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.

domingo, 25 de abril de 2021

A “ordem liberal” que na verdade era hegemonica - Velina Tchakarova

Is a Cold War 2.0 inevitable?

23 April 2021

The message is clear — every state actor, big or small, will have to choose sides between two very different global offerings, each with their own set of norms, rules and ideologies.

This article is part of the series — Raisina Files 2021.


The global system[1] has never been as interconnected as was demonstrated by the COVID-19 outbreak. But global affairs are also at an inflection point. An unexpected manifestation of the pandemic is the bifurcation of the global order in a way unseen since the Cold War. It begs the question — is the world witnessing the beginning of a new bipolar era of global competition?

Global powers rise and fall. The pendulum swings back and forth, and a fragile equilibrium is achieved through the constant struggle for power and influence that keeps global affairs afloat. The rationale behind it lies in maximising the gains, forming powerful alliances and partnerships, and building enough capabilities to project power beyond the national realm. Any competitor strong enough to question the dominance of a global power will surely seize an opportunity to fill the gaps wherever they may present themselves. In the presence of a hegemon, there is always a process of polarisation that leads to the creation of a secondary system organised around a pole consisting of a single competitor or a group of rivals that seek to undermine the incumbent’s global power supremacy. To put things into perspective: a global reserve currency is not possible nowadays without the global power projection capabilities that enable the US to control the interconnected flows of goods, capital, services, and data, and to protect trade and transport routes from disruptions that might result in major supply shocks.

Any competitor strong enough to question the dominance of a global power will surely seize an opportunity to fill the gaps wherever they may present themselves.

Global affairs are constantly influenced by competition and cooperation. The global system has recently entered a new transitional period with the formation of two centres of power — the US and China. The former has predominantly shaped international relations since the collapse of the Soviet Union at the end of the Cold War through global power projection via transnational networks established over decades of world dominance. On the other hand, given China’s impressive economic growth trajectories, even during the COVID-19 pandemic, there are heightened expectations around its continued rise to prominence in the global arena. However, it remains to be seen whether Beijing will be capable of transforming its growing geoeconomic clout and geopolitical influence into global power projection. Under any circumstance, the global system is already facing profound consequences, with long-lasting impacts for international affairs. Is a Cold War 2.0 inevitable amid the competition between the US and China?

From ‘Chimerica’ to systemic decoupling

According to US President Joe Biden’s new administration, China “is the only competitor potentially capable of combining its economic, diplomatic, military, and technological power to mount a sustained challenge to a stable and open international system.”[2] Furthermore, Secretary of State Antony Blinken portrayed China as “America’s most powerful adversary and competitor” as well as “America’s biggest geopolitical test of the 21st century.”[3] Chinese President Xi Jinping similarly identified the US as “the biggest source of chaos in the present-day world” as well as “the biggest threat to our country’s development and security.”[4] Moreover, the Chinese Communist Party “revealed late last year that the [Five Year] plan would span not just military but also economic, financial, and technological security.”[5]

The integration of China into US-led systems during the Cold War and afterwards led to the emergence of what many have termed as “Chimerica.”

A systemic rivalry means competition over the access to and control of global socioeconomic networks and structures. The integration of China into US-led systems during the Cold War and afterwards led to the emergence of what many have termed as “Chimerica.”[6] Globalisation created highly interconnected networks between Washington and Beijing, while also causing the consequent rise of China. This unintended outcome has led to China challenging US dominance in various spheres. This ongoing phenomenon has a ‘Cold War-like’ texture and may implicate the emergence of what has been termed as systemic decoupling — “the creation of two separate systems, that are often in competition with each other.”[7]

In the 1960s, British geographer Halford Mackinder claimed that China could become a major player in global affairs based on its geographic location, stretching from the “heartland” to “rimland terrains” of the world.[8] In keeping with Mackinder’s vision, China is seeking to establish a terrestrial connectivity through Eurasia[9] with the industrial heart of Europe — Germany, France, Italy, and Great Britain. Central and Eastern Europe are key to win “the heartland” as the control over these geographies will enable China’s global power projection. China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI)[10] can be viewed through the Mackinder prism. The BRI entails two terrestrial connectivity routes to Central and Eastern Europe — one through Russia, and the other through Central Asia and Turkey. Additionally, Beijing has also introduced various political and economic platforms for engagement and cooperation, with the ‘Cooperation between China and Central and Eastern European Countries’ (or the ‘17+1’) initiative the most prominent among them.[11]Based on Nicholas Spykman’s geopolitical premises,[12] China is also building up its sea power presence in the ‘rimland terrains’ of the South China Sea and the Indo-Pacific, and has developed a “string of pearls” approach in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) to create a network of friendly ports and trade posts in India’s immediate neighbourhood as part of the maritime connectivity within the BRI.[13]

In reality, China is already pursuing the simultaneous formation of alternative routes via maritime and terrestrial connectivity, an approach combining Mackinder’s “heartland” and Spykman’s “rimland” strategies. China is seizing the opportunity to become the first Asian global power in modern international relations.

Political scientist Andrew Michta describes Beijing’s endgame as a “global inversion” of the interconnected trade flows, “which currently favour maritime routes, a setup that relies on U.S. naval power as enforcement. If China can develop a cross-Eurasian supply chain and protect it, it won’t need to match America in the maritime domain.”[14] In reality, China is already pursuing the simultaneous formation of alternative routes via maritime and terrestrial connectivity, an approach combining Mackinder’s “heartland” and Spykman’s “rimland” strategies. China is seizing the opportunity to become the first Asian global power in modern international relations. However, Beijing’s global rise will primarily be determined by the outcome of the Fourth Industrial Revolution and its capability to establish global networks of finance, trade, energy, economics and diplomacy.

Contrary to the bipolar global order established during the Cold War, the systemic rivalry between the US and China is evolving simultaneously at sea and on land. State actors seek to “weaponise interdependence” by leveraging global networks for strategic advantages.[15] There are four domains that will be crucial in determining the outcome of this mutual competition — political economy, technology, international rules and ideology, and partnerships and alliances.

Political economy

According to realpolitik thinking,[16] the distribution of power lies at the heart of international relations. Realpolitik has once again become the true motor of global affairs; it is the main driver of the systemic decoupling between the US and China following the shift of global power from the Atlantic to the Indo-Pacific. Competition between the two systemic rivals was already taking shape when former US President Barack Obama launched the American pivot to Asia and engaged with likeminded states to build institutional alliances, trade blocs and coalitions to counterbalance China’s increasing geoeconomic clout. His successor Donald Trump continued building up the pressure on Beijing on all fronts, mostly by applying a protectionist approach through bilateral agreements and coalitions.[17]

Beijing is just as keen to break up its dependence on American monetary, financial, economic, trade, diplomatic and technological networks.

But Washington is not the only one pursuing the decoupling of ‘Chimerica’; Beijing is just as keen to break up its dependence on American monetary, financial, economic, trade, diplomatic and technological networks. China is focusing on “sustaining economic growth and prosperity, developing its domestic markets, boosting innovation and technology, improving its military capabilities and maintaining domestic stability.”[18] Its approach is clearly aimed at achieving greater self-sufficiency by establishing alternative systems and substituting critical connectedness that is “forcing China and the United States towards a zero-sum understanding” [19] due to the complex challenges and the bifurcation of the global affairs today.

Riding the Fourth Industrial Revolution wave

The nature of globalisation is determined by the geoeconomic and geopolitical expansion model by the nation-state that has established global dominance, much like Great Britain did in the nineteenth century and the US did at the end of the Cold War in the twentieth century. Both states achieved a dominant position in global affairs by riding the wave of previous industrial revolutions. Which country will emerge the winner from the ongoing digital revolution is yet to be seen, but the victor will surely impose its dominance on competitors and allies alike in the future. Attempts at establishing supremacy during the Fourth Industrial Revolution necessitates a drive towards self-sufficiency in critical technologies and global supply chains. Logically, there can only be one winner in such a contest; Xi has staked early claim and “has publicly proclaimed the imminence of China’s industrial superiority and strived to achieve it via the largest industrial espionage offensive in history.”[20]

Which country will emerge the winner from the ongoing digital revolution is yet to be seen, but the victor will surely impose its dominance on competitors and allies alike in the future.

At the same time, reconfiguring global supply chains away from China is becoming a reality as American capital withdrew from Beijing amidst COVID-19.[21] A global disruption of supply chains, alongside an imperilled rules-based global order and eroding international structures, has impacted all regions around the world. But the reconfiguration will be initiated mainly by the US to bring manufacturing and supply chains back home or to trusted partner countries. Moving production from traditional hubs to new ones will take time and effort but will also certainly create new geoeconomic advantages for certain actor such as India, projected to become the world’s third-largest economic power in the next decade.[22] Regional centres of trade, such as Japan and the European Union (EU), have already began considering a shift of manufacturing operations out of China. Over the long term, two parallel supply chains networks are likely to emerge — one centred around the US, the other facilitated by China.[23]

Sectors such as space technologies, artificial intelligence, defence and the cyber domain will witness strategic investments to promote the growth of new, regional power centres. This is important since any significant breakthrough in these areas will bestow global competitiveness and geoeconomic advantages. Further, the unprecedented interconnectedness of all socioeconomic systems has obfuscated any distinction between economic and trade indicators on one hand, and defence and security considerations on the other. This explains why the competition between the US and China does not solely represent a trade war but a broader rivalry extending to the global networks of finance, trade, economy, diplomacy, energy, defence and so forth.

Moving production from traditional hubs to new ones will take time and effort but will also certainly create new geoeconomic advantages for certain actor such as India, projected to become the world’s third-largest economic power in the next decade.

Battle over global norms and ideologies

The Cold War encompassed a competition over the systemic hierarchy of international values, norms, and rules. After the Soviet Union’s collapse, the US was able to define this agenda by promoting the liberal ideas of a democratic political order coupled with a market economy, human rights, and freedoms. Similarly, the outcome of the ongoing competition between Washington and Beijing will also have an impact on the future of the global order in terms of norms, standards, rules, and values.[24] This will be implicated by a growing systemic coordination between China and Russia (the “Dragonbear”[25]) that indicates “a willingness to challenge the international order and the US position in it.”[26]

While there is no overt ideological competition yet, the US-led liberal international order is facing a threat from the growing influence of the Chinese Communist Party’s authoritarian ideology and governance model.[27] Following China’s global ascent, authoritarian regimes and ideas have established a stronghold in Southeast Asia, with “strongmen in power in Myanmar, Thailand and Cambodia, single parties in Laos and Vietnam, and democracy eroding in the Philippines, Malaysia, Indonesia.”[28] China has also drawn international attention for human rights abuses, “including a crackdown on pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong and against Uighurs in Xinjiang.”[29] And there is some speculation that Beijing might seek to penetrate the political spectrum and socioeconomic fabric of Taiwan to establish control over its processes and structures in the long run.[30]

Following China’s global ascent, authoritarian regimes and ideas have established a stronghold in Southeast Asia.

At the same time, the demand for a COVID-19 vaccine scenario has presented a new dimension to the ongoing battle of international vaccines, and will pose a new challenge for the West as China sought to establish a “Health Silk Road” at the beginning of the pandemic to support partner countries with medical supplies.[31] Furthermore, Beijing aims to enhance its global image through its vaccine diplomacy.[32] In response, the US and three of its closest Indo-Pacific partners — India, Japan and Australia; together known as the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad)[33] — committed to boosting COVID-19 vaccine supply at their first summit and pledged to cooperate in the maritime, security, and cyber domain to meet the challenges posed by China.[34] Quad cooperation is aimed at boosting security and defence ties between the four Indo-Pacific countries, while counterbalancing China’s rise in this region.

The United Nations (UN) and other international organisations have already been impacted by the ongoing global power competition between the US and China. The diminished role of the UN Security Council (UNSC) is linked to Washington’s declining international role, particularly under the Trump administration.[35] It has been unable to keep the transatlantic community together and often faces difficulties in convincing allies to vote in favour of its draft resolutions (for instance, on Iran[36]). This is compounded by the rising assertiveness of China and Russia as diplomatic powers and their deft manoeuvring of multilateral institutions.

Quad cooperation is aimed at boosting security and defence ties between the four Indo-Pacific countries, while counterbalancing China’s rise in this region.

Multilateralism is at risk of becoming only a buzzword,[37] with institutions reduced to playgrounds for diplomatic battles between competing powers, much like the UNSC was during the Cold War. This dynamic could easily resurface, with the transatlantic community on one side, and China and Russia on the other. China and Russia operate within the existent global order with the clear goal of disrupting it, dismantling its multilateral structures, and creating better conditions for their conceptualisation of multilateralism, which is strictly opposed to Western values, norms and rules.[38] Coordinated efforts by the Dragonbear within the UNSC and other international organisations will likely increase further, as both states will seek to boost their international image as norm-setters in a rapidly changing rules-based global order.

Systemic bipolar era and alliances

The emergence of regional power centres has created the illusion of multipolarity, even as the systemic bipolarity between the US and China encompasses all relevant networks. An important structural layer of the global system consists of middle-sized powers oscillating between Washington and Beijing to maximise their own gains while avoiding picking a side for as long as possible — there are neither eternal allies, nor perpetual enemies, only eternal and perpetual interests.[39] This seems to be the leading geopolitical maxim of the upcoming Indo-Pacific decade. To counterbalance the growing Chinese presence in the IOR and its direct neighbourhood, India is expanding its network of regional and bilateral partnerships through various security and defence constellations, “while playing as well, carefully but with dedication, the card of the Indo-Pacific.”[40] Other key players like Canada, Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Australia, and Turkey have one thing in common, especially amid the COVID-19 pandemic — playing a balancing act between the US and China while delaying the difficult task of choosing a side. From a geopolitical point of view, the new great game will be predominantly situated in the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean due to rising competition between the two Asian giants, China and India, in addition to the systemic rivalry between China and the US.

The chasm between Washington and Beijing has not only led to the bipolarisation of the global order but has also increasingly put pressure on the regional powers caught in the middle.

The main hotspots and potential triggers for an escalation of the US-China rivalry are in the South and East China Seas, the Indian Ocean, the Mediterranean, the Caspian, and the Black Sea, as well as in the Middle East and North Africa. Tensions are also expected along the global chokepoints for energy and food as well as the Chinese Belt and Road connectivity. China has been in the lead at various multilateral forums, such as BRICS, the Asian Investment and Infrastructure Bank and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, and trade blocs such as the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, which covers 15 countries in the Asia-Pacific region but excludes major economic powers like the US, EU and India.[41] The chasm between Washington and Beijing has not only led to the bipolarisation of the global order but has also increasingly put pressure on the regional powers caught in the middle.

What next

China has become the main external factor in American domestic politics, but the US can only exert a limited influence on Chinese domestic affairs. International cooperation has become a function of the competition and systemic rivalry between Washington and Beijing. But this competition need not necessarily turn into an overt and direct confrontation. Blinken stressed that the “relationship with China will be competitive when it should be, collaborative when it can be, and adversarial when it must be.”[42]During the first face-to-face high-level bilateral talks with the Biden administration, China’s top diplomat Yang Jiechi stressed that “US can no longer ‘speak to China from a position of strength.’”[43]

Eventually, the systemic competition between the US and China will fragment the interdependent and globalised world by unleashing centrifugal forces of bipolarity, affecting the entire global system deeply.

The competition between the US and China is made up as much by the technological, geoeconomic and institutional decoupling as it is by the oscillating alliances of middle power countries. China has already become a second pole of global power and has also begun challenging existing international structures and networks. While the US is seeking to preserve its institutional heritage, technological leverage and geoeconomic clout in cooperation with transatlantic allies and regional partners, China will clearly aim to establish and promote alternative structures and systems to counterbalance and challenge the American dominance. These competing strategies cannot result in a win-win situation. Eventually, the systemic competition between the US and China will fragment the interdependent and globalised world by unleashing centrifugal forces of bipolarity, affecting the entire global system deeply.

A pessimistic scenario will mean a more radical and consistent mutual decoupling, while an optimistic view reveals a more peaceful systemic coexistence, with Beijing focusing on partnerships and commitments to strengthen its domestic development until it builds a counterbalance to the overwhelming American influence.[44] In both scenarios, the message is clear — every state actor, big or small, will have to choose sides between two very different global offerings, each with their own set of norms, rules and ideologies. [45] The US has so far been the biggest source of China’s wealth.[46] And yet, Washington might also become the biggest source of China’s demise. The US will certainly not shy away from advancing this idea under aggravating circumstances of global power competition.


[1] Velina Tchakarova, “Global System Outlook 2020,” Antifragilista, 9 February 2020.

[2] Joe Biden, Interim National Security Strategic Guidance, Washington, The White House, March 2021, pp. 8.

[3] Dan De Luce and Abigail Williams, “China poses ‘biggest geopolitical test’ for the U.S., Secretary of State Blinken says,” NBCNEWS, 3 March 2021.

[4] Chris Buckley, “‘The East Is Rising’: Xi Maps Out China’s Post-Covid Ascent,” New York Times, 3 March 2021.

[5] George Magnus, “Economics, National Security, and the Competition with China,” War on the Rocks, 3 March 2021.

[6] Andrew Browne, “Bloomberg New Economy: The Chimera that Was ‘Chimerica’,” Bloomberg, 11 July 2020.

[7] Mark Leon Goldberg, “How COVID-19 is Accelerating Geopolitical Shifts,” UN Dispatch, 23 April 2020.

[8] Halford Mackinder, “Democratic ideals and reality,” Diane Publishing, no. 184, 1962.

[9] Mark Bassin, “Eurasia,” in European Regions and Boundaries: A Conceptual History, eds Diana Mishkova and Balázs Trencsényi (Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2019), pp. 210-32.

[10] World Bank, “Belt And Road Initiative,” 2018.

[11] Cooperation between China and Central and Eastern European Countries, 2013.

[12] Nicholas Spykman, The Geography of the Peace (New York, Harcourt: Brace and Company, 1944); America’s Strategy in World Politics: The United States and the Balance of Power, (New York, Harcourt: Brace and Company, 1942).

[13] Velina Tchakarova, “China and India: Geopolitics in the Indo-Pacific Decade, Part I,” The Defence Horizon Journal, Special Edition I/21, Geopolitics: 14-19.

[14] Andrew Michta, “Opinion | Can China Turn Europe Against America?” The Wall Street Journal, 2021.

[15] Henry Farrell and Abraham Newman, “Weaponized Interdependence: How Global Economic Networks Shape State Coercion,” International Security 44, no. 1 (Summer 2019): 42-79.

[16] John Bew, History of Realpolitik (Oxford University Press Inc, 2016).

[17] Guy Erb and Scott Sommers, “Still Losing Ground: The Consequences of the Trump Administration’s Bilateral Trade Policy,” Washington International Trade Association, 7 September 2020.

[18] Øystein Tunsjø, “The new US-China superpower rivalry,” East Asia Forum, 4 April 2020.

[19] Tunsjø, “The new US-China superpower rivalry”

[20] Edward Luttwak, “How to stop China’s long march,” UnHerd, 27 February 2021.

[21] Chloe Taylor, “Coronavirus is accelerating a ‘capital war’ between China and the US, investor warns,” CNBC News, 27 May 2021.

[22] “India to become 5th largest economy in 2025, 3rd largest by 2030,” The Economic Times, 26 December 2020.

[23] Velina Tchakarova, “Covid-19 and the Indo-Pacific Decade,” Observer Research Foundation, 8 July 2020.

[24] Sean Fleming, “World order is going to be rocked by AI – this is how,” The World Economic Forum, 13 February 2020.

[25] Velina Tchakarova, “The Dragonbear: An Axis of Convenience or a New Mode of Shaping the Global System?” Irmo Brief, March 2020.

[26] Michael Spirtas, “Are We Truly Prepared for a War with Russia or China?” The Rand Blog, 8 October 2018.

[27] “How China’s Communist Party trains foreign politicians,” The Economist, 10 December 2020.

[28] Bhavan Jaipragas, “Advantage China, as democracy slides from view in Southeast Asia,” South China Morning Post, 7 February 2021.

[29] Luce and Williams, “China poses ‘biggest geopolitical test’ for the U.S., Secretary of State Blinken says”

[30] Chia-Chien Chang and Alan H. Yang, “Weaponized Interdependence: China’s Economic Statecraft and Social Penetration against Taiwan,” Orbis 64, no. 2 (2020): 312-333.

[31] Wade Shepard, “China’s ‘Health Silk Road’ Gets A Boost From COVID-19,” Forbes, 27 March 2020.

[32] Emma Graham-Harrison and Tom Phillips, “China hopes ‘vaccine diplomacy’ will restore its image and boost its influence,” The Guardian, 29 November 2020.

[33] Ankit Panda, “The ‘Quad’ Summit: Delivering Value in the Indo-Pacific,” The Diplomat, 17 March 2021.

[34] “US, Indo-Pacific allies pledge to boost Covid-19 vaccine supply at Quad summit,” France 24, 13 March 2021.

[35] David Whineray, “The United States’ Current and Future Relationship With the United Nations,” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 6 March 2020.

[36] “Isolated by allies, US suffers UNSC defeat on Iran arms ban,” National Herald, 15 August 2020.

[37] Velina Tchakarova, “UNSC balancing between USA and the Dragonbear,” in Powering Universalism, ed. Ursula Werther-Pietsch, to be published in April 2021.

[38] Tchakarova, “The Dragonbear”

[39] Oxford Reference, “Lord Palmerston 1784–1865,” Oxford University Press.

[40] Jean-Luc Racine, “The New Indian Geopolitics of the Sea: From the Indian Ocean to the Indo-Pacific,” Hérodote 163 (4) (2016): 101-129.

[41] Iwamoto, Kentaro, “ ” Nikkei Asia, 2020.

[42] Luce and Williams, “China poses ‘biggest geopolitical test’ for the U.S., Secretary of State Blinken says.”

[43] Justin McCurry, “US and China publicly rebuke each other in first major talks of Biden era,” The Guardian, 19 March 2021.

[44] Øystein Tunsjø, “The new US-China superpower rivalry,” East Asia Forum, 4 April 2020.

[45] Michael Auslin, “The Coronacrisis Will Simply Exacerbate The Geo-Strategic Competition Between Beijing And Washington,” Hoover Institution, no. 64, 23 April 2020.

[46] Orville Schell, “The Ugly End of Chimerica,” Foreign Policy, 3 April 2020.

The views expressed above belong to the author(s).

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Meu primeiro diário da pandemia: produção intelectual de março de 2020 a abril de 2021 - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

 Meu primeiro diário da pandemia:

produção intelectual de março de 2020 a abril de 2021

  

Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Brasília, 25 de abril de 2021

(www.pralmeida.orghttp://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com)

[Objetivo: relacionar produção completa e específica; finalidade: registros da pandemia]

  

Leitor diário, que sou, de todos os boletins informativos dos mais variados veículos da mídia – todos os grandes jornais e revistas internacionais, os periódicos nacionais, e os maiores canais nacionais e internacionais de noticiário televisivo –, acompanhei as primeiras notícias sobre a, até então, nova epidemia na China desde o final de 2019, ou seja, no mês de dezembro, quando as primeiras evidências de uma “nova gripe” – talvez equivalente àquelas conhecidas anteriormente: SARS, H1N1, gripe suína, aviária, etc. – foram veiculadas nos mais diferentes noticiários do mundo. Não registrei nada ao final de 2019 ou início de 2020, pois não se tinha ideia de sua disseminação mundial. 

Apenas em fevereiro de 2020 os alertas foram dados, com os primeiros casos na Itália e também no Brasil, mas ainda assim se tinha a ideia de que seriam casos isolados, oportunamente objeto de contenção das autoridades do setor, na Europa ou no Brasil. Lembro-me perfeitamente da negligência então demonstrada pelo prefeito de Milão, convidando turistas a continuar a visitar a cidade, pois não haveria nenhum risco naquela “gripezinha”. Quando a OMS decretou a existência de uma pandemia, comecei a seguir o assunto com maior atenção, ainda assim com menor prioridade em relação aos meus temas preferenciais, economia e relações internacionais.

Ainda assim, efetuei o primeiro registro acerca do “fenômeno” em meu blog Diplomatizzando, em 13 de março de 2020, sob este título: “O Covid, a globalização e os antiglobalistas”, mas se referia à transcrição de uma postagem de um site trumpista que eu também sigo metodicamente, o Daily Grind, cujo lema é “Helping Grind the Globosphere's Gears” – ou seja, ajudando a emperrar as engrenagens da globalização –, que é da tribo dos antiglobalistas. Nesse mesmo dia 13 de março eles publicavam uma postagem basicamente mentirosa, dizendo que “Globalization helped export China’s coronavirus”. Transcrevi a matéria, com uma introdução crítica, como sempre faço, dizendo basicamente o seguinte: 

O que transcrevo abaixo é justamente uma amostra dessa imbecilidade antiglobalista que pode se reforçar por causa do Coronavirus. A epidemia é evidentemente global, globalista, e a resposta está na globalidade, na globalização, no globalismo, pois só a intensa, imensa, acrescida cooperação internacional entre cientistas de TODOS os países, com a coordenação de entidades GLOBALISTAS como a OMS, terá condições de superar a pandemia. Os que querem se fechar na sua fortaleza nacional, sobretudo tendo líderes idiotas à sua frente, sofrerão as consequências dessa introversão. (ver minha postagem e a nota do Daily Grind, neste link: https://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com/2020/03/o-covid-globalizacao-e-os.html).

 

Este foi, portanto, o marco inicial de meu seguimento da pandemia do Covid-19, como logo após ela foi denominada pela OMS, sem que soubéssemos, nessa fase inicial, que nos levaria a um isolamento completo por mais de um ano, com idas e vindas nas medidas restritivas decretadas por governos nacionais e entidades subnacionais. Meu blog e minhas postagens no Facebook e no Twitter reproduziram toda a amplitude e dramaticidade da nova praga mundial, o que me levou a ler bastante sobre a Peste Negra do século XIV e sobre a gripe espanhola do final da Grande Guerra. Não é o caso de reproduzir aqui – nem seria possível – a intensidade desse seguimento nessas centenas de postagens desde março do ano passado. Por isso mesmo vou concentrar-me em minha própria produção sobre a pandemia, a partir de uma transcrição sintética de tudo o que elaborei nesses treze ou catorze meses desde que eu também fui levado ao tele-trabalho e ao isolamento, a partir de meados ou final desse mesmo mês de março. 

Vou partir de uma primeira postagem, ainda antes mesmo desse dia 13 de março, e retomar a produção de forma linear, destacando em negrito os trabalhos que se referem precisamente à pandemia e a seus efeitos sobre o Brasil e o sistema internacional. Esta longa transcrição, mesmo resumida, talvez enfadonha, tem exatamente por objetivo confirmar que eu não fiquei parado durante a pandemia, não enfrentei nenhuma crise de abstinência de algum trabalho específico que eu estivesse fazendo – tanto porque estou sempre produzindo de modo contínuo, seja no plano profissional ou no pessoal –, nunca tive falta do que fazer e até encontrei, no isolamento forçado, maior lazer, espaço e estímulo, para produzir ainda mais, seja no contexto da pandemia, seja no contexto da produção intelectual de forma geral.

(A) 2020 (partir de março): 

3593. “Crise no mundo. E o Brasil, como fica?”, Brasília, 10 março 2020, entrevista concedida ao jornalista Mano Ferreira, do Livres, sobre os temas das crises internacionais (Covid-19, petróleo), do baixo crescimento brasileiro e das relações Brasil-Estados Unidos, a propósito da visita de Bolsonaro a Trump; canal YouTube do Livres (link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KxhuWasxKmk&feature=youtu.be).

(...) 

3830. “2020: o ano que não terminou”, Brasília, 31 dezembro de 2020, 2 p. Nota sobre a persistência dos efeitos da pandemia no ano que se inicia e sobre as responsabilidades de cada um no quadro da governança. Divulgado às 20:00hs no blog Diplomatizzando (link: https://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com/2020/12/2020-o-ano-que-nao-terminou-paulo.html).

  

(A) 2021 (desde janeiro): 

 

3831. “O Zaratustra do Cerrado Central e a angústia de não ser compreendido”, Brasília, 1 janeiro 2021, 2 p. Comentário superficial ao artigo do chanceler acidental pregando união liberal-conservadora para combater o marxismo, no blog Metapolítica 17; blog Diplomatizzando, (link: https://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com/2021/01/o-zaratustra-do-cerrado-central-e.html).

3832. “Mini-reflexão sobre a opção pelo declínio”, Brasília, 2 janeiro 2021, 2 p. Nota sobre tendências ao declínio de países como Brasil e Argentina; blog Diplomatizzando (link: https://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com/2021/01/mini-reflexao-sobre-opcao-pelo-declinio.html). 

(...)

3898. “Brincando de profeta: escrevendo a mim mesmo 20 anos à frente”, Brasília, 23 abril 2021, 8 p. Revisitando uma carta que escrevi a mim mesmo, em 2012, para ser lida 20 anos à frente, em 2032, com uma introdução e uma conclusão nova e remissão a meu livro de 2003, A Grande Mudança. blog Diplomatizzando (link: https://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com/2021/04/brincando-de-profeta-escrevendo-mim.html).

3899. “Meu primeiro diário da pandemia: produção intelectual de março de 2020 a abril de 2021”, Brasília, 25 abril 2021, 30 p. Síntese e transcrição sobre a produção própria desde o início do primeiro registro da pandemia em meus registros de trabalhos. 

 

Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Brasília, 3899, 25 de abril de 2021

Total de 306 trabalhos em treze meses; 23.5 trabalhos por mês, ou quase um trabalho por dia, mais exatamente um trabalho a cada 1,2 dias; número de trabalhos sobre a pandemia: 18.


Ler a íntegra desta relação no seguinte link: 

3899) Meu primeiro diario da pandemia: producao intelectual de março de 2020 a abril de 2021






sábado, 24 de abril de 2021

O aprendiz de feiticeiro do bolsolavismo diplomático (1/05/2020) - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

 Um texto que nunca foi divulgado quando foi escrito, e que se destinava a rechaçar as ofensas do chanceler acidental contra o Ricupero e outros diplomatas que criticaram a diplomacia subserviente que ele administrou de forma deplorável. 

O aprendiz de feiticeiro do bolsolavismo diplomático 

Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Brasília,  1o. de maio de 2020

(www.pralmeida.orghttp://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com)

 [Objetivo: protesto; finalidade: informação pública]


 

Naquele antigo desenho animado de Walt Disney, o aprendiz de feiticeiro Mickey se vangloriava de ter acabado com sete de uma vez só; eram apenas moscas, mas a impressão que ele deu foi de que se tratava de gigantes. 

Metido a experiente feiticeiro, o aprendiz provoca a maior confusão na casa do seu mestre, que volta assustado e se apressa em restabelecer a ordem.

O aprendiz de feiticeiro do bolsolavismo diplomático se vangloria, numa postagem recente, de ser capaz de enfrentar não apenas quatro gigantes, mas quarenta, de uma vez só. 

Ele começou sua bravata por estas palavras:

 

1.             “Ex-chanceleres e ex-ministros despeitados decidiram criar o “grupo Ricupero” para falar mal de nossa política externa, que está ajudando o Brasil a se livrar da corrupção, da promoção de ditaduras, ou da letargia medrosa que caracterizaram as políticas deles ou dos seus governos.”

 

E terminou assim:

 

4.             “O fato de que quatro ex-Ministros se juntem num grupo, sob tão indigna inspiração, para atacar a mim, que sou apenas um, muito me honra. Dessa laia podem vir quatro, podem vir quarenta, e eu os enfrentarei feliz, fiel ao PR @jairbolsonaro e ao povo brasileiro.”

 

Sua pretensão é descabida em mais de um aspecto. 

Não são apenas quatro ex-ministros, nem quarenta, que o acusam, certamente não de conduzir uma política externa que simplesmente não existe, mas praticamente toda a diplomacia profissional — ou seja, centenas de colegas temporariamente silentes, pois que intimidados pela sua postura de tirano de aluguel — e virtualmente todas as pessoas sensatas do Brasil, entre industriais, empresários do agronegócio, acadêmicos, jornalistas e militares, que demonstram sua estupefação em face da destruição quase completa dos altos padrões de sempre foram os da diplomacia brasileira tradicional.

Todos estão fartos de saber que o aprendiz de feiticeiro do inaceitável desmantelamento do Itamaraty não comanda absolutamente nada; o chanceler acidental não é sequer capaz de formular diretrizes para uma diplomacia minimamente racional, sendo teleguiado de forma servil pelos aloprados e ineptos em política externa que o controlam de perto. 

Ficou já mais do que patente que o novo aprendiz de feiticeiro da extrema-direita tupiniquim só é capaz de tuitar desvarios típicos do subsofista expatriado que o colocou no cargo, atuando unicamente para afundar ainda mais o pouco que resta de credibilidade de uma diplomacia outrora respeitada internacionalmente.

Os brasileiros em geral, os diplomatas profissionais em especial, assim como todos aqueles que tinham orgulho da antiga política externa equilibrada, construída e cuidadosamente operada pelas gerações anteriores de mestres do ofício, estão estarrecidos pelo espetáculo medíocre que lhes é oferecido pela diplomacia bolsolavista. 

Todos anseiam por uma superação do pesadelo que representa a não diplomacia atual. Esse dia virá!

Como diz o ditado popular, “não há mal que nunca acabe...”

 

 

Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

No dia do trabalhador diplomático, 1ro de maio de 2020

 

 

China vs Australia (and USA): Australian government cancels Chinese economic deals - World Socialist Website

Australian government cancels Chinese economic deals


World Socialist Website, April 24, 2021

Australia’s government this week took to a new level its support for the US-backed confrontation with China and also set a global precedent for tearing up economic agreements previously signed with Beijing.

The Liberal-National Coalition invoked new powers introduced last December in order to cancel two deals previously struck by the Victorian state Labor government under the umbrella of China’s massive infrastructure Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).
The 2018 “Memorandum of Understanding” (MoU) and 2019 “Framework” agreements were vague and non-enforceable, and had never actually been activated. That only makes their overturn by Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s government more clearly a direct and deliberate attack on the BRI.
Washington regards with hostility, as a threat to US hegemony, the ambitious BRI project to link China by road, rail and sea with the rest of the Eurasian continent, right across to Europe, as well as to help build infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific and Africa.

The four-page 2018 MoU merely agreed to “cooperation within the Framework of the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road Initiative.” Much of the language in the MoU consisted of motherhood statements, such as “form synergy in cooperation,”

Likewise, the nine-page 2019 agreed to “jointly promote” that “Framework” without any concrete proposals. It contained more general statements, such as a desire to “enhance two-way trade”

Evidently, Victorian construction companies hoped for lucrative opportunities in China, while Chinese infrastructure firms could tender for Victorian government projects. Amid growing US and Australian trade war measures against China and the stepping up of the US-led military build-up in Asia, however, no projects ever resulted.

Marise Payne, Australia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs. (Wikimedia Commons)

Nevertheless, Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne formally declared these deals to be “inconsistent with Australia’s foreign policy or adverse to our foreign relations in line with the relevant test in Australia’s Foreign Relations (State and Territory Arrangements) Act 2020.” She gave no further reasons and provided no other explanation.

By further cutting across economic relations with China, on top of a series of bans on Chinese investment, and steps to stop reliance on “supply chains” from China, Canberra’s move points to the accelerating US-led preparations for a war against China to prevent it from challenging US power.

The White House was clearly involved in the decision. Asked if the Biden administration had been in touch with Canberra over the issue, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki did not deny it.

Instead, Psaki revealed how much Washington is preoccupied with combating China. “How we can work together as a global community and in a coordinated fashion as it relates to China is part of nearly every discussion the President has with a European partner or country in the region,” she said.

Morrison defended scrapping the Chinese deals, saying his government would “always act in Australia’s national interest to protect Australia” and “advance our national interests of a free and open Indo-Pacific and a world that seeks a balance in favour of freedom.”

Such provocative language declares China to be a threat to Australia and world “freedom,” when in reality it is the US and its allies that have conducted barbaric neo-colonial wars for decades, from Vietnam to the Middle East, and are now menacing China.

Defence Minister Peter Dutton added to the belligerence by saying Australia would not be “bullied by anyone” in exerting its sovereign rights. He denounced the Victorian government for betraying the “national interest” by signing the two documents.

This anti-China campaign has bipartisan backing within the parliamentary establishment. For its part, the Victorian Labor government readily accepted the cancellation of its deals. Federal Labor Party leader Anthony Albanese sought to outbid the Morrison government, saying a proper explanation was needed about why Victoria’s deals were scrapped but not the 99-year lease of the civilian Port of Darwin to Chinese company Landbridge in 2015.

The Darwin lease is particularly sensitive because President Obama personally rebuked Morrison’s predecessor, Malcolm Turnbull in 2015 for allowing the lease of the northern Australian port to go ahead without consulting Washington.

Albanese’s stance is in line with his message at Labor’s recent national conference, where he said Labor governments were needed for periods of war and crisis, as a Labor government had proved by initiating the US military alliance during World War II. Backed by the trade unions, Labor’s conference passed no less than six resolutions denouncing China.

Murdoch media outlets and most others hailed the Morrison government for “standing up to” China. Some nervousness was voiced by sections of mining-related business, however, because China has become Australia’s largest export market over the past two decades, with iron ore sales and revenues soaring.

Today’s Australian Financial Review editorial criticised the government for “prodding” China “for no obvious gain on moribund Belt and Road agreements.” Malcolm Broomhead, the chairman of mining, oil and gas giant Orica and a BHP board member, told the Australian: “I just don’t understand the deliberate provocation of China which sits at odds with ‘we want to be friends.’”

Despite such qualms that the attacks on China are provoking restrictions on Australian exports to China, the ruling class as a whole depends heavily on US investment and on Washington’s support to pursue its own neo-colonial interests. That is why the Australian ruling elite has joined every major US war since World War II.

The Chinese government reacted angrily and lodged a formal protest. Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin accused the Morrison government of “political manipulation and bullying” and setting a “bad” global precedent. He said China had signed BRI cooperation documents with 140 countries and 31 international organisations. “Australia is the first and only country to tear apart an agreement.”

Last year, the Chinese embassy issued a 14-point complaint against Australia’s discriminatory tariff and other economic measures against Chinese companies, including the ban on the teleco giant Huawei. That ban, imposed in 2018, was demanded by Washington and mirrored by other US allies.

More widespread cancellations of China-linked economic, educational and cultural agreements by state and local governments and universities are looming. So far, Payne said she had reviewed more than 1,000 existing or proposed deals and decided to cancel only four—the two with China and older Victorian agreements with Syria and Iran. Later, after landing in New Zealand, she said she expected further such decisions.

Universities have until June to submit their lists of exchange and other agreements with overseas universities and other entities. Already, the US-aligned and government-subsidised Australian Security Policy Institute is calling for the shutting down of the dozen or so Confucius Institutes on Australian campuses.

The rapidity of the shift against China is underscored by the fact that in 2017 Turnbull’s Coalition government reached its own BRI agreement with the Chinese government. Then trade minister Steven Ciobo said: “Australia supports the aims of initiatives such as the Belt and Road that improve infrastructure development and increased opportunities in the Asia-Pacific region.”

Over the past three years, the Australian government has become a frontrunner in measures against China, including the far-reaching, anti-democratic “ foreign interference ” laws passed in 2018, that Washington regards as a model for similar provisions internationally.

The International Youth and Students for Social Equality in Australia and New Zealand is today, April 24, at 4 p.m. [AEST] holding an online meeting in opposition to the drive to war against China. Register here


Cúpula militar se irrita com nova declaração de Bolsonaro sobre usar as FFAA contra o isolamento - Forum

 

Cúpula militar se irrita com nova declaração de Bolsonaro, de mandar Forças Armadas às ruas contra isolamento, diz jornal

Exaltado, Bolsonaro atacou as medidas de contenção da Covid-19 - como o uso da máscara - e disse em entrevista ao apoiador Sikêra Jr. que os militares podem ir às ruas para reestabelecer, entre outras, a "liberdade religiosa e de culto"


Plinio Teodoro

Jornalista, editor de Política da Fórum, especialista em comunicação e relações humanas.

Revista Forum,  

Menos de um mês após a demissão dos comandantes do Exército, Marinha e Aeronáutica, que ameaçaram colocar o cargo à disposição após declaração sobre “o meu Exército” de Jair Bolsonaro, a cúpula militar voltou a se irritar com uma fala do presidente, que em entrevista ao apresentador Sikêra Jr. voltou a falar que é o “chefe supremo das Forças Armadas” e ameaçou fazer uso da força contra as medidas de isolamento social para frear a propagação da Covid-19.

Segundo Igor Gielow, da Folha de S.Paulo, membros da cúpula militar ouvidos na manhã deste sábado (24) teriam dito que Bolsonaro “confunde conceitos” ao suar sua posição de comandante-em-chefe das Forças Armadas de forma política contra governadores.

Na entrevista, Bolsonaro afirmou que tem “plano” de colocar as Forças Armadas nas ruas para intervir nas políticas de isolamento social decretadas por governadores e prefeitos para reduzir a contaminação pelo coronavírus.

“Se tivermos problemas, nós temos um plano de como entrar em campo. Eu tenho falado, eu falo ‘o meu [Exército]’, o pessoal fala ‘não’… Eu sou o chefe supremo das Forças Armadas. O nosso Exército, as nossas Forças Armadas, se precisar iremos para a rua não para manter o povo dentro de casa, mas para reestabelecer todo o artigo 5º da Constituição. E se eu decretar isso vai ser cumprido”, afirmou Bolsonaro, diante da pergunta “bem bolsonarista” de Sikêra Jr.

Exaltado, Bolsonaro atacou as medidas de contenção da Covid-19 – como o uso da máscara – e disse que os militares podem ir às ruas para reestabelecer, entre outras, a “liberdade religiosa e de culto”.

“As nossas Forças Armadas podem ir para a rua um dia sim, dentro das quatro linhas da Constituição, para fazer cumprir o artigo 5º. O direito de ir e vir, acabar com essa covardia de toque de recolher, direito ao trabalho, liberdade religiosa e de culto; para cumprir tudo aquilo que está sendo descumprido por parte de alguns governadores e alguns poucos prefeitos, mas que atrapalha toda a sociedade. Um poder excessivo que lamentavelmente o Supremo Tribunal Federal delegou, então qualquer decreto, de qualquer governador, qualquer prefeito, leva transtorno à sociedade”.