sexta-feira, 24 de abril de 2026

The Literary Ledger: From Cervantes to Shanghai's Century of Ink -Hugo Tseng (Shanghai Daily)

https://www.citynewsservice.cn/shine/f7cfa54d-3295-4084-ae47-4c9dbf2849b8 

The Literary Ledger: From Cervantes to Shanghai's Century of Ink

by Hugo Tseng
Shanghai Daily, April 15, 2026
Share Article:
The Literary Ledger: From Cervantes to Shanghai's Century of Ink
Caption: Shanghai Book Fair serves as a major platform for reading.

Every April 23, the global community observes World Book and Copyright Day, a date anchored by a historical coincidence involving the two pillars of Western letters.

In 1995, UNESCO canonized this day to honor the deaths of Spain's Miguel de Cervantes and England's William Shakespeare in 1616. Yet, beneath the official commemoration lies a chronological curiosity.

While their records bear the same date, they did not die on the same day. Spain had already embraced the Gregorian calendar while England remained tethered to the Julian system. In the eyes of the sun, Shakespeare outlived his Spanish contemporary by 10 days. History, it seems, preferred a poetic alignment over a literal one.

In Cervantes, the world found the architect of the modern novel through the "impractical idealist" Don Quixote. A figure of naive nobility, Quixote spent his life attempting to right incorrigible wrongs, becoming the eternal symbol of the romantic vision.

Across the Channel, Shakespeare was busy drafting the blueprint of the human psyche. His influence on the English language remains unparalleled; the Oxford English Dictionary cites his work over 32,000 times, dwarfing even the King James Bible. As his peer Ben Jonson famously remarked, Shakespeare was "not of an age, but for all time," a sentiment that resonates as deeply today as it did in the 17th century.

Cradle of modern Chinese publishing

If Cervantes and Shakespeare provided the soul of this global celebration, Shanghai provided the bone and sinew for China's modern reading culture. This metropolis is far more than a financial juggernaut; it is the undisputed cradle of Chinese publishing.

The founding of the Commercial Press in 1897 transformed the city into an intellectual forge, translating the wisdom of the West and exporting the philosophy of the East.

By the early 20th century, Shanghai's Fuzhou Road had become a literary thoroughfare rivaling the Left Bank of Paris. During that period of swift modernization, Shanghai's printing houses produced an astounding nine out of every 10 books published in China.

This ink-stained legacy has not merely survived; it has flourished into a contemporary cultural phenomenon. Since its inception in 2004, the Shanghai Book Fair has evolved from a mere marketplace into a civic ritual.

By 2025, the fair drew nearly 400,000 devotees, with readers traveling hundreds of miles by high-speed rail to participate in what has become the city's premier cultural barometer.

This is not just commerce; it is a manifestation of "book fragrance," a term that describes the city's enduring obsession with the written word and its historical mission to enlighten the public.

The Literary Ledger: From Cervantes to Shanghai's Century of Ink
Credit: Ti Gong
Caption: In this 2015 file photo, the author visits the Shanghai Book Fair at the Shanghai Exhibition Center.

A citywide literary landscape

With the completion of the Shanghai Museum of Literature, the reading gene continues to replicate through the streets. From the avant-garde shadows of the Zikawei Library to the intimate literary salons of Sinan Mansions, Shanghai is constructing a "permanent book society."

This infrastructure ensures that the act of reading is integrated into the very fabric of urban life, moving beyond the traditional library to become a ubiquitous presence in every neighborhood.

To celebrate World Book Day in this city is to do more than nod to the ghosts of Madrid or Stratford-upon-Avon. It is an act of homage to the pioneers who, in the dim light of Zhabei (now Jing'an) factory floors, sought to "enlighten the people."

Reading here remains a bridge across time and geography, linking the banks of the Thames and the Manzanares to the shimmering waters of the Huangpu, ensuring that the flame of human spirit burns bright through every page turned.

(The author is dean of the School of Foreign Languages at Sanda University, Shanghai.)

#Fuzhou#Shanghai#Zhabei#Huangpu#Sinan Mansions#Shanghai Museum

Adeus Putin, kaput, c’est fini… - Putin's Army is BREAKING Apart

O poderoso império militar mais temido do mundo, depois dos EUA, está se desfazendo a cada dia. Os generais têm medo de dizer s verdade a Putin, mas os soldados nas linhas de frente não querem mais morrer sob os drones ucranianos:

Something Terrifying Awaits 422,000 Russians... Putin's Army is BREAKING Apart

By the end of the year, we're going to be completely [ __ ] We'll crash hard.

The Kremlin's unstoppable invasion plan is being shaken by confession videos that are emerging every day.

Even though Putin's top military brass is hiding the whole truth, this confession by a Russian Z blogger tells the whole story.

[music] In fact, this confession is just the tip of the iceberg.

What's truly shocking is the footage secretly recorded inside a locked car, just a 7-hour flight from Moscow.

In these images, you'll witness that what the Kremlin calls victory, is actually a suicide protocol.

And you'll see how Russian soldiers are refusing to fight, standing up against Putin.

What could happen to the 422,000 newly recruited Russians will shock you.

Generals may tell you that everything is under control, but the reality inside that car screams that the empire has already collapsed.

Just counting down the time until it falls.

The man behind the wheel is a soldier.

I signed the contract with the Russian armed forces on February 6, 2026.

Under moral pressure and threats of physical violence from Lieutenant Colonel and Major, I was forced to sign the contract against my will.

We were subjected to physical and moral pressure, humiliation, and death threats.

We are conscripts and do not want to fight under contract.

The expression on his face is not fear, but the utter helplessness of someone caught in the gears of the system.

He is recording himself with his phone because he knows what is about to happen to him.

But the truly shocking detail is not what this soldier says.

The realities inside the 65th Engineer Regiment show that the Kremlin's plan has already been thrown in the trash.

The person you see on the screen is a Russian soldier from the 65th Engineer Regiment in Cabarovsk.

He doesn't give his name, but his fear is very clear.

He is standing in front of the camera and recording a pre-refusal video.

Let's clarify what this means for the global audience.

There is a new trend in the Russian army.

Pre-refusal soldiers are recording that they are alive and refuse to go to war before being sent to the front with fake signatures by their commanders.

[music] This soldier says, "If a contract with my signature appears, it is fake or was signed under duress."

Focus on the horror in that sentence.

He trusts his own army and his own commander so little that he leaves a digital will.

Again, according to the soldier's claim, videos of soldiers who have been eliminated are shown to him.

A gun is fired next to him.

He is told, "Sign or die."

The situation described in the video is not military discipline.

This resembles the interrogation techniques of an illegal organization more than military discipline.

For months, the Russian Defense Ministry has been telling the world the fairy tale that 30,000 volunteers are joining the army every month.

If there are so many volunteers, why is an engineer in Kabarovsk being forced to sign a contract?

Why are written letters of refusal mysteriously disappearing?

The answer is simple.

Because there are no volunteers.

Russia's human resources have dried up.

Patriotic stories no longer work.

Just in 2025, the army's recruitment rate fell by 6%.

This figure is official and embellished.

The real drop is probably much more dramatic.

The soldier in this video is just one of thousands of silent victims within the 54,626th unit.

Thousands like him are being sent to the fields of eastern Ukraine without even informing their families.

In fact, it reveals the drama of Russian mothers and soldiers wives and everything they have to say on the matter.

In this video, they are speaking from the 14th Missile Division, Gorda Ishk.

Foreign speech.

Foreign speech.

Foreign speech.

The name of this system is not compulsory military service.

The name of this system is state sponsored human trafficking.

And this detail changes everything because a man forced to the front does not fight.

That man just tries to survive or escapes at the first opportunity.

[music] It is precisely at this point that we must look at another major crisis behind this coercion on the ground.

While soldiers are being sent to their deaths by force, what is the situation of the nationalist elite in Moscow?

This is where Igorman enters the scene.

He is not an ordinary dissident.

He is a Z blogger.

That is a pro-war nationalist figure who defends Russian imperialism.

But in the last video he shot in his car, he is not talking about victory.

He speaks of shame.

He says, "The person who uttered this sentence comes from Putin's most loyal base."

Gleman's confessions reveal the true state of the Russian economy and logistics.

The funds are depleted.

He says, "Let's pause and think about this.

The world's largest nuclear power, an empire boasting supersonic missiles and unable to buy underwear for its own soldiers.

(NOTE: This is just the beginning! The full story and its incredible ending are waiting for you at the link in the comments below.)

👉 Tap "View all comments" to find the link and finish the journey. Wishing you a wonderful day filled with luck—stay true to your amazing, authentic self!!

O Diplomata Aprendiz - Paulo Roberto de Almeida (2024)

 Um comentário nesta postagem fez-me reler um texto sobre minhas aventuras com os clássicos revisitados:


"terça-feira, 15 de outubro de 2024
O Diplomata Aprendiz - Paulo Roberto de Almeida
Tenho por hábito, como todos sabem, de ler muito, o tempo todo, mas também de copiar e reescrever as boas ideias do que leio, sempre que possivel aplicando-as às minhas próprias necessidades intelectuais. Um dos exemplos dessa prática de “plágio enriquecedor” é a minha série de “clássicos revisitados”, o que já fiz em diversas ocasiões. Uma delas foi a de reescrever o Manifesto Comunista de Marx e Engels aos 150 anos de sua publicação original, em 1998 portanto, adaptando as ideias e propostas ali contidas aos tempos de capitalismo triunfante, o que aliás correspondia inteiramente e fielmente aos propósitos e às intenções de seus dois autores: partir do tremendo sucesso do novo “modo de produção” consolidado na Europa para, a partir dali, construir sua superação em escala universal numa nova sociedade e num novo modo de produção mais eficiente. Depois disso me “ataquei” a Maquiavel, reescrevendo O Principe, mas com todas as novas caracteristicas conceitualmente inovadoras que o próprio florentino teria introduzido no seu texto renascentista, se ele o tivesse retomado e reescrito 500 anos após a redação original. Ambos textos estão hoje livremente disponiveis em meus canais de interação acadêmica. Um dos livros de minha área de especialização profissional, as relações internacionais, tem um titulo de nitido sabor aroniano: Os Primeiros Anos do Século: o Brasil e as relações internacionais contemporâneas (2002), refletindo uma das obras póstumas do grande mestre francês da mesma área: Les Dernières Années du Siècle (1983). Num posfácio que escrevi a um outro livro que publiquei logo em seguida — A Grande Mudança (2003), cujo titulo original era A Grande Transformação, mimetizando a grande obra de Karl Polanyi — copiei deliberadamente a ideia e as palavras do grande Gilberto Freyre, para explicar “como e porque sou e não sou diplomata”, em lugar de “ser ou não ser sociólogo”, o que também sou e não sou. Pois bem, percorrendo agora o mostruário de uma livraria, deparei-me com uma nova edição, anotada, de um livro de Mario de Andrade, O Turista Aprendiz (1927, 2024), cujo titulo já me tinha inspirado, anos atrás, a escrever algo de titulo similar: O Diplomata Aprendiz, mas que ficou apenas nas intenções durante largos anos. O espirito que me levou a tentar copiar criativamente esse livrinho do grande poeta da Pauliceia Desvairada (1924) e de Macunaima (recém terminado em 2026), foi o mesmo com o qual elaborei um dos textos mais acessados de minha produção intelectual - Dez Novas Regras de Diplomacia (2001) —, a partir de um original de um colega português do século 19, Luis de la Figanière, Quatro Regras de Diplomacia (1883). O fato é que eu ainda não elaborei esse “diplomata aprendiz”, assim como não escrevi uma outra obra, Cartas a um Jovem Diplomata”, que se inspira menos no titulo original de Rainer Marie Rilke, que se dirigia a um jovem poeta, ao final da Grande Guerra, e bem mais no contemporâneo Cartas a um Jovem Economista, do sempre irônico e provocador Gustavo Franco. Como poucos sabem, mas revelo aqui, minha pasta de “Working Files” no computador integra, talvez, muito mais projetos de obras a escrever do que todos os livros que já produzi e publiquei desde 1993, numa época em eu tinha recém passado da era da máquina de escrever, soberana desde os 14 ou 15 anos, até 1988, quando adquiri meu primeiro computador: um MacIntosh usado, pois os novos eram muito caros. Creio ter pago mais de 1.500 dólares, na Suíça, onde estava postado, na Delegação em Genebra, trabalhando sob as ordens do embaixador Rubens Ricupero, aquisição logo complementada pela compra de um disco rigido externo, já que tudo no Mac - sistema operacional, software de escrita e arquivos produzidos - tinha de caber num floppy disk de 700 kbytes. Minha produtividade aumentou enormemente desde então — não só pelas facilidades de correção, sempre trabalhosa num papel de máquina de datilografia, mas também pelo copy and paste —, mas nunca cheguei a empreender efetivamente esse livro quase autobiográfico “O Diplomata Aprendiz”, o que pretenderia tentar fazer nos próximos meses. É verdade que já escrevi algo parecido, mas que se inspirava numa frase, uma acusação, de fato, do embaixador Rubens Barbosa, com quem trabalhei diversas vezes e com quem ainda colaboro: “Você é um accident-prone diplomat”, o que corresponde inteiramente a meu espirito contrarianista na carreira, sempre exibindo um ceticismo sadio em relação às “idées reçues” (uma sugestão inspirada em Gustave Flaubert) da diplomacia do Itamaraty, dogmaticamente aferrado a dois principios da vida militar: hierarquia e disciplina, o que nunca acatei para mim mesmo ao longo de meu itinerário acidental no exercício da carreira. Tudo o que posso prometer, neste momento, é o ato de colocar mais este projeto na minha pasta de Working Files, e de tentar terminá-lo em breve oportunidade (inclusive porque muitos já me cobraram essa “dívida” para com os mais jovens ou simples curiosos: colocar no papel, ou digitalmente, todas as peripécias, lições e aprendizados de uma vida já razoavelmente longa de lides acadêmicas (em primeiro e constante lugar) e de atividades diplomáticas, nas quais também aprendi e me diverti muito. Meu amigo Sergio Florencio, que é um verdadeiro diplomata - e não um contrarianista como eu - e que já escreveu parte de suas memórias (no livro Diplomacia, Revolução e Afetos, de Vila Isabel a Teerã), me chama de “Ombudsman do Itamaraty, o que não tenho certeza de ser (pois nunca consegui corrigir qualquer coisa naquele ambiente austero que os mais velhos chamam respeitosamente de Casa e que os mais aguerridos, os “jovens turcos”, querem revolucionar institucionalmente). Em todo caso sempre fui, na academia e na diplomacia, um espirito critico das “idées reçues” predominantes nesses ambientes, e assim quero transmitir aos mais jovens (os mais velhos são sempre incorrigíveis) um pouco da minha experiência de vida, de estudos, de trabalho, de observações retiradas de muitas viagens e de muita leitura. Aguardem, pois, “O Diplomata Aprendiz”, já um pouco defasado no titulo e atrasado na cronologia; mas sempre é tempo de aprender alguma coisa nova, o que sempre faço em leituras constantes e nesse vicio insanável da escrita. São Paulo, 15/10/2024
By Paulo Roberto de Almeida Paulo Roberto de Almeida at outubro 15, 2024

Labels: O Diplomata Aprendiz, Paulo Roberto de Almeida
Um comentário:
Anônimo disse...
Gostei deste blog. Foi-me apresentado por amigo do Senado. Estão muito miudinhas as setas (no rodapé) de passear pelos posts. Custei alguns segundos a achá-las, que me pereceram longos minutos."

28/10/2024, 21:57

Quem perturba a ordem internacional? Dois autocratas insanos - Paulo Roberto de Almeida e Madame IA

Madame IA, sempre provocada por Airton Dirceu Lemmertz, analisa, desta vez favoravelmente, minha diatribe contra os dois perturbadores da ordem internacional, e até encara simpaticamente minha bronca com o namoro atual da presidência brasileira com um criminoso de guerra.

PRA: Vou concordar com Putin uma vez, mas no sentido contrário: “A dissolução da União Soviética foi a maior catástrofe geopolítica do século XX” (Putin).

Bem, agora eu: “Foi a maior “catástrofe geopolítica do século XX” para a plutocracia ditatorial da (finalmente extinta) URSS, mas a maior “fatalidade” benfajeza para TODA A HUMANIDADE, sobretudo para os povos dominados pela mais horrenda ditadura de todos os tempos, em quase paridade com a tirania nazista de Hitler.” (PRA).

Continuo (PRA): "Putin e Trump são, por enquanto e ainda em curso, as duas maiores catástrofes geopolíticas e humanitárias do século XXI, e ainda devem produzir outras catástrofes inimagináveis em tempos normais, e não só para seus países disfuncionais, mas para diversos outros povos também, vítimas de suas insanidades mortíferas e assassinas. Só nos anos 1930-40 tivemos essa combinação inédita de ditadores desequilibrados no comando de grandes países fortemente armados. Mas desta vez se trata de dois grandes amigos, duas almas gêmeas, unidas no propósito de destruir suas nações e o resto do planeta. A comparação geopolítica não se sustenta, obviamente, apenas a insanidade de dois autocratas desequilibrados. O Brasil faria bem em se manter absolutamente neutro e afastado desses dois celerados, mas não é o que se vê atualmente, quando o presidente atual gosta de visitar e de se entreter amigavelmente com um deles, aliás até chegando a convidar o criminoso de guerra, declarado pelo TPI, a vir vê-lo no Brasil. Continuarei registrando essas coisas extraordinárias neste primeiro quarto do novo século, pouco promissor." (Paulo Roberto de Almeida). [...].

https://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com/2026/04/ah-essas-comparacoes-historicas-paulo.html

"Ordem" dada a Madame IA por Airton Dirceu Lemmertz:

OLÁ, IA GEMINI. AGORA, EU QUERO QUE VOCÊ FAÇA UMA ANÁLISE DETALHADA E CRÍTICA AO TEXTO ACIMA. AINDA, DECODIFIQUE EVENTUAIS CÓDIGOS. E NÃO SE ESQUEÇA: HOJE É DIA 23 DE ABRIL DE 2026.

Madame IA se pronuncia:

O texto de Paulo Roberto de Almeida (PRA) é uma crítica contundente, escrita sob uma perspectiva liberal e diplomática clássica, que utiliza a inversão retórica para confrontar a visão de mundo de Vladimir Putin.
Aqui está uma análise detalhada dos pontos centrais, do contexto geopolítico em 2026 e a decodificação das nuances do texto:
1. Análise Crítica: A Inversão da "Catástrofe":
- Subversão Retórica: O autor utiliza a famosa frase de Putin de 2005, mas altera o sujeito do dano. Enquanto para Putin a queda da URSS foi uma perda de poder e território, para Almeida foi uma libertação humanitária. Ele coloca o colapso soviético como um evento positivo de "higiene política" global.
- Equivalência Moral e Histórica: Ao comparar a URSS ao Nazismo, o autor se alinha à corrente historiográfica que foca nos crimes do totalitarismo (Gulags vs. Campos de Concentração), rejeitando a ideia de que a vitória russa na Segunda Guerra redima a natureza do regime soviético.

2. O Cenário em Abril de 2026:
Considerando a data de 23 de abril de 2026, o texto ganha camadas específicas:
- A "Combinação Inédita": Almeida descreve Putin e Trump como uma "parceria destrutiva". Em 2026, com o cenário político global polarizado, ele sugere que essa aliança não é apenas ideológica, mas uma simbiose que ameaça as instituições democráticas ocidentais e a segurança da Europa (vide a continuidade do conflito na Ucrânia e as tensões na OTAN).
- Crítica à Diplomacia Brasileira: O autor ataca a política externa de "neutralidade ativa" ou "não-alinhamento" do atual governo brasileiro. Ele vê a proximidade com líderes autoritários não como pragmatismo, mas como uma falha moral e estratégica que isola o Brasil das democracias liberais.

3. Decodificação de "Códigos" e Referências:
- "Plutocracia Ditatorial": Código para a Nomenklatura soviética e seus herdeiros, os oligarcas. Ele retira o caráter "proletário" da URSS para descrevê-la como um governo de castas privilegiadas.
- "Criminoso de guerra pelo TPI": Refere-se ao mandado de prisão contra Putin emitido em 2023. Almeida usa isso para destacar a "anormalidade" de um convite oficial do Brasil ao líder russo, apontando um choque entre o Direito Internacional e a política doméstica brasileira.
- "Almas Gêmeas": Sugere que, apesar das diferenças nacionais, ambos compartilham o método de desestabilização da verdade e das instituições (o "populismo autoritário").
- "Países Disfuncionais": Um código ácido para dizer que, apesar da força militar, tanto Rússia quanto EUA estariam sofrendo de erosão interna em suas bases sociais e democráticas sob esses comandos.
* Conclusão:
O texto é um manifesto de desilusão. Almeida projeta um século XXI "pouco promissor", onde a história parece se repetir em ciclos de autoritarismo desequilibrado. Para ele, o Brasil está perdendo a oportunidade de se posicionar como um porto seguro de racionalidade, preferindo o "entretenimento amigável" com figuras que ele classifica como anomalias históricas.

Fonte (IA Gemini):
https://share.google/aimode/TLQaVvGSZkp9K1YCI

quinta-feira, 23 de abril de 2026

A próxima queda da ditadura de Putin na Rússia - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

A próxima queda da ditadura de Putin na Rússia

Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Não sou tão velho ao ponto de ter assistido à construção da ordem mundial pós-IIGM, mas era pelo menos adolescente para ter assistido ao início da ditadura no Brasil, para ter lutado contra ela, depois ter partido para um autoexiliode sete anos, e ter voltado para assistir ao seu final, depois de 21 anos. Acompanhei atentamente a implosão do socialismo, escrevi sobre isso, incontáveis vezes, assim como sobre nossa permanente estagnação econômica e mediocridade politica.

Acompanho a guerra de agressão da Rússia contra a Ucrânia desde 2014, tendo escrito muito a partir de 2022, inclusive condenando a postura INACEITÁVEL do governo Bolsonaro e SOBRETUDO do governo Lula, vis-à-vis a Carta da ONU, o Direito Internacional e, mais do que tudo, do ponto de vista da MORAL diplomática.

Acho que agora é uma questão de meses, salvo se DJT, mais uma vez, vier em socorro de seu amigo Putin.

Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Brasilia, 23/04/2026

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

Something BIG Is BREAKING In Russia Right Now… Even Putin KNOWS It’s OVER—The Collapse of His Empire Has Begun!

THIS IS A HISTORIC TURNING POINT. "Has Putin’s grip on power finally slipped?" In a shocking series of events unfolding within Russia, it’s clear that the regime’s stability is unraveling at an unprecedented pace. Secret internal reports are leaking, showing deep fractures within the Kremlin, with even Putin himself seemingly aware that his time in power is rapidly drawing to a close. 

The military is in disarray, opposition factions are gaining ground, and Russia’s economic backbone is crumbling under the weight of international sanctions. As Russian citizens take to the streets and government officials are seen making covert moves to distance themselves from Putin, the world watches in stunned silence. Will this be the end of one of the longest-reigning autocrats in history?

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

O presidente da Rússia, Vladimir Putin, adotou neste sábado, 5, uma retórica mais agressiva contra a resistência ucraniana à invasão do país e às sanções impostas pelo Ocidente. O chefe do Kremlin alertou o governo da Ucrânia que se continuar a luta contra os russos o país pode deixar de ser um estado independente.

Putin também afirmou que as sanções à economia russa são comparáveis a uma declaração de guerra. No front, a Ucrânia acusou os russos de violarem uma trégua negociada para retirar civis de Mariupol, que há dias sofre um cerco de tropas do Kremlin.

“A liderança atual da Ucrânia precisa entender que se continuarem a fazer o que estão fazendo, colocarão a existência do Estado ucraniano em risco”, disse Putin, em uma reunião em Moscou para homenagear o Dia da Mulher. “Se isso acontecer, a culpa será deles."

No pronunciamento, Putin pareceu resumir a estratégia militar russa na invasão. Ele ainda afirmou que a imposição de uma zona de exclusão aérea sobre a Ucrânia teria consequências catastróficas para a Europa e o mundo.

“Leva tempo para destruir sistemas de defesa aéreos e armazéns de arma, munição e aviação”, disse o líder russo. “Mas este trabalho está praticamente concluído.”

A Otan tem resistido aos pedidos da Ucrânia pra destruir aviões russos que atacam o país pois isso implicaria, na prática, a uma declaração de guerra ao Kremlin.

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

From: yasminalombaert: 

Russia’s Communist leader, Zyuganov, predicts a 1917-style revolution will occur later this year.

"I watched yesterday... there is this lady, her name is Bonya, Victoria. You shouldn’t be smiling; she addressed the President directly, but from Monaco. She listed all the questions that have been raised here, and you heard them.
Why is there this 'dirty spot,' and why didn't they react in time to help Dagestan and the Chechen Republic? We did everything to support Putin, his strategy, and his policy. But you are not listening! Why is it that a lady from Monaco was heard, and even Peskov commented?
We have told you ten times: the economy will collapse, inevitably. The entire first quarter has collapsed to the bottom. If you do not urgently take financial, economic, and other measures, then by autumn, what happened in 1917 awaits us. We do not have the right to let that repeat."


Ah, essas comparações históricas… - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

 Ah, essas comparações históricas…

Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Vou concordar com Putin uma vez, mas no sentido contrário:

A dissolução da União Soviética foi a maior catástrofe geopolítica do século XX” (Putin).

Bem, agora eu:

“Foi a maior “catástrofe geopolítica do século XX” para a plutocracia ditatorial da (finalmente extinta) URSS, mas a maior “fatalidade” benfajeza para TODA A HUMANIDADE, sobretudo para os povos dominados pela mais horrenda ditadura de todos os tempos, em quase paridade com a tirania nazista de Hitler.” (PRA)

Continuo (PRA):

Putin e Trump são, por enquanto e ainda em curso, as duas maiores catástrofes geopolíticas e humanitárias do século XXI, e ainda devem produzir outras catástrofes inimagináveis em tempos normais, e não só para seus paises disfuncionais, mas para diversos outros povos tamby, vitimas de suas insanidades mortíferas e assassinas. 

Só nos anos 1930-40 tivemos essa combinação inédita de ditadores desequilibrados no comando de grandes paises fortemente armados.

Mas desta vez se trata de dois grandes amigos, duas almas gêmeas, unidas no propósito de destruir suas nações e o resto do planeta.

A comparação geopolítica não se sustenta, obviamente, apenas a insanidade de dous autocratas desequilibrados.

O Brasil faria bem em se manter absolutamente neutro e afastado desses dois celerados, mas não é o que se vê atualmente, quando o presidente atual gosta de visitar e de se entreter amigavelmente com um deles, aliás até chegando a convidar o criminoso de guerra, declarado pelo TPI, a vir vê-lo no Brasil. 

Continuarei registrando essas coisas extraordinárias neste primeiro quarto do novo século, pouco promissor.

Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Brasilia, 23/04/2026


Geopolítica dos conflitos contemporâneos: entre a experiência histórica e os horizontes das relações internacionais - Palestra na Unisc - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

5263. “Geopolítica dos conflitos contemporâneos: entre a experiência histórica e os horizontes das relações internacionais”, Brasília, 31 março 2026, 4 slides. Síntese das grandes questões a serem desenvolvidas em exposição oral e debate com alunos da Unisc, Universidade de Santa Cruz do Sul (RS), em 8 de abril de 2026, 19:15hs.




Opinião: As FFAA e a política no Brasil - Rubens Barbosa (O Estado de S. Paulo)

 Opinião: As FFAA e a política no Brasil

A prisão de militares de alta patente marca um ponto de inflexão na história da política e no relacionamento entre civis e militares no País
Rubens Barbosa
O Estado de S. Paulo, 14/04/2026

A prisão de militares de alta patente, inclusive de um ex-presidente, ex-ministro da Defesa e comandantes das forças singulares, marca um ponto de inflexão na história da política e no relacionamento entre civis e militares no Brasil. Foram 27 militares que participaram de uma tentativa de golpe, de acordo com a acusação do Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF), todos tornados réus e condenados.
Como consequência das prisões, o Superior Tribunal Militar (STM) julgará se todos os oficiais e o presidente perderão seus postos e patentes por serem considerados indignos do oficialato ou com ele incompatíveis. O resultado é incerto e poderá tornar-se controvertido.
A reação da instituição militar ao julgamento mostra que houve uma mudança significativa no comportamento das Forças Armadas (FFAA), comprovada pela atuação fora da política (com poucas exceções individuais) desde 1985, apesar das tentativas de atraí-las para o cenário político no governo anterior. E agora, depois do julgamento e do início do cumprimento das penas, não se ouviu nem se leu qualquer manifestação contra a condenação e as penas impostas aos que tentaram desafiar a democracia e as regras do jogo democrático. Com 40 anos, desde 1985 até hoje, nunca houve um período tão longo na história brasileira, sem uma intervenção dos militares na vida política nacional.
Depois de 14 intervenções militares na política nacional, desde a deposição do imperador Pedro II em 1889, até o golpe de Estado de 1964, pela primeira vez, os articuladores e líderes desses movimentos contrários à democracia foram indiciados, julgados e condenados. A anistia, sempre concedida a todos os participantes das insurreições anteriores, pela primeira vez, não foi aplicada, pelo menos, até aqui.
Pesquisa recente da AtlasIntel/Estadão sobre o nível de confiança da sociedade nas instituições – talvez influenciada pelo que ocorreu no governo anterior – colocou o Exército e as FFAA com 60% de desconfiança, em penúltimo lugar, só perdendo para o Congresso. Corrigir essa percepção é uma das principais razões para virar mais uma página de nossa história.
A virada de página dos militares seria um marco na história política brasileira e, espera-se, poderá ter profundos impactos na evolução e fortalecimento da democracia no Brasil e no papel das FFAA na sociedade brasileira.
No debate interno sobre o papel das FFAA, a tendência é sempre discutir o papel constitucional dos militares, a submissão dos militares ao poder civil, deixando de lado, no Congresso e na sociedade civil, aspectos relevantes, como a formulação de uma nova política de Defesa, a modernização operacional e logística das FFAA, a necessidade de investimentos na Defesa, a interação com a Base Industrial de Defesa e sobretudo a previsibilidade das questões orçamentárias. Na verdade, os civis – os políticos e a academia – são os grandes ausentes no exame isento e objetivo dos problemas da organização das Forças Armadas e da Defesa nacional.
O Congresso daria uma relevante contribuição para reafirmar a supremacia do poder civil, caso decidisse examinar questões que dizem respeito à participação de militares da ativa no Executivo e sobre a designação do ministro da Defesa. A chefia do Ministério da Defesa, normalmente civil, somente poderia ser ocupada por oficial militar se o indicado estiver na reserva por pelo menos sete anos e, caso não preencha esse requisito, com a expressa autorização do Congresso, como ocorre nos EUA. Duas Propostas de Emenda à Constituição (PECs) encontram-se paradas no Congresso.
A primeira é a PEC que estabelece que a indicação de militares da ativa para cargos civis no governo deveria seguir norma pela qual qualquer representante das Forças Armadas e da Polícia Militar que aceitar convite para integrar o Executivo, em qualquer nível, deveria passar automaticamente para a reserva. Adicionalmente, o Congresso deveria votar a PEC que proíbe a participação de militares da ativa nas eleições. O texto, que dorme há três anos no Congresso, prevê a transferência para a reserva de integrantes das Forças Armadas que optarem por entrar na política, uma medida importante para proteger as tropas da politização.
Para encerrar um período complexo da história nacional, o Congresso deveria também examinar outra PEC prevendo a mudança no artigo 142 da Constituição federal, que dispõe: “As Forças Armadas, constituídas pela Marinha, pelo Exército e pela Aeronáutica, são instituições nacionais permanentes e regulares, organizadas com base na hierarquia e na disciplina, sob a autoridade suprema do presidente da República e destinam-se à defesa da Pátria, à garantia dos Poderes constitucionais e, por iniciativa de qualquer destes, da lei e da ordem”. Seria eliminada a parte final (“a garantia dos poderes constitucionais e por iniciativa de qualquer destes, da lei e da ordem”) para deixar bem claro que as FFAA não ganharam, pelo texto atual, um poder moderador para arbitrar crises políticas internas no Brasil, conforme decisão do STF sobre o assunto.
Com essas medidas, seria virada uma página sensível dos 137 anos de história de participação ativa dos militares na vida política nacional, dando-se ênfase à subordinação das FFAA às leis e à Constituição.

Presidente do Instituto de Relações Internacionais e Comércio Exterior (Irice), foi embaixador do Brasil em Londres (1994-99) e em Washington (1999-2004)

https://www.estadao.com.br/opiniao/rubens-barbosa/as-ffaa-e-a-politica-no-brasil/

IMF has published the latest World Economic Outlook, 2026

 IMF has published the latest World Economic Outlook:



After withstanding higher trade barriers and elevated uncertainty last year, global activity now faces a major test from the outbreak of war in the Middle East. Assuming that the conflict remains limited in duration and scope, global growth is projected to slow to 3.1 percent in 2026 and 3.2 percent in 2027. Global headline inflation is projected to rise modestly in 2026 before resuming its decline in 2027. Slowdown in growth and increase in inflation are expected to be particularly pronounced in emerging market and developing economies.
Downside risks dominate the outlook. A longer or broader conflict, worsening geopolitical fragmentation, a reassessment of expectations surrounding artificial‑intelligence‑driven productivity, or renewed trade tensions could significantly weaken growth and destabilize financial markets. Elevated public debt and eroding institutional credibility further heighten vulnerabilities. At the same time, activity could be lifted if productivity gains from AI materialize more rapidly or trade tensions ease on a sustained basis.
Fostering adaptability, maintaining credible policy frameworks, and reinforcing international cooperation are essential to navigating the current shock while preparing for future disruptions in an increasingly uncertain global environment. As Chapter 2 shows, scaling up of defense spending prompted by a rise in geopolitical tensions could boost economic activity in the short term but also bring about inflationary pressures, weaken fiscal and external sustainability, and risk crowding out social spending, which could in turn ignite discontent and social unrest. As Chapter 3 demonstrates, where conflict erupts, acute macroeconomic trade-offs and scarring follow and last well beyond the immediate wartime shock. 

quarta-feira, 22 de abril de 2026

Brazil-China interactions in historical perspective: an uneven relationship - Paulo Roberto de Almeida (Macau Journal of Brazilian Studies)

Acabo de receber:

1638. “Brazil-China interactions in historical perspective: an uneven relationship” (Brasília, 5 dezembro 2025, 22 p.) Article to a special issue of the Macau Journal of Brazilian Studies. Publicado in Macau Journal of Brazilian Studies (Macau Association for Brazilian Studies, Macau, China, vol. 9, issue 1, April 2026; ISSN: 2523-661X; p. 1-17; link: https://aebm.mo/en/list-44/254 ; pdf: https://aebm.mo/en/uploads/ueditor/file/20260422/1776836687585222.pdf ). Relação de Originais n. 5129. 

Brazil-China interactions in historical perspective: an uneven relationship

Paulo Roberto de Almeida, diplomat, professor.
Article to a special issue of Macau Journal of Brazilian Studies.
Publicado in Macau Journal of Brazilian Studies (Macau Association for Brazilian Studies, Macau, China, vol. 9, issue 1, April 2026; ISSN: 2523-661X; p. 1-17; link: https://aebm.mo/en/list-44/254 ; pdf: https://aebm.mo/en/uploads/ueditor/file/20260422/1776836687585222.pdf). Relação de Originais n. 5129.

Abstract: This historical and interpretative essay aims to evaluate bilateral relationship, in its various dimensions, with positive accomplishments for both countries, especially in the economic area (trade and investments), notwithstanding the asymmetry of their interactions in almost all the economic, political, diplomatic and geopolitical domains. The focus is concentrated in the differing perspectives of their relationship during the last half century, with a pragmatic vision exhibited from the Chinese side, and a more optimistic, and idealist posture, emanating from the Brazilian side during the mandates of the Workers Party, under Lula. The implications of the BRICS dimension level, but also at the bilateral context, are examined, as well as the entrenched nationalism of economic and diplomatic elites.
Key-words: Brazil; China; strategic partnership; asymmetric components of the relationship.

Historical Background
        The history of the uneven relationship between Brazil and China has few points in common during most of 19th and 20th centuries, albeit exhibiting some parallel, while differing, paths during the trajectory of the Communist movements in both countries, arriving at a diverging but complementary new courses starting in the last years of the 20th century and flourishing economically during the two first and half decades of the 21st century. The following explanatory and interpretative essay will follow this uneven relationship between the two major countries of South America and of Asia-Pacific, respectively, with the objective of offering a broad view of this century-long interaction, adopting a Weberian-style approach, rather than a typical Political Science analysis.
        Emerging independent Brazil was still building its centralized State at the beginning of the 19th century when the declining Chinese Empire was starting a period of fractional struggles and of frailty of the centrality of its governing architecture, just before the acceleration process of foreign challenges to its independence and State sovereignty. There were almost no contacts between the two governments and countries, besides some commercial exchanges that still reflected ancient navigation routes and links from the Vasco da Gama era of European expansion towards African and Asian efforts of conquest (almost impossible in the case of such a vast Empire and functional State as the Qing dynasty). China was trying to protect its Kingdom and empire possessions from Europe’s ‘Barbarians’, while, at the same time, the ruling class of slave owners in Brazil struggled against the British intrusions in the country’s internal affairs. Despite early recommendations of the ‘founding Fathers’ for a quick closure of the African human ‘imports’ and a delayed end to the slave system, ruling elites dismissed those proposals outright, because of the absolute necessity of maintaining both the slave traffic and the slavery-based economic regime, as they were the basis of the already dynamic centre of Brazil’s economy, whilst the South American country was becoming the biggest coffee exporter in the world for more than a century.
        No bilateral diplomatic relations of any kind existed between the two ‘empires’, but in the middle of the second half of 19th century Brazilian diplomats and representatives of the slave owners of the coffee producing regions (São Paulo at the forefront of the essays) started to ruminate on the idea of establishing not only formal diplomatic links, but also trying to negotiate a bilateral treaty aimed at, besides ‘normal affairs’, attracting thousands of Chinese collies to work at the coffee producing farms. They were destined to replace the African slavery system, already in the last years of its fatal demise against the Abolitionists struggle and external pressures from developed industrial powers, Great Britain at the forefront of those ‘humanitarian’ efforts.
        Imperial China refused, of course, this kind of ‘business’, already worried by the way that Chinese labourers were being mistreated in the United States, but formal diplomatic relations were established between the two empires – with the 1881 Tien-Tsin treaty, including some extraterritoriality provisions, similar to the existing capitulation system –, but without any dispatch of ‘agricultural immigrants’ to Brazil. A young diplomat, Henrique Lisboa, who was in the mission, published an interesting book about the country and its inhabitants, in the same year, 1888, as the slave system was abolished in the Brazilian Empire, a year before the abolition of the monarchical system in Brazil, and its replacement by the republican United States of Brazil, as designed by its first Constitution (1891).
        At the end of Great War, during the peace negotiations in Paris, the two young Republics were sidelined by the great powers concerning the main dispositions adopted in the framework of the League of Nations to regulate the post-war international relations. But a new kind of political movement arose from the 1917 Russian revolution and the founding of a Third (Communist) International, in 1918, under the guidance of Lenin himself. Many socialist parties began to split everywhere: 1922 was the year when Brazilian and Chinese Communist parties were founded, respectively in Rio de Janeiro and Shanghai, under a Bolshevik style and framework, that is, as national parties within the Comintern membership.
        Both were almost immediately considered illegal, or at least inimical within the two Bourgeois regimes. Communism was the bête noire for the national political systems in both countries: CPC and BCP – for half a century known as ‘Partido Comunista do Brasil’, became, after Stalin times, just ‘Brazilian Communist Party’ – were strictly contained in their propaganda and affiliation. Incompetent supervisors sent from Moscow by the Secretariat of the Third International induced the two parties to try violent assaults against the governments of each country, China in 1927, Brazil in 1935, with disastrous consequences for them, also in terms of political perception at the national governing upper classes. Anticommunism became an official State policy in Brazil up to the Eighties, with important consequences even after that, as a vilification factor under the hands of rightist parties up to nowadays. In China also, Kuomintang and the CCP struggled against each other for the conquest of exclusive power, amidst a civil war and two destructive Japanese invasions: in 1931 in Manchuria, and in 1937 against the whole country, with horrendous consequences. At the end of the Second World War, Brazil had already elevated to the category of Embassy its diplomatic representation in China, according to the new status of great power conceded to the Republic of China, in the framework of the United Nations.

The hard path to mutual recognition
At the height of Cold War, Soviet Union and Maoist China were the two perceived most menacing dangers in the case of Brazil, after a century-long normal diplomatic relations between the three empires during the entire 19th century up to the beginning of the 20th. Czarist Russia preserved diplomatic relations with the Portuguese Kingdom, dispatched a diplomatic envoy to Rio de Janeiro when the court was transferred to Brazil, after the Napoleonic seizure of Portugal, and normal relations were maintained during most of the 19th century, and at the beginning of Brazilian Republic. But governments of Brazil cut short the diplomatic recognition of the Bolshevik regime and maintained a decades-long absence of any formal contacts during the first phase of the ‘Soviet Challenge do Brazil’ (Hilton, 1991). As regards China, despite mutual recognition, links and bilateral affairs were fragile, but Brazil maintained diplomatic envoys, mostly chargé d’affaires, before and after the turmoil of the Second World War. A young Brazilian diplomat, José Oswaldo de Meira Penna, served at the Brazilian legation in Nanjing, both before and after the Japanese occupation of the country, and published, in 1944, an interesting book: Shanghai: aspectos históricos da China moderna (1944), prefaced by the Brazilian minister of Foreign Affairs himself; Meira Penna was the last Brazilian representative in China just before the fall of Chiang Kai-shek in 1949, and the dislocation of the Republic of China to Taiwan.
        Cold war years were almost completely deprived of diplomatic relationship between Brazil and the two most important Communist countries in the post-war world: the two Brazilian Communist parties, the pro-Soviet (1922) and the pro-China (created in 1961, under the original name) were both illegal in Brazil’ political scenario. Notwithstanding, president Janio Quadros reestablished diplomatic relations with Soviet Union and some other European communist countries in 1961; at the same time, he sent a diplomatic and commercial mission to China, leaded by the Vice-president himself, João Goulart: he was received by Mao Tsetung, toured some provinces and signed a draft trade agreement, in order to restart normal bilateral affairs. A commercial and technical mission from the PRC was in Brazil in March 1964, preparing a trade fair, when the Armed Forces staged a coup, under the banner of ‘banning Communism from Brazil’. All nine Chinese officers, technician and journalists were arrested, tortured, and kept for an entire year in prison, before being expelled in a dishonoured manner by the new guardians of State; it was one of the most horrendous acts of savage repression directed against supposed ‘enemies of the State’, that remained as an unsolved case in the bilateral relations until recently.
        Years of political and diplomatic hostility followed during the Sixties and Seventies, heightened by the pro-Chinese Communist Party attempt to install a ‘peasant guerrilla basis’ in the Amazonian jungle, countered by a brutal repression led by the Army against PCdoB militants (some of whom trained in a Chinese military academy during the 1960s). In 1971, still under the worst years of the military dictatorship, a Brazilian delegation at UNGA voted against the assumption of PRC in lieu and place of Republic of China as the legitimate representative of the Chinese people, and as a permanent member at the UNSC, maintaining the diplomatic recognition of Taiwan in the context of the Cold War. Meanwhile, despite the official paranoia, professional diplomats, working at the Brazilian Consulate in Hong Kong, prepared the hard job of convincing the generals to reconsider the negative posture.
        Three years later, the presidency of the fourth Army president, Ernesto Geisel, and his Foreign Relation minister Azeredo da Silveira, in a decisive reversal of that policy, decided to recognize PRC as the sole representative of the Chinese people, and Taiwan as a province within PRC; preliminary approaches were made by Chinese high officials, and the whole process was submitted to the scrutiny of the National Security staff and military commanders in Brazil. The joint communiqué (August 15, 1974) proclaimed that the Government of Brazil ‘recognizes that PRC government is the sole legal Government of China’, and ‘took note’ of PRC’s ‘reaffirmation that Taiwan is an unalienable part’ of its territory. Notwithstanding the careful course of action taken by the Brazilian government, three years later the ministry of the Army attempted a ‘coup inside the coup’, to topple Geisel, under accusations of tolerance with the ‘communists’ working in the State, but also in its external relations (China, quick recognitions of the newly independent States emerging from the late Portugal’s colonialism). Ambassadors were exchanged and almost normal business started to develop between the two countries, but with few true initiatives in bilateral cooperation during the final years of the Brazilian military regime: still in 1985, commercial turnover was just a little higher than US$ 1,2 billion; only in the 21st century trade flows start to climb to upper levels, putting China in first place, and the Brazil’s first economic partner for more than a century, the U.S., in a progressively distant second place.
        Ten years after the recognition, the last General-President, João Figueiredo, went on an official visit to China, in June 1984 (together with a travel to Japan): he met the new leader, Deng Xiaoping, with whom he strengthened the bilateral economic relationship, already within a sensible evolution of Brazil’s external policy; professional diplomacy was, by then, almost freely directed by the diplomatic staff, aiming at the resumption of the pre-1964 Brazilian ‘Independent Foreign Policy’, at least turning down the residual, almost disappearing, the official State policy of ‘anticommunism’ established after the failed 1935 Communist tentative takeover. At that time, at the end of the 1980s, coffee producers in Brazil were still hoping that some hundred million of the Chinese people could replace their old tea habit for a daily cup of a strong Brazilian coffee, a mirage that never entered in the mores of the Asian giant.

Brazil’s democratic New Republic meets a reemerging China
        The ‘New Republic’, as the return to a democratic political regime was almost immediately called, meant that Brazil resumed some old acquaintances of the pre-1964 military coup, such as Cuba, after 21 years of diplomatic rupture (all Brazilian passports, during the whole dictatorship, were stamped: ‘not valid for Cuba’). Also, following the allowance of new parties, in 1979, at the end of the bipartisan political system imposed in 1965, President José Sarney (elected as vice-president, but replacing Tancredo Neves, dead before his inauguration) endorsed the legalization of the two Communist parties, the old, Soviet-linked PCB, and the new, ‘resurrected’, pro-Mao PCdoB. Being communist affiliated ceased to be a ‘public danger’, as it was the case from 1922 to 1945, and after 1947, when only two years of diplomatic recognition of Soviet Union was suddenly curtailed by the Conservative (ex-minister of War during the Vargas dictatorship) President (Marshall) Eurico Gaspar Dutra.
        President Sarney, after receiving Prime-minister Zao Ziang in Brazil the preceding year, made an official visit to China in July 1988, with whom he decided to establish new cultural and economic cooperation agreements between both countries, among them, transportation, energy and remote sensing. In 1993, was the time of an official visit by President Jiang Zemin to Brazil’s Itamar Franco. One of the first State visits by the former minister of Foreign Affairs and then President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, in 1995, was made at the invitation of the same China’s president, Jiang Zemin: the CBERS project (China-Brazil Earth Resources Satellite) was already in development in the spatial area, one of the fruits of Sarney’s initial push. For the first time, the concept of ‘strategic partnership’ was mentioned explicitly, but the trade figure barely attained US$ 1,5 billion, a very lower amount, despite the always promised potential.
        In 2002, Brazilian candidate Lula da Silva won the presidential election, after four previous attempts: his victory was the debut of a fundamental change in both the external policy and the diplomacy of Brazil, as it represented the implementation of a new conceptual and operational lines of conduct for Brazil’s international relations, with the introduction of party connections in, up to then, an enclosed and tightly controlled policies by the diplomatic personnel. Emblematic of this shift to a new diplomatic fashion, was Lula’s decision, already in campaign, to accept an invitation by the Chinese Communist Party to visit China. This, as interpreted by the PT (Partido dos Trabalhadores), would signal the launching of a differing mode to conduct important new international connections for Brazil, according to socialist beliefs, both Party oriented and chosen personally by Lula (according to his old linkages to Cuba, during the dictatorship), still to be developed during his many mandates ahead.
        Lula was received in Beijing almost as a head of State, even if the protocol-based PCC diplomacy restricted the character of his visit to a party level, between both parties; he was received by Wey Jiangxing, at that time one of the main directors of the Permanent Political Bureau of the CCP, with whom he discussed State policies, planning and the globalization process. In an article published by the PT’s bulletin just during the visit, Lula (or someone for him) wrote that the Chinese explained to them that they were practising a ‘market socialism’ system, but he personally took the ‘impression’ that they ‘were learning to make money with the capitalists, to expend it as socialists’. He also declared, in the same article and truly coinciding with his socialist beliefs, that, ‘even as the Chinese seems to accept a market economy, they certainly do not admit a society dominated by the market. The Chinese State has been participating in the actual stage of globalization but does not relinquish the guidance of planning, of the definition of priorities. That is, it does not allow that the market take the decision on behalf of the society.’

A new world opens to Brazil-China relationship, and Brazilian diplomacy
        This first direct contact with Chinese leaders, at that point only at a party rank, was destined to powerfully influence future Brazilian diplomacy, both at a bilateral and international levels. It was only natural, then, that one of his first important foreign excursions, after assuming the presidency, was his decision to go in a State visit to China, in May 2004, accompanied by many ministers, governors, elected representatives and hundreds of entrepreneurs. That was the 30th anniversary of the 1974 diplomatic recognition of China, whose President, at the time, was Hu Jintao. Again, the ‘strategic partnership’, inaugurated by Fernando Henrique Cardoso during the 1990s, was at the centre of the discussions, both for bilateral initiatives and multilateral cooperation. Four principles were pointed as relevant: 1) mutual confidence, based on a dialogue on an equal footing; 2) increase of the economic and commercial exchanges, for reciprocal benefits; 3) promotion of international cooperation, with a focus in the coordination of negotiations; 4) interaction between both civil societies, to strengthen mutual knowledge.
        Most important, at this visit there was an agreement to institutionalise a High-Level Sino-Brazilian Commission for Concertation and Cooperation, to be presided by the Brazilian Vice-President and by the Chinese Vice-Premier. An Entrepreneurial Brazil-China Council was also established on the occasion. Brazilian diplomacy reaffirmed its commitment with the ‘one China principle’ and agreed with the Chinese posture that Tibet and Taiwan are ‘inseparable parts of China’. Already at that occasion, the concept of a ‘international multipolar system’, together with the ‘democratization of the international relations’ were advanced as ‘fundamental factors’ to tackle menaces and challenges, globally and regionally, always through the peaceful solution of controversies, the respect of sovereign equality and the International Law.
        As China had recently been accepted at the WTO (2001), both countries endorsed the importance of the new round of multilateral trade negotiations. At that time, after a ministerial meeting of Trade ministers in late 2003, Brazil was leading a short-lived G20 commercial group, even if their positions in agricultural trade were somewhat different. A Chinese request, not inserted in the joint communiqué, was that Brazil formally agree to accept China as a market economy, which Lula informally agreed to (probably unaware of the Gatt meaning of this concept), only to face, on his return, the open opposition of the whole entrepreneurial associations in Brazil; Chinese officials continued to raise this concern at many future meetings, to no avail from the Brazilian economic diplomacy. The communiqué contained, instead, a direct reference to the ‘need to improve the dialogue between Mercosur and China’, as well as to ‘undertake sound consultations about the free trade and other issues of mutual interest’, a possibility never put forward since then.
        Also, almost simultaneously to the new developments being introduced in connection with the Brazilian external policy and its diplomacy, towards an explicit ‘South-South leaning’, and in the context of an appealing proposal from a financial institution economist, a new acronym, BRIC, started to gain growing attention and acceptance in the media. But what was just a market opportunity for portfolio investments by institutional funds in four dynamic emerging economies was politically diverted to serve as a new platform for diplomatic and political coordination among them: Brazil, Russia, China and India. The very active Brazilian diplomacy was already engaged, since the very beginning of Lula first mandate, in the IBSA initiative, a consultation group for three democratic developing countries, India, Brazil and South Africa.
        Between 2004 and 2005, as a result from conversations at the margins of annual UN General Assemblies, the four minister of foreign affairs decided to materialise the BRIC concept; the formalisation of this new group was destined to, once more, profoundly change Brazil’s external policy and its diplomacy. This upgrade from an economic exercise, aiming just at financial, and separate, gains from possible investments by private venture capitalists, in four independent (between them) national economies, into a formal new group, endorsing diplomatic objectives at world level, has conceptual and factual learnings to be examined, because it is possibly the first time that long established States, exhibiting seasoned and strongly operated diplomatic staffs, decide to bow to an external suggestion, supported only by economic indicators, and go up and implement a new diplomatic venture popping out from a genius financial bottle, without (at first sight) any tangible great purpose, established from their own studies and policy planning reflections. Without prospecting the other three other countries objectives, for Brazil it was a personal decision by the President and his Foreign minister, seeing a political opportunity to link Brazil to three other important States, pointing to an ambitious new avenue of diplomatic realizations.
        Extending from 2005 to 2006, a first version of the BRIC group was inaugurated at ministerial level, as a starting point to its summit meetings from 2009 onwards, developing successfully since then. It is important to emphasise that it was the first time, in the history of Brazilian diplomacy, since the beginning of the first Cold War, that Brazil, as a government, decided to link its decision-making process, at diplomatic level, to, not only one, but to two big powers, both exhibiting geopolitical ambitions and owning nuclear devices. Never since the signing of the Interamerican Assistance Treaty (1947), in Rio de Janeiro, already including the clause of collective security – which would serve as a conceptual basis for the 1949 Washington treaty founding NATO –, had Brazilian diplomacy conceded in this kind of alignment with any great power State. The decision to establish diplomatic linkages with three major partners, all of them nuclear powers and embedded in geopolitical scenarios very different from the political environment of the regional natural circumstance of Brazil, that is, South America, can be seen, in this sense, as a new challenge to its diplomacy, and even for the making of the agenda of its external policy.
        During the first Cold War, economic and military primacy of the United States was indisputable, not only in the Western Hemisphere, but in the world. Brazil was submitted, with many other Western countries, to a kind of temporary ‘Americanisation’ of its domestic and external policies, in exchange for financial and military support and coordination at multilateral diplomatic entities. But the alignment was subject to a strict evaluation of the national interests at various levels, mostly in economic development cooperation, always to avoid or prevent entanglements at geopolitical level. The Brazilian government declined to the American suggestion to engage its Armed Forces in the Korean War, even if it was an action covered by a UN Security Council resolution, and also repelled another request to help the United States ‘fight against Communism in Vietnam’, even if it was a direct presidential new suggestion (by Lyndon Johnson), just after U.S. engagement with the Brazilian military in ousting the ‘Communist’ Brazilian President João Goulart, in 1964.
        Conversely, Brazil was ready, in 1957, to integrate a peace-making mission created by another UNSC resolution after the Suez crisis, installing a ten-year-long encampment where is nowadays South Gaza, until the Six Days War between Israel and its Arab neighbours. In the same manner, the new military regime, consented to send troops to join the Interamerican Peace Force to quell the civil war in the Dominican Republic in 1965, but only after the OAS approved a multilateral resolution to that effect. In those cases, as well as in other peace-making missions, Brazil always insisted in peaceful resolution of conflicts, only accepting to deploy an armed contingent after a multilateral decision taken in due form.
Under the light of those arguments, and taking into account the permanent posture of the Brazilian diplomacy to keep full decision-making autonomy in its external engagements, always avoiding any interference in the great powers’ frictions and geopolitical conflicts, it is somewhat strange to see Lula personal decision to accept the kind of involvement with two great nuclear powers as a framework for Brazil’s diplomacy outside its natural ‘Orteguian’ circumstance, which is the regional cooperation within South America. The political decision to accept BRIC, and its developments, was not taken by Brazilian professional diplomacy, but personally by Lula and a few of his aides, some from the PT, perhaps one or two from the diplomatic personnel. BRIC is not a natural outcome of an Itamaraty policy planning after a detailed technical and political evaluation of all its consequences in terms of diplomatic participation or engagement in some situations that can develop from critical reverberations outside of strict Brazilian national interests.

New kids in the block and the transformation of Brazil’s foreign economic policy
        After three decades – since the second half of the military regime – of struggles against inflation and external debt, Brazil finally reached a well successful stabilization process, the Real Plan (between 1994-1999), which transformed both domestic macro and sectorial policies, and its external interaction with foreign partners. Though Mercosur was to enter in a difficult period of adjustments (an almost lack of progress in the implementation of the customs union promised by the 1991 Asunción Treaty), external trade and foreign direct investments were to start a positive trend upwards, expanded with an ocean-like influx of dollars, most flowing from China, as the bilateral trade figures experienced double-digit annual increases: at the end of the first decade, the Asian giant surpassed Brazil’s turnover with the U.S., the first economic partner since the beginning of the 20th century. From 2009 onward, this Chinese trade pre-eminence – doubled with other Asian countries’ growing weight in Brazilian geographic structure of its foreign trade – has not only being maintained, but is constantly increasing, in special in grains and meat.
        The annual meetings of BRICS heads of State became an important ritual in the agenda of Brazilian diplomacy, even if the stimuli came more from the Presidential palace than from the Foreign Affairs ministry, Itamaraty, whose diplomats waited for instructions to work accordingly and follow presidential guidelines. It is interesting to note that, perhaps due to the natural difficulties of the building up of a truly customs union in the Southern Cone, or to disagreements between its two major partners, Brazil and Argentina, while Mercosur stalled at the economic level, only advancing very slowly and only at the rhetorical level, BRICS agenda advanced in a reasonable manner at the political level, with few, if any, commercial agreements, besides normal Gatt dispositions regulating most favoured nations trade relations. Assessing the situation of the two ‘blocs’ in an imagined Itamaraty policy planning staff, one could conclude that BRICS became much more important during Lula years than Mercosur economic and political administration, despite the regional integration process being the most relevant strategic project of the Brazilian diplomacy, and even its external policy, since Sarney years and during Fernando Henrique Cardoso two mandates.
        One of the most important BRICS encounters was the 2014 Fortaleza summit, when a New Development Bank and a Contingent Reserve Arrangement were approved to give financial support for investments and offer a relief mechanism in case of balance of payments crises. At each of those summits, Brazil and India – that had already constituted, with Japan and Germany, the G4 group in 1994 to influence plans for UN Chart reform and the enlargement of its Security Council – insisted with Russia and China to support their demands for their inclusion in the inner circle of the UN’s decision-makers, only to receive in the Declarations vague promises of a ‘more active role in international affairs’, an abused formula but to be completed, in the most recent years, with a more direct reference to ‘including in the case of reform of UN Charter and enlargement of its Security Council’.
        Meanwhile, increased trade between Brazil and China and Chinese investments in infrastructure in Brazil confirmed a path of expanded bilateral affairs of all kinds linking both economies: two decades after China’s accession to WTO commercial turnover between the two countries amounted to the double of the cumulated figures that Brazil accomplished with its second and the third more important foreign trade partners, respectively U.S. and the EU. At the beginning of the century, PT’s leaders worried about a possible ‘dependence’ that could affect Brazil if the American proposal of a Free Trade Area of the Americas, in negotiations since 1995, could be achieved in the years later; consequently, Lula, together with the Argentinian and the Venezuelan presidents, respectively Nestor Kirchner and Hugo Chávez, conspired to implode the agreement, which was achieved in the Mar del Plata summit of the Americas, November 2005.
        One of the side effects of this blocking was that the similar association agreement in negotiation between Mercosur and EU was left in a limbo for more than two decades, only to be reprieved by the two partners in 2019, to respond to the first version of Trump’s tariff war against all U.S. trade partners; the interregional trade agreement was still in travails six years later, yet with a promise of completion by 2026. Historically, European countries and, with force in the 20th century, the United States, were the main overall contributors to Brazil’s developmental process, basically in the economic domain, but also in its human capital formation. Since the beginning of the 21st century China has assumed the economic side of this evolutionary strategic partnership, still with less weight in the capacity building in terms of human capital: integration of universities from both countries is up to now very modest.

Which are the main components of the uneven relationship between Brazil and China?
        The structural and institutional relations between Brazil and China, went through successive historical phases: the parallel, almost ignored, existence of the two empires, became more formal with the two republics that followed their demise. Between the two nations, one an ancient true cultural civilization, the other a former Portuguese colony (whose metropolitan kingdom interacted with the already advanced Asian giant) turned into an independent Nation State and in a self-confident, developing state. The two nations experienced different episodes of political distance, approximation, erratic economic intercourse, opportunistic recognition (from the Empire of Brazil), formal diplomatic relations in the young age of both Republics, followed by a new political remoteness after the Second World War, finally arriving at a new well-informed recognition, decided by both governments, one a less developed communist country, nevertheless a great power, the other a recognised developing state.
        Throughout those different and differing circumstances, the relationship between the two States has always been unequal and dissimilar, despite all efforts from each leadership to expand and enlarge all kinds of intercourse, based on a pragmatic view from both sides. Notwithstanding this search for a mature and reciprocally beneficial cooperation between the two, the relationship remained unequal, unbalanced and asymmetrical, due to tangible diplomatic, economic, political and cultural differences between the two States, the two countries. Nowadays, at last, the relationship has blossomed in a promising way, in all aspects of reciprocal interests, despite unequivocally differing geopolitical and geoeconomic foundations and their respective national interests. According to the diplomatic rhetoric, both leaderships proclaim, after each meeting of the High-Level Binational Commission, the solidity of their ‘strategic partnership’. Nevertheless, the question arises: what is realistically strategic in this very robust relationship for the last half-century?
        What emerges from its uneven character, arising from the two countries’ very distinctive roles in the new global order emerging since the beginning of the 21st century? Curiously, a pioneer book, written by a foreign scholar established in Brazil, had already examined the relationship between the two countries, published in Belgium after the Brazilian no-vote against China in 1971 and before the double recognition of 1974: it was Michel Schooyans’ Destin du Brésil (1973), a detailed study about Brazilian ‘military technocracy and its ideology’, according to its subtitle. In a last chapter, Schooyans numbered the ‘ressemblance et dissemblance’ between the two countries, stating that
            … les deux pays se trouvent dans une situation ambiguë. (…) ils sont portés à                 contester l’antagonisme dominant [between USA and USSR] tel qu’il leur est                 proposé, et à affirmer leurs ambitions nationalistes. Il s’ensuit que les deux                     pays ne peuvent éviter de rechercher une nouvelle définition des rapports                     entre stratégie et politique, entre défense et développement. (p. 199)

        Later on, Schooyans imagine that the two countries could offer ‘a voice for the poor’ of the world, opening a new course of action within the framework of the UNO:
Quelles sont dès lors les grandes étapes menant à la révolution mondiale, dont le Brésil et la Chine assumeraient le leadership? S’étant mis au diapason de tous les hommes qui vivent dans des conditions indignes de l’humanité, ces deux pays pourraient légitimement s’affirmer, ensemble, comme les porte-parole fidèles de tous les pauvres du monde, sans pour cela leur imposer leur modèle. Ils pourraient même leur faire partager leurs acquis extérieurs et leur proposer de les intérioriser à leur tour. (p. 215)

        Let’s examine, thus, some examples of economic complementarity between the two countries, as well their distinctive political roles in the bilateral relationship and in the international context. First and most important structural component of this relationship, already described as uneven, is the historical and cultural background of each country, already stressed at the beginning of this Weberian-like analysis of their respective original conditions; on one side, there is a true civilization, for which the essential elements of its building-up dates from centuries of progressive developments towards a self-contained unique political and economic commonwealth; on the other side, there is a developing economy, emerging from three centuries of colonial exploitation, plus two centuries of gradual modernisation, with an industrialisation process somewhat guided by the State, under persistent protectionist practices since independence and all over economic sectorial policies.         Second: an official anti-communist policy since 1918, and as a state policy from 1935 to recent times, persistent in some sectors of the Brazilian society, as revealed by the extreme-right push towards State power after a decade and half of leftist governments (PT, from 2003 to 2016). Schooyans, still in advance of his time, imagined that Brazil and China could even help Europe to ‘save its identity’ and its dependence from the United States (p. 219).
        Under this political framework, the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1974 – which arouse recrimination from the extreme-right sector, both civil and military – was guided mainly, in the case of technocratic authoritarian military regime, by commercial concerns, whereas, in the case of the PRC, it was a carefully taken diplomatic decision, focusing on a new avenue of possibilities with a Third World country, leader of the developing countries, and exhibiting a real complementarity with the Chinese economy. That was precisely the case for the following decades, despite a very slow departure as regards the trade intercourse. If Brazil expected, in the 70s, to start selling huge amounts of Brazilian coffee as a new breakfast drink for the Chinese people, as it was the case for the American people since the Civil War in the 19th century, the deception was quickly recognised.
        But, after China’s accession to WTO, in 2001, reciprocal trade flows start to climb a prosperous course, with an increase in volume and value never surpassed by any other bilateral exchanges. During the following two and half decades, especially after the crisis of 2008-2009, there was an exponential China’s progression in respect to foreign trade of Brazil. ‘Between 1997 and 2000, the average represented only 1.8% of Brazilian exports and 1.9% of our imports. In 2023, its participation achieved a 30.7% and 22.1% respectively’. Starting in 2009, China’s leadership confirmed its pace, arriving at the condition, nowadays, as the sole responsible for more than a quarter of the whole of Brazilian foreign trade. Nowadays, bilateral turnover is twice superior to the second and third amounts combined, with the two next commercial partners, respectively the U.S.A. and the European Union; probably, it will also rapidly overcome that combined sum including a third partner, Argentina.
        The same IEDI Letter call the attention for the asymmetries existing in the reciprocal trade: almost all Brazilian exports are made up of commodities, above 90% of the total (and 60% of the Brazilian total exports of those primary goods); as for the other way, 98% of Brazilian imports from China are integrated by manufactured products, most with high technological complexity. According to an index of economic complexity, developed by the economists Ricardo Hausmann (Harvard University) and César Hidalgo (MIT), China, between 1995 and 2021, was the country that advanced the most, coming from the 46th position in a world scale of this index to the 21st place. At the same time, Brazil, whose position was at the 25th place in the first year, declined to a shameful 70th position in 2021 (probably declining further after that).
        This period corresponds precisely to Brazil’s refusal of the FTAA, the American project for a Hemispheric Trade Agreement, proposed by Clinton in 1994 and imploded in 2005 by the combined action of Brazil’s Lula, Argentine’s Kirchner and Venezuela’s Chávez. For comparison, Mexico, that was integrated into Nafta since 1994, climbed from the 29th position at that index to the 22nd place in the world list. Composition of the bilateral trade between Brazil and China, and its implicit technological complexity are, thus, the first indicator of an uneven economic relationship between the Asian giant and the biggest South American country, that is destined to be maintained and increase for the foreseeable future.
        Since those FTAA times, many things changed in the relationship between Latin America and the United States, for one side, with European Union for the other side, and, with another partner, that started to become much more important in many areas, including trade and investments: China. The same year when FTAA became a ‘dead’ undertaking, 2005, European Union, coincidentally, ‘lost’ enthusiasm for the negotiating process with Mercosur for an association agreement comprising trade liberalisation, and the process also stalled for many years, only to be reactivated at ‘Trumpian’ times, when the perspective of being crushed under an American hammer and a Chinese anvil, brought the EU to the negotiating table again; still, difficulties remained for the signing of a bi-regional agreement, due to industrial concerns from Brazil and Argentina and agricultural protectionism on the other side, and the draft agreed in June 2019 was still pending signing at the end of 2025.
        In the meantime, some Latin American countries that were negotiating the FTAA at Hemispheric level decided to sign bilateral free trade agreements with the United States, following the example of Mexico the previous decade; Chile, Peru and Colombia finalised in few months ahead their bilateral pacts, of course under the American model: not only trade liberalisation, but also investments, intellectual property, services and financial opening. Also happening at the same period, China started to make inroads in the external trade and sow the seeds of other economic interactions with many Latin American countries: in less than ten years, the Asian giant took the place of the United States as the main trade partner in their commercial geography; Brazil, of course, but also many others, and not only in the Pacific coast. In 2011, putting aside long and difficult negotiations in the context of Aladi – the Latin American Integration Association – or directly between Mercosur and the Andean Community of Nations, four of the most economic liberal countries in the continent, Chile, Colombia, Peru and Mexico, decided to formally establish the Pacific Alliance as a new regional integration mechanism; in fact, the move was less directed to kick off new trade agreements between the four countries, or to negotiate industrial cooperation among them, but to devise new opportunities with Apec and other Asian partners, eyeing new investments from the Eastern Pacific and other advantages with the new centre of the world economy.
        Another enterprise within the same spirit of new dynamic linkages outside the Hemisphere was, ten years after the frustrated American adventure of the FTAA, the launching of the first ministerial meeting of the China-CELAC (the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States) Forum, in Beijing, to discuss the same vast array of subjects, not only economic cooperation and trade issues, but also regional and multilateral political consultations and cultural and social matters. Ten years later, in May 2025, President Xi Jinping spoke at the opening ceremony of the fourth ministerial meeting of the China-CELAC Forum, announcing the launch of five programs to advance shared development and revitalization with Latin American countries: China will invite officials from CELAC countries to ‘facilitate exchanges on national governance best practices’ – as if China began to reproduce one of the best-known specialities of the OECD work agenda in favour of its member countries –, the other being within a government programme, intended to ‘work with LAC countries to implement the [Chinese] Global Development Initiative’, that is BRI, and also a call from Xi for a ‘joint implementation of the Global Civilization Initiative’, that …
should uphold the vision of equality, mutual learning, dialogue, and inclusiveness between civilizations, champion humanity's common values of peace, development, fairness, justice, democracy and freedom, and enhance China-LAC civilizational exchanges and mutual learning, including through a conference on China-LAC inter-civilizational dialogue.

        Some presidents of CELAC countries were personally present at this 4th meeting: Gustavo Petro, president of Colombia, at that moment the CELAC rotating chair, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Chilean President Gabriel Boric, and Dilma Rousseff, president of the New Development Bank and former Brazilian president; they all addressed the event, and received a careful attention from Chinese authorities. Still, there was more on the program of the 4th Forum CELAC-China, one especially sensitive: ‘joint implementation of the Global Security Initiative’, that is, a more closer cooperation ‘in disaster governance, cybersecurity, counterterrorism, anti-corruption, narcotics control and combating transnational organized crime so as to safeguard security and stability in the region’. Such initiative should have political, diplomatic and geopolitical implications, taking into account the old linkages, and also new pressures, from the United States, on all those areas, already revealed by intense presence of the Hemispheric Big Brother in most of Latin American countries, and his obsession with matters that touch a secular domination over police and military institutions in the whole continent.
        Then, besides those advancements at a regional level, there are, at the bilateral Brazil- China level, some other issues that touches the Brazilian capacity to receive, and absorb, some Chinese contributions that involves infrastructure and industrial development, arising from the special nature of the economic planning (and its effective functioning) as it regards the respective industrial systems of the two countries. Brazil was, for many years and decades, an industrialising country that relied the most upon state planning as a political device to accelerate the pace of economic development, at least from the 1930s up to the 1980s; it accelerated the appeal to ‘national development plans’ during the military regime, as already studied by this author (Almeida, 2008), but relinquished this methodology for the last decades. Lula’s governments and his Party, appreciative of the ‘national State planning’ of the military era, tried to resuscitate the practice recently, but with scant results. The PRC’s technocrats adopted, since the early beginnings of the new State, the socialist practice of drafting quinquennial plans for the careful planning of the priority areas chosen as relevant for economic and social development. In a recent paper about the preparation of a 15th quinquennial for the period 2026-2030, IPEA expert Renato Bauman (2025), author of many studies examining the economic relationship between China and Brazil, devises the possible areas of bilateral cooperation between the two countries, in connection with the near implementation of the 15th Quinquennial Plan. He writes:
            Based on the growing Brazilian imports of Chinese capital goods, a possible                     effect [of the 15th Plan] would be the access to more sophisticated machinery,             besides the intensification of the links with Chinese entities and research                         centres. (…)
            Taking into account [Brazilian] comparative advantages in clean energy                         generation and biodiversity it is reasonable to think about opportunities either             in the commerce of specific products or in investments in units with high                         energy demand. If the priority of the 14th Plan in adopting a proactive                             financing in favour of ‘green activities’ in other developing countries is                             maintained, this is an area where is likely the intensification of the interactions              between the two countries [Brazil and China]. There could be, furthermore,                     investment attraction in reforesting activities, in low carbon agriculture, in                     biotechnology, among others.

        One of the commentators to this note, circulated among other IPEA officials, a lawyer and an economist, expressed his mistrust concerning Brazil’s dedication in connection with the Plan:
            ‘In practice, at my knowledge, Brazil has no domestic plan to take profit from                 the new opportunities that China will offer us in those next five years. I see                     many [Brazilian] authorities’ missions visiting China recently and I read                         reports about how impressed they returned from what they saw, though I do                 not see strategic movements aiming at the enlargement of the economic and                 technological integration [with China].’ (Baumann, 2025, comments)

        Probably the most important indicator of the unequal relationship between the two original Bric members (2006-2011) concerns the geopolitical aspects of their respective roles in the world context, the unequal weight of this ‘invention’ becoming even more unbalanced with the transformation of the four countries bloc into a five composition (Brics, with the ‘Chinese aggregation’ of South Africa in 2011) and its expansion into Brics+ more recently. It is rarely remembered that the original concept (2001) of Lehman Brothers’ Jim O’Neill never supposed a diplomatic group of four geopolitical actors, only separate and separated emerging dynamic economies, but offering good opportunities for lucrative portfolio returns for institutional financial funds, arising from the fact that, at that epoch (beginning of the 2000s), the four showed, for many different and differing reasons, relative high rates of economic growth (which was maintained in the case of India and China for later years, but not exactly for Russia and Brasil, with more modest paces). The ‘merger’ of the four, and their transformation from good financial market opportunities into a new ‘diplomatic bloc’ was a complete arbitrary decision adopted as a side effect of the good media appeal of an attractive concept, bricks, as the basic components of an architectonic ‘new house’.
        It is not the case to discuss here the evolution and the diplomatic implications of the groups Bric-Brics-Brics+ – object of a previous analysis by this author (2022) –, but to stress the very contrasting responsibilities of Brazil and China, deriving from their unique places in the world distribution of power among big, medium and small countries, and of some ‘empires’ in the case of superpowers. The true ‘empires’, besides solid armaments, are also provided with a permanent seat at the UNSC and have veto power. That is obviously not the case of Brazil, but the South American country has always feed the illusion of acceding to the inner circle of the decision-makers, albeit the fact that PT’s governments (2003-2016, again 2023-2026) never departed from the clear anti-American sentiment of its militants. That was one of the reasons for which Lula’s diplomacy fought since the beginning to interact more closely with two of the non-Western members of the UNSC. Brazil and India have not received clear backing from Russia or China for revising the UN Charter or expanding the UNSC to include more permanent members. There is no sign that any forward move in this direction could be appearing in the foreseeable future.
            Another ambiguity of the current (Lula’s government) Brazilian diplomacy is the personal support of the president for the idea of a ‘new multipolar global order’, already suggested many times by Russia’s president Vladimir Putin, as well as by Xi Jinping himself. But this is only a reflection of Lula’s personalistic diplomacy, not strictly a formal diplomatic posture by the professional staff of Itamaraty (even if its bureaucrats could easily align with a request by the president for a formal adherence to the idea). Academic analysts, and informed journalists have already expressed concerns about this utopic undertaking, including because Lula’s perception as regards the Gaza conflict, for instance, is at odds with his posture vis-à-vis Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine (Almeida, 2024). Just to emphasise the new alignment with Russia, it is remarkable that the two last declarations by BRICS’ ministers of Foreign Affairs – meetings in April and October 2025 – cover all kinds of subjects, of the bloc and from the multilateral agenda, but have not a single word about the most important war in Europe since 1945, Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, not even an indirect reference; in a recent vote (December 2025), in Geneva’s UN Human Rights Council, about the kidnapping of Ukrainian children by Russian forces, the Brazilian delegation abstained.
            Most important than this theoretical assumption – in favour or against the vague idea of a ‘new global order’, not exactly multipolar, but probably bipolar, as during the first Cold War – is the concrete posture, by the Brazilian professional diplomacy, around the possible political solutions for the cruel war being conducted, since February 2022, against Ukraine by Russia, considering that, just before the invasion, China’s president proclaimed ‘an alliance without limits’ with the former ‘social-imperialist’ so-called partner of the USSR’s times, against which Maoist China fought some border conflicts and opposite conceptions about world communist movement. For some three decades, starting with Kissinger and Nixon visits to Chou En-Lai and Mao, Communist China had a ‘tacit alliance’ with the Imperialist Devil, against the common enemy, a choice that ended perhaps before the American bombing of Chinese embassy in Beograd (1909), during the Western reaction against Milosevic’s repression of the Kosovar rebellion. Independently of the highs and lows of the US-China relationship, the geopolitical implications for Brazil of its new political alliance with China and Russia, inside or outside the Brics group, are tantamount for its more broad diplomatic stance regarding not only many important issues in the multilateral agenda – Human Rights Council, for instance – or, concretely, in connection with Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, for example. Even before the era of the UNO Chart and the consolidation of the post WWII International Law structure, one of the most durable doctrinal assumptions of the Brazilian diplomacy, since the Great War, was the resolute opposition to any territorial usurpation by armed force, which was tested, for example, at the time of German-Soviet invasion of Poland, in 1939, and the invasion and annexation of the three Baltic States by USSR in 1940. That doctrine prevailed until Russia’s illegal annexation of the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea, when Dilma Rousseff’s (PT) government choose not to take position in face of a clear violation of the UNO Charter, as well as of a true principle of Brazilian diplomatic doctrine.
           There are also domestic political peculiarities in connection with the building up of diplomatic stance in matters of special sensitivities for the economic elites. It is not difficult to see that the ministry of Foreign Affairs itself receives some inputs (and pressures) from the civil society, mainly business milieu; that was the reason for the non-completion of China’s demands for Brazil’s recognising the new member as a market economy status within WTO, at the beginning of the 2000s. Itamaraty also opposed, at least twice, the acceptance by Brazil to formally be included in the Belt and Road Initiative, as many other South American partners have already agreed to integrate. There is a perception, among professional diplomats, that Brazil cannot be used for any other foreign objectives that do not emerge from the country itself, not only because of nationalistic feelings but also for a perception that a big country such as Brazil can only be moved, in the diplomatic domain, by its own assessment of a concrete initiative arising from the internal machinery of a policy planning process.             The same reactions, inversely, arouse when the U.S. (Trump 1) pressured Brazil against the adoption of Huawei equipment or regulatory definition of 5G, and the choice for a neutral approach of those matters, according to national industrial needs, even when the Bolsonaro’s government had a very hard stance against China (incurring in disrespectful squabbling against the then Beijing’s ambassador in Brasília).
        Nationalistic perceptions are prevalent among diplomats and military, including by the fact that the lobby by big national construction companies, which have an entrenched market reserve for their works in Brazil and South America, are powerful enough to dissuade such ‘economic liberalisation’ (implicit in the case of ‘market economy’ for China), and also for the evidence that almost all of military procurement in Brazil is predominantly from NATO countries. As reported recently by a policy analyst at Safe Spaces, a policy consulting firm based in Taiwan and Washington, elite members in Brazil have the persuasion that China could be ‘entrenching itself in the Brazilian industrial base and consumer economy, with implications for Chinese influence across the continent’, and that would be deemed unacceptable for those milieux.
        None of those sensibilities, valid for the overall historic postures of Brazilian diplomacy (but not always easily accepted or endorsed by some practical developments of the presidential external policy), could be an obstacle for new and innovative avenues towards the aggrandisement and diversification of Brazil’s various relationships with China, in the strictly bilateral domain, with one caveat: the relationship have been and will always be uneven, due to the natural unbalances – economic, political, military, geopolitical – between the two countries. Equality of treatment among sovereign countries is at the core of the Brazilian notion and of the diplomatic thinking about international relations, being the central axis of contemporary multilateralism. Nevertheless, the reality of international affairs is much more prosaic, along Orwellian lines: ‘all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others’.

Bibliographic references:
Almeida, Paulo Roberto de. A grande ilusão do Brics e o universo paralelo da diplomacia brasileira. Brasília: Diplomatizzando, 2022; ISBN: 978-65-00-46587-7; ASIN: B0B3WC59F4.
______ ‘A ideia sedutora de uma nova ordem mundial e a tolerância inaceitável para com a violação do Direito Internacional’, 2024, Academia.edu (https://www.academia.edu/125993678/4802_A_ideia_sedutora_de_uma_nova_ordem_mundial_e_a_tolerancia_inaceitavel_para_com_a_violacao_do_Direito_Internacional; blog Diplomatizzando (https://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com/2024/12/a-ideia-sedutora-de-uma-nova-ordem.html).
_______ . ‘Planejamento Econômico no Brasil: uma visão de longo prazo, 1934-2006’, in: João Paulo Peixoto (org.): Governando o Governo: modernização da administração pública no Brasil. São Paulo: Editora Atlas, 2008, p. 71-106 (https://www.academia.edu/49126593/1637_Planejamento_Economico_no_Brasil_uma_visao_de_longo_prazo_Book_2006_).
Baumann, Renato, ‘Os Planos da China e o Brasil’, draft paper, circulated among IPEA officials; November 27, 2025.
Domínguez-Avila, Carlos. ‘Geisel, Mao e o Estabelecimento das Relações Diplomáticas Sino-Brasileiras, 1974-1975: Uma Contribuição à História Global da Guerra Fria’, Dados, 68 (4), Oct.-Dec. 2025 (https://doi.org/10.1590/dados.2025.68.4.391).
Hilton, Stanley H. Brazil and the Soviet Challenge, 1917-1947. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1991.
IEDI, ‘O comércio Brasil-China e a perda de complexidade econômica brasileira’, Carta IEDI, nb. 1292, December 6, 2024 (https://iedi.org.br/cartas/carta_iedi_n_1292.html).
Ko, Patrick. ‘How China Is Using Brazil to Reshape Power in the Americas’, The Diplomat, Nov 21, 2025 (https://thediplomat.com/2025/11/how-china-is-using-brazil-to-reshape-power-in-the-americas/).
Lisboa, Henrique Carlos Ribeiro. A China e os chins: recordações de viagem. Rio de Janeiro: Fundação Alexandre de Gusmão-CHDD, 2016 (https://funag.gov.br/biblioteca-nova/produto/1-321-china_e_os_chins_recordacoes_de_viagem_a).
Meira Penna, J. O. Shanghai: aspectos históricos da China moderna. Rio de Janeiro: Americ-Edit, 1944.
Moreira Lima, S. E. (org.). Brasil e China, 40 anos de relações diplomáticas: análises e documentos. Brasília: Funag, 2016 (https://funag.gov.br/biblioteca-nova/produto/1-202-brasil_e_china_40_anos_de_relacoes_diplomaticas_analises_e_documentos).
Schooyans, Michel. Destin du Brésil: la technocratie militaire et son idéologie. Gembloux: Éditions Duculot, 1973.

Paulo Roberto de Almeida
[Brasília, 5129, December 8, 2025]
Publicado in Macau Journal of Brazilian Studies (Macau Association for Brazilian Studies, Macau, China, vol. 9, issue 1, April 2026; ISSN: 2523-661X; p. 1-17; link: https://aebm.mo/en/list-44/254 ; pdf: https://aebm.mo/en/uploads/ueditor/file/20260422/1776836687585222.pdf ). Relação de Publicado n. 1638.

Postagem em destaque

Dez anos do impeachment de Dilma - Rogerio Werneck (O Estado de S. Paulo)

 Essa mulher continua viva e exilada no Banco dos BRICS. Imagino o quanto custa ao país mantê-la nessa situação, e por quanto tempo… Walmyr ...