endured painful decades of military dictatorships. It could again become the land of presidents for life, military juntas, stealthy autocracies, disappeared dissidents, and torture chambers. The region’s leaders—and the world’s democracies—must do everything they can to prevent such bleak outcomes from becoming realities.

 


sexta-feira, 18 de outubro de 2019

A tragedia da diplomacia americana sob Trump - William J. Burns (Foreign Affairs)

Se ouso mimetizar o artigo de Bill Burns, seria para também lamentar o desmantelamento da diplomacia brasileira, mas não desde meio século apenas, como ele faz, mas nos últimos DUZENTOS ANOS. José Bonifácio foi nosso primeiro chanceler, e conduziu um delicado processo de afirmação do novo Estado em construção e seu reconhecimento no plano internacional, inclusive por meio de sua atuação como constituinte, até ser afastado e exilado pelo imperador, o que mergulhou a diplomacia numa primeira fase de confusão e incertezas. 
Com o início do funcionamento pleno da Assembleia Geral, e o escrutínio que os parlamentares exerceram sobre a diplomacia, o papel da diplomacia na construção da nação – para usar o título que o embaixador Rubens Ricupero deu ao seu livro que já nasceu clássico – pode se exercer de maneira plena, e ao longo das décadas seguintes a política externa do Estado serviu aos interesses nacionais, de forma bem estruturada e consciente, com poucas exceções (como a infeliz defesa inconsequentemente do tráfico e da escravidão). Depois, a despeito de uma representação bem mais voltada para a defesa de um Brasil oligárquico e desigual, a diplomacia continuou servindo de maneira efetiva e adequada ao processo de modernização do Brasil. 
Mesmo durante o regime militar – quando eu ingressei na diplomacia profissional – e a despeito de uma adesão de princípio do lado do Ocidente, na defesa contra uma suposta ameaça comunista, a diplomacia serviu com sua proverbial competência ao esforço de modernização material do Brasil, ainda que menos enfática na defesa da democracia e dos direitos humanos. Na redemocratização, e até recentemente, a diplomacia profissional foi absolutamente essencial na configuração e conformação de um papel e de uma imagem internacional eminentemente positivos para o Brasil, como um todo, com alguns problemas que detectei durante a era lulopetista, dada a empatia dos companheiros por regimes execráveis na região, como a ditadura castrista e os bolivarianos chavistas, além da corrupção nos negócios com ditaduras africanas e os mesmos regimes em nossa região.
O que se vê na atualidade, porém, é um rebaixamento inacreditável dos padrões de qualidade da nossa diplomacia, devido à direção aloprada exercida sobre o Itamaraty por um serviçal da Família Bolsonaro e seus gurus ineptos e incompetentes em relações internacionais. Isso passa, evidentemente, pelo próprio chefe de Estado, um notório inepto nesse quesito, pelo seu filho ambicioso, mas despreparado para qualquer função na diplomacia, pelo atual conselheiro presidencial nessa área, um verdadeiro true believer fundamentalista, discípulo do suposto guia das novas orientações governamentais, um cidadão sem qualquer qualificação em assuntos internacionais. Juntos, esses responsáveis conduziram a diplomacia brasileira a uma "demolição" inacreditável, para usar o conceito de Bill Burns, uma adesão sabuja e grotesca a um outro desmantelador da diplomacia americana, o presidente trambiqueiro que está destruindo toda a ordem internacional construída laboriosamente pelos Estados Unidos desde Bretton Woods. 
A atual diplomacia brasileira envergonha o país e o corpo profissional de diplomatas, e eu tenho os personagens acima citados como responsáveis por essa diminuição de nossa reputação e pelo rebaixamento do prestígio internacional do Brasil.
Isso passará, um dia, estou seguro disso. Por enquanto fico na resistência.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida
Brasília, 18 de outubro de 2019


The Demolition of U.S. Diplomacy

Not Since Joe McCarthy Has the State Department Suffered Such a Devastating Blow

In my three and a half decades as a U.S. Foreign Service officer, proudly serving five presidents and ten secretaries of state from both parties, I’ve never seen an attack on diplomacy as damaging, to both the State Department as an institution and our international influence, as the one now underway.
The contemptible mistreatment of Marie Yovanovitch—the ambassador to Ukraine who was dismissed for getting in the way of the president’s scheme to solicit foreign interference in U.S. elections—is just the latest example of President Donald Trump’s dangerous brand of diplomatic malpractice. His is a diplomacy of narcissism, bent on advancing private interests at the expense of our national interests.
Ambassador Yovanovitch is not the first professional diplomat to find herself in political crosshairs in the history of the State Department. Trump is not the first demagogue to bully career personnel. And Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is not the first secretary of state derelict in his duty. But the damage from this assault—coming from within the executive branch itself, after nearly three years of unceasing diplomatic self-sabotage, and at a particularly fragile geopolitical moment—will likely prove to be even more severe to both diplomatic tradecraft and U.S. foreign policy.

THE NEW MCCARTHYISM

Almost 70 years ago, in the early years of the Cold War, Senator Joseph McCarthy conducted a savage campaign against “disloyalty” in the State Department. Partisan investigators, untethered to evidence or ethics, forced out 81 department employees in the first half of the 1950s. Among them was John Paton Davies, Jr., an accomplished China hand. His sin was to foresee the communist victory in the Chinese Civil War. Davies was subjected to nine security and loyalty investigations, none of which substantiated the paranoid accusation that he was a communist sympathizer. Nevertheless, in a moment of profound political cowardice, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles fired him.

Purging Davies and his colleagues was not only wrong but also foolish. The loss of such expertise blinded American diplomacy on China for a generation and had a chilling effect on the department and its morale. One of the United States’ most distinguished diplomats, George Kennan, was also pushed out of the Foreign Service during this era. He tried to defend Davies, who had served with him in Moscow and on the Policy Planning Staff, to little avail. Years later, Kennan wrote in his memoirs that McCarthy’s onslaught and the department’s failure to defend its employees was the most “sobering and disillusioning” episode of his long career.
That Senator McCarthy’s chief counsel, Roy Cohn, was also Donald Trump’s lawyer and mentor is one of history’s sad ironies. Trump’s scorched-earth tactics, casual relationship with truth, and contempt for career public service bear more than a passing resemblance to the playbook that Cohn wrote for McCarthy. And when Trump cried out for a “new Roy Cohn” to replace the late original, it was hardly a surprise that former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani appeared—or that he dove into the muck of the Ukraine scandal and agitated for the removal of a career ambassador whose integrity and expertise proved to be an obstruction.
One might imagine that the State Department’s leadership would stand up to the president and for its personnel—so many of whom are doing hard jobs in hard places around the world. If only that were the case.

Trump’s scorched-earth tactics, casual relationship with truth, and contempt for career public service bear more than a passing resemblance to the playbook that Cohn wrote for McCarthy.
Instead, today’s leaders have shown no more spine than Dulles did. Secretary Pompeo apparently worked around the embassy in Kiev to advance the president’s private agenda, allowed specious opposition research about Yovanovitch to circulate around the department, and sat on his hands as Trump slandered Yovanovitch on the infamous call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and warned ominously that “she’s going to go through some things.” The ghost of Roy Cohn was smiling somewhere.
Even before the Ukraine mess, the Trump administration had been waging a war on diplomacy for nearly three years. The White House regularly pushes historic cuts to diplomacy and development spending, which is already 19 times smaller than the defense budget. Career diplomats are sidelined, with only one of 28 assistant secretary-rank positions filled by a Foreign Service officer, and more ambassadorships going to political appointees in this administration than in any in recent history. One-fifth of ambassadorships remain unfilled, including critical posts.
Not coincidentally, applications to join the Foreign Service have declined precipitously, with fewer people taking the entrance exam in 2019 than in more than two decades. The pace of resignations by career professionals is depressing, the pernicious practice of retaliation against individual officers just because they worked on controversial issues in the last administration is damning, and the silence from the department’s leadership is deafening.

AGAINST THE AMERICAN INTEREST

Last spring, I wrote an essay in Foreign Affairs called “The Lost Art of American Diplomacy.” It was meant less as an elegy than as a reminder of diplomacy’s significance. I’m feeling much more elegiac today.
To clean up the institutional wreckage in the State Department will take many years. The damage to our influence and reputation may prove to be even longer lasting—and harder to repair.
The practical consequences are not hard to discern. If a U.S. ambassador doesn’t speak for the president, and the embassy is seen as an enemy of the White House, why would the local government take seriously its diplomatic messages? Why use official channels, rather than speak directly to the president’s personal lawyer and his grifting confidants? If the key to unlocking aid is stroking the president’s vanity, why undertake the hard work of economic or political reform, with all the risks that entails?

For dictators, Trump is the gift that keeps on giving, a non-stop advertisement for Western self-dealing.
The president’s actions distort diplomatic practice and decapitate the American interest. Because of them, a new Ukrainian administration is all the more exposed to corruption and democratic backsliding, and all the more vulnerable to Russian manipulation and aggression. Russian President Vladimir Putin, professionally trained to manufacture compromising material on all sorts of opponents, couldn’t have produced a more disruptive document than the summary of the Trump-Zelensky call last July, which has sowed political dysfunction in both Washington and Kiev.
By using his public office for personal gain, Trump has affirmed Putin’s long-held conviction—shared by autocrats the world over—that Americans are just as venal and self-absorbed as they are, just more hypocritical about it. For dictators, Trump is the gift that keeps on giving, a non-stop advertisement for Western self-dealing. So much for enlightened self-interest. So much for the power of our example. So much for our credibility.
We are digging a deep hole for ourselves in a world that is changing fast, filled with players who won’t wait for us to stop digging and a landscape that is quickly hardening against U.S. interests. Our allies are confused. Our adversaries are quick to take advantage. The institutions and coalitions we shaped over decades are wobbling. The confidence of the American people in the power and purpose of disciplined American leadership is evaporating.

THE URGENCY OF RENEWAL

The Trump administration’s dereliction of duty takes place at a time when the United States will need to rely on diplomacy more, not less, to advance its interests and values in an ever more competitive world.
I closed my essay six months ago on a reasonably optimistic note. I acknowledged that a long, tough journey lay ahead—that American diplomacy would take a lot longer to fix than it has taken to break. But I also emphasized the opportunity before us, which the malpractice of the Trump administration has thrown into sharp relief. The journey toward renewal will be even more arduous now, and even more urgent.