O que é este blog?

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

quarta-feira, 29 de agosto de 2018

Lula e Cristina: dois corruptos que infelicitaram seus países - Carlos Pagni (El Pais)

El País, Madri - 29.8.2018
Lula y Cristina
Brasil y la Argentina se miran como en un espejo. Los dos asisten a un escandaloso espectáculo de corrupción asociado a esos gobiernos
Carlos Pagni

Brasil y la Argentina se miran como en un espejo. Las economías de ambos países enfrentan ajustes después de una década de expansión, asociada al boom de las materias primas. Esa etapa fue liderada en Brasil por el Partido de los Trabajadores (PT) de Lula da Silva y Dilma Rousseff. En la Argentina, está asociada a Néstor y Cristina Kirchner.
Brasileños y argentinos asisten desde hace varios años a un escandaloso espectáculo de corrupción asociado a esos gobiernos. En Brasil la Justicia lleva adelante el proceso Lava Jato. En la Argentina se investiga la obtención de contratos de obra pública mediante sobornos. 
Esa historia policial adquirió una dimensión nunca imaginada por la aparición de los cuadernos de Oscar Centeno, un chofer obsesivo, que tomó nota a lo largo de una década de las indecentes andanzas de su jefe, Roberto Baratta, un funcionario clave en la gestión de la infraestructura durante el kirchnerismo. En Brasil, igual que en la Argentina, las causas judiciales alcanzan a los políticos pero también a numerosos hombres de negocios vinculados al Estado. La epidemia se expande porque en el derecho procesal de los dos países se incorporó la figura del arrepentido. Los acusados pueden negociar la pena que les corresponde a cambio de información que permita esclarecer la trama del delito.
La similitud de estas experiencias se proyecta también sobre la carrera electoral. Lula da Silva aparece como la cabeza del sistema de corrupción montado alrededor de Petrobras y sus contratistas, sobre todo Odebrecht. Cristina Kirchner y su esposo Néstor, que falleció en 2010, son señalados por sus antiguos subordinados como los destinatarios finales del dinero negro recaudado entre los empresarios.
Lula registra en las encuestas 39% de intención de voto para las elecciones presidenciales del próximo 7 de octubre. Él pretende competir. Pero es difícil que los jueces se lo permitan. En Brasil, nadie que haya sido condenado en segunda instancia puede postularse. Es el caso del ex presidente, penado con 12 años de prisión por dejarse sobornar por una constructora contratista de Petrobras.
La justicia electoral tiene hasta el 17 de septiembre para contestar los reclamos de Lula. Si lo hiciera a último momento, él podría hacer campaña televisiva durante más de dos semanas desde su celda de Curitiba.
Lula intentará transferir sus adhesiones a Fernando Hadad, el ex alcalde de San Pablo, que milita en su partido. Ausente el líder del PT, el candidato que encabeza los sondeos es el híper reaccionario Jair Bolsonaro. La apuesta de Lula es que, respaldado por él, Hadad pase a segunda vuelta y, aprovechando el rechazo que despierta Bolsonaro, se consagre presidente.
En la Argentina, Cristina Kirchner está en el foco de un escándalo que investigan los tribunales federales. Es probable que sea procesada y que un juez vuelva a pedir su prisión preventiva. Hasta ahora ha logrado evitarla debido a que es senadora y, por lo tanto, está protegida por los fueros parlamentarios.
Como Lula, la ex presidenta conserva la lealtad de buena parte de su base electoral. No lidera las encuestas, pero exhibe alrededor de 30% de intención de voto. La elecciones por la sucesión de Mauricio Macri se decide en octubre del año próximo.
A diferencia de lo que sucede con Lula y el PT, en el peronismo el liderazgo de la señora de Kirchner está en discusión. Un sector importante del partido compite con ella, que constituyó su propia fuerza. Esa fracción cuenta con varios candidatos a la presidencia: Sergio Massa, Juan Manuel Urtubey y Miguel Pichetto, entre otros. Para estos aspirantes la principal dificultad es que su antigua jefa bloquea, con su capital electoral, cualquier proyecto peronista alternativo. Esta dinámica opositora beneficia las aspiraciones de Macri para conseguir la reelección.
Lula y Cristina Kirchner son la encarnación de dos disociaciones. Una es la de las sociedades brasileña y argentina, que están fracturadas en su escala de valores. Una franja se indigna frente a la corrupción y reclama sanciones. La otra parece blindada a los escándalos y sigue fiel a sus líderes, más allá de cualquier fechoría.
Una segunda disociación es la que afecta a la izquierda populista, que se ha desentendido de la ética como criterio de la acción política. Lula y Cristina Kirchner coinciden en un esfuerzo común de simplificación. Las inobjetables pruebas judiciales de los delitos cometidos son, para ellos, parte de una conspiración universal orquestada por quienes quieren volver atrás con sus reformas igualitarias. A la cabeza de ese complot están, como siempre, los Estados Unidos.

Esta versión persecutoria tal vez tranquilice a quienes la postulan y a sus seguidores, ya que los releva de revisar cualquier contradicción. Pero inquieta a quienes tienen una preocupación por el destino de la democracia en América Latina. Los escándalos de corrupción están minando la credibilidad del sistema político. Hay países, como Colombia, donde el domingo pasado se realizó un interesante plebiscito, un sector de la dirigencia busca una receta institucional para producir una regeneración. En otros, como Brasil, donde esa reacción es mucho más difusa, aparecen fantasías regresivas, que explican el encanto del autoritario Bolsonaro.

Leszek Kolakowski (1927-2009) - Tony Judt (NYRBooks, 2009)

http://rosiebell.typepad.com/files/kozalowski.pdf
The New York Review of Books | September 24, 2009
Leszek Kolakowski (1927-2009)
Tony Judt
I heard Leszek Kolakowski lecture only once. It was at Harvard in 1987 and lie was a guest at the seminar on political theory taught by the late Judith Shklar. Main Currents  of Marxism had recently been published in English and Kolakowski was at the height of his renown. So many students wanted to hear him speak that the lecture had been moved to a large public auditorium and guests were permitted to attend. I happened to be in Cambridge for a meeting and went along with some friends.
The seductively suggestive title of Kolakowski's talk was "The Devil in History." For a while there was silence as students, faculty, and visitors listened intently. Kolakowski's writ­ings were well known to many of those present and his penchant for irony and close reasoning was familiar. But even so, the audience was clearly having trouble following his argument. Try as they would, they could not decode the metaphor. An air of bewildered mystification started to fall across the auditorium. And then, about a third of the way through, my neighbor—Timothy Garton Ash—leaned across. "I've got it," he whispered. "He really is talking about the Devil." And so he was.

Leszek Kolakowski at the opening of the Académie Universelle des Cultures, Paris, January 29, 1993


It was a defining feature of Leszek Kolakowski's intellectual trajectory that he took evil extremely seriously. Among Marx's false premises, in his view, was the idea that all human shortcoming are rooted in social circumstances. Marx had "entirely overlooked the possibility that some sources of conflict and aggression may be inherent in the permanent characteristics of the species."1Or, as he expressed it in his Harvard lecture: "Evil ... is not contingent but a stubborn and unredeemable fact." For Leszek Kolakowski, who lived through the Nazi occupation of Poland and the Soviet takeover that followed, "the Devil is part of our experience. Our generation has seen enough of it for the message to be taken extremely seriously."2
Most of the obituaries that followed Kolakowski's recent death at the age of eighty-one altogether missed this side of the man. That is hardly surprising. Despite the fact that much of the world still believes in a God and practices religion, Western intellectuals and public commentators today are ill at ease with the idea of revealed faith. Public discussion of the subject lurches uncomfortably between overconfident denial ("God" certainly does not exist, and anyway it's all His fault) and blind allegiance. That an intellectual and scholar of Kolakowski's caliber should have taken seriously not just religion and religious ideas but the very Devil himself is a mystery to many of his otherwise admiring readers and something they have preferred to ignore.
Kolakowski's perspective is further complicated by the skeptical distance that he maintained from the uncritical nostrums of official religion (not least his own, Catholicisrn) and by his unique standing as the only internationally renowned scholar of Marxism to claim equal preeminence as a student of the history of religious thought.3Kolakowski's expertise in the study of Christian sects and sectarian writings adds depth and piquancy to his influential account of Marxism as a religious canon, with major and minor scriptures, hierarchical structures of textual authority, and heretical dissenters.
Leszek Kolakowski shared with his Oxford colleague and fellow Central European Isaiah Berlin a disabused suspicion of all dogmatic certainties and a rueful insistence upon acknowledging the price of any significant political or ethical choice:
There are good reasons why freedom of economic activity should he limited for the sake of security, and why money should not automatically produce more money. But the limitation of freedom should be called precisely that, and should not be called a higher form of freedom.4
He had little patience for those who supposed, in the teeth of twentieth-century history, that radical political improvement could he secured at little moral or human cost—or that the costs, if significant, could be discounted against future benefits. On the one hand he was consistently resistant to all simplified theorems purporting to capture timeless human verities. On the other, he regarded certain self‑evident features of the human condition as too obvious to be ignored however inconvenient:
There is nothing surprising in the fact that we strongly resist the implications of many banal truths; this happens in all fields of knowledge simply because most truisms about human life are unpleasant.5
But the above considerations need not—and for Kolakowski did not—suggest a reactionary or quietist response. Marxism might be a world-historical category error. But it did not follow that socialism had been an unrnitigated disaster; nor need we conclude that we cannot or should not work to improve the condition of humanity:
Whatever has been done in Western Europe to bring about more justice, more security, more educational opportunities, more welfare and more state responsibility for the poor and helpless, could never have been achieved without the pressure of socialist ideologies and socialist movements, for all their naiveties and delusions.... Past experience speaks in part for the socialist idea and in part against it.
This carefully balanced appreciation of the complexities of social reality—the idea that "human fraternity is disastrous as a political program but indispensable as a guiding sign"—already places Kolakowski at a tangent to most intellectuals in his generation. In East and West alike, the more common tendency was to oscillate between excessive confidence in the infinite possibilities for human improvement and callow dismissal of the very notion of progress. Kolakowski sat athwart this characteristic twentieth-century chasm Human fraternity, in his thinking, remained regulative, rather than a constitutive, idea.6
The implication here is the sort of practical compromise we associate today with social democracy—or, in continental Western Europe, with its Christian Democratic confrère. Except, of course that social democracy today—uncomfortably burdened with the connotations of "socialism" and its twentieth-century past—is all too often the love that dare not speak its name. Leszek Kolakowski was no social democrat. But he was critically active in the real political history of his time, and more than once. In the early years of the Communist state Kolakowski (though still not yet thirty) was the leading Marxist philosopher in Poland. After 1956, he shaped and articulated dissenting thought in a region where all critical opinion was doomed sooner or later to exclusion.
As professor of the history of philosophy at Warsaw University he delivered a famous public lecture in 1966 excoriating the Communist Party for betraying the people—an act of political courage that cost him his Party card. Two years later he was duly exiled to the West. Thereafter, Kolakowski served as a reference and beacon for the youthful domestic dissenters who were to form the core of Poland's political opposition from the mid-1970s, who provided the intellectual energy behind the Solidarity movement and who took effective power in 1989.
Leszek Kolakowski was thus an entirely engaged intellectual, notwithstanding his contempt for the pretensions and vanities of "engagement." Intellectual engagement and "responsibility," much debated and idolized in continental European thought in the generation following World War II, struck Kolakowski a: fundamentally vacant concepts:
Why should intellectuals be specifically responsible, and differently responsible than other people, and for what?... A more feeling of responsibility is a formal virtue that by itself does not result in a specific obligation: it is possible to feel responsible for a good cause as well as for an evil one.
This simple observation seems rarely to have occurred to a generation of French existentialists and their Anglo-American admirers. It may be that one needed to have experienced firsthand the attraction of utterly evil goals (of left and right alike) to otherwise responsible intellectuals in order to understand to the full the costs as well as the benefits of ideological commitment and moral unilateralism.
As the above suggests, Leszek Kolakowski was no conventional "continental philosopher" in the sense usually ascribed to the phrase in contemporary academic usage and with particular reference to Heidegger, Sartre, and their epigones. But then nor did he have much in common with Anglo-American thought in the form that carne to dominate English-speaking universities after World War II—which no doubt accounts for his isolation and neglect during his decades in Oxford.7The sources of Kolakowski's particular perspective, beyond his lifelong interrogation of Catholic theology, are probably better sought in experience than in epistemology. As he himself observed in his magnum opus, "All kinds of circumstances contribute to the formation of a world-view, and ... all phenomena are due to an inexhaustible multiplicity of causes."8
In Kolakowski's own case, the multiplicity of causes includes not just atraumatic childhood during World War II and the catastrophic history of communism in the years that followed, but the very distinctive setting of Poland as it passed through these cataclysmic decades. For while it is not always clear exactly where Kolakowski's particular thinking is leading, it is perfectly evident that it never carne from "nowhere."
The most cosmopolitan of Europe's modern philosophers—at home in five major languages and their accompanying cultures—and in exile for over twenty years, Kolakowski was never "rootless." In contrast with, for example, Edward Said, he questioned whether it was even possible in good faith to disclaim all forms of communal loyalty. Neither in place nor ever completely out of place, Kolakowski was a lifelong critic of nativist sentiment; yet he was adulated in his native Poland and rightly so. A European in his bones, Kolakowski never ceased to interrogate with detached skepticism the naive illusions of pan-Europeanists. whose homogenizing aspirations reminded him of the dreary utopian dogmas of another age. Diversity, so long as it was not idolized as an objective in its own right, seemed to him a more prudent aspiration and one that could only be assured by the preservation of distinctive national identities.9
It would be easy to conclude that Leszek Kolakowski was unique. His distinctive mix of irony and moral seriousness, religious sensibility and epistemological skepticism, social engagement and political doubt was truly rare (it should also be said that he was strikingly charismatic—exercising much the same magnetism at any gathering as the late Bernard Williams, and for some of the same reasons10). But it does not seem unreasonable to recall that for just these reasons—charisma included—he also stood firmly in a very particular line of descent.
His sheer range of cultivation and reference; the allusive, disabused wit; the uncomplaining acceptance of academic provincialism in the fortunate Western lands where he found refuge; the experience and memory of Poland's twentieth century imprinted, as it were, on his mischievously expressive features: all of these identify the late Leszek Kolakowski as a true Central European intellectual—perhaps the last. For two generations of men and women, born between 1880 and 1930, the characteristically Central European experience of the twentieth century consisted of a multilingual education in the sophisticated urban heartland of European civilization, honed, capped, and side-shadowed by the experience of dictatorship, war, occupation, devastation, and genocide in that selfsame heartland.
No sane person could want to repeat such an experience merely in order to replicate the quality of thought and thinkers that such a sentimental education produced. There is something more than a little distasteful about expressions of nostalgia for the lost intellectual world of Communist Eastern Europe, shading uncomfortably dose to regret for the loss of other people's repression. But as Leszek Kolakowski would have been the first to point out, the relationship between Central Europe's twentieth-century history and its astonishing intellectual riches nevertheless existed; it cannot simply be dismissed.
What it produced was what Judith Shklar, in another context, once described as a "liberalism of fear": the uncompromising defense of reason and moderation born of firsthand experience of the consequences of ideological excess; the ever-present awareness of the possibility of catastrophe, at its worst when misunderstood as opportunity or renewal, of the temptations of totalizing thought in all its protean variety. In the wake of twentieth-century history, this was the Central European lesson. If we are very  fortunate, we shall not have to relearn it again for some time to come; when we do, we had better hope that there will be someone around to teach it. Until then, we would do well to reread Kolakowski.
l“The Myth of Human Self-ldentity,” in The Socialist Idea: A Reappraisal, edited by Leszek Kolakowski and Stuart Hampshire (Basic Books, 1974), p. 32.
2“The Devil in History,” in My Correct Everything (St. Augustine's), p. 133.
For a representative instance of Kolakowski's approach to the history of religious thought, see, for example,God Owes Us Nothing: A Brief Remark on Pascal's Religion and on the Spirit of Jansenism (University of Chicago Press, 1995). It would not he too much to say that Kolakowski was a twentieth-century Pascalian, cautiously placing his bet on reason in place of faith.
4Leszek Kolakowski, Modernity on Endless Trial (University of Chicago Press, 1990), pp. 226-227.
Kolakowski and Hampshire, The Socialist Idea, p. 17.
6Kolakowski, Modernity on Endless Trial, p. 144.
Elsewhere, his achievements were copiously acknowledged. In 1983 he was awarded the Erasmus Prize. In 2004 he was the first recipient of the Kluge Prize of the Library of Congress, where he had been the Jefferson Lecturer twenty years previously. Three years later he was awarded the Jerusalem Prize.
8Leszek Kolakowski, Main Currents of Marxism, Volume III: The Breakdown (Clarendon Press/Oxford University Press, 1978), p. 339. I am grateful to Leon Wieseltier for reminding me of this reference.
9Kolakowski, Modernity on Endless Trial, p. 59. For Edward Said, see Out of Place: A Memoir (Vintage, 2000).
10At a party in his honor following the Cambridge lecture, I recall watching with bemused admiration and no little envy as virtually every young woman in the room migrated to the comer where a sixty-year-old philosopher, already wizened and supported by a cane, held court before their adoring eyes. One should never underestimate the magnetic attraction of sheer intelligence.

Kissinger, por Niall Ferguson: uma critica feroz - Todd Gitlin

 The Servile Fanatic: Niall Ferguson’s Grotesque but Telling New Biography of Henry Kissinger

Jackson, Polk, and—Kissinger?


Tablet MagazineOctober 28, 2015 12:00 AM

1.
American history does not lack for superintendents of devastation whom the taxidermy of whitewashed history puts on display as illustrious persons for the admiration of schoolchildren. While ghosts prowl the outskirts of national mythology, herds of admirers graze agreeably, ever cowed.
Consider Thomas Jefferson, who in 1803 wrote confidentially  to the governor of the Indiana Territory that if natives east of the Mississippi persisted in refusing to give up their hunting ways and take up sedentary agriculture instead, they should be rounded up and sent West. Consider his protégé Andrew Jackson , whose Indian Removal Act, the legal justification for grabbing Cherokee land in the southeast and force-marching the “savage hunters” westward, was, he said, a policy “not only liberal, but generous” and “a happy consummation” that might “perhaps cause” the natives “to cast off their savage habits and become an interesting, civilized, and Christian community.” Or consider Jackson’s protégé James K. Polk, who then-Congressman Abraham Lincoln  showed had provoked war with Mexico in 1848. Thirteen thousand Americans died  in the ensuing Mexican War, but the story told to American schoolchildren is that the memorable local event was the martyrdom of the Anglo victims of the earlier battle of the Alamo. None of this is even to speak of the several presidents and other high officials of the United States who owned slaves—which entailed holding onto them by force and violence, which may not technically qualify as war criminality but may surely be understood as the continuation of war (on Africans) by other means. At his death in 1845, Jackson owned about 150 slaves , his protégé James Polk  more than 50. (Writes one historian: “More than half of the children among Polk’s slaves died before reaching age 15”—a mortality rate  more than 50 percent higher than that for all blacks in America.) But that’s by the by. The official website about Jackson baronial home “The Hermitage,” the same that tells us about the slaves, calls him “The People’s President,” and his face still adorns the $20 bill.

2.
Or consider Henry Kissinger, who finds America self-evidently glorious and the expansion of American power an unquestionable virtue. In a 1956 article that his often reverent biographer Niall Ferguson characterizes mildly as “self-confident,” Kissinger deplored Americans’ penchant for blind optimism. Americans, he wrote, lack the ability to “grasp … the nuances of possibilities,” as (surprise!) none other than Henry Kissinger was adept at doing. Eighteen years after arriving in the United States as a refugee from Nazi Germany, Kissinger had stars in his eyes. Poor enfeebled Americans: They suffered from a “lack of tragic experience.” They needed close encounters with the abyss. They need a gravel-voiced, heavily accented refugee from the old country—Henry Kissinger.
How the historian Niall Ferguson (late of Harvard, now heading to Stanford’s Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace) will assess Kissinger’s years in Richard Nixon’s White House we shall see when he brings out his second volume, which will take up the saga in 1969, when Kissinger assumes the office of national security adviser and more than 21,000 Americans and between 800,000  and 1.5 million Vietnamese who would die before Nixon left the White House in disgrace are still breathing.
But it is not a happy forecast of what is to follow that Ferguson sees Kissinger’s critics as grudge-bearing self-seekers. The flavor of Ferguson’s approach emerges as early as page 16 in Vol. I, subtitled “1923-1968: The Idealist.” Ferguson tells the tale of 13 former Harvard colleagues descending upon Washington to meet with Kissinger in May 1970. “We’re a group of people,” the game-theory pioneer Thomas Schelling, no radical and a later Nobel Prize-winner in economics, told Kissinger, “who have completely lost confidence in the ability of the White House to conduct our foreign policy, and we have come to tell you so. We are no longer at your disposal as personal advisers.”
Ferguson goes on that the Schelling “group’s stated reason for breaking with Kissinger was the invasion of Cambodia. (As their spokesman Schelling put it, ‘There are two possibilities. Either, one, the President didn’t understand … that he was invading another country; or, two, he did understand. We just don’t know which one is scarier.’)” Ferguson goes on to acknowledge that “[n]o doubt Schelling and his colleagues had cogent reasons to criticize Nixon’s decision.” But he does not tarry to present any of those “cogent reasons.” Instead, Ferguson’s next sentence reads: “Still, there was something suspiciously staged about their showdown with Kissinger. Each one [of the 13] … had experience in government, and at high levels. … For these men, publicly breaking with Kissinger … was a form of self-exculpation.”
In this view from Ferguson’s planet Kissinger’s Harvard critics were not only pinkly fatuous moralists but dishonest, carping, bitter men trying to whitewash their own dirty records. Some of them were, in fact, eminently conventional Cold Warriors themselves who had come to see that the wheels were coming off the express. But to mention their conventionality would deprive Ferguson of his main line of argument: namely, that Kissinger was the reasonable statesman-hero in action. It’s of interest, then, to compare the historian Greg Grandin’s longer version of the Schelling story in his own useful survey, Kissinger’s Shadow, published concurrently, as if to haunt Ferguson’s dithyrambic tome. Grandin, unlike Ferguson, includes Schelling’s comment about the invasion of Cambodia:  “Sickening.” And Schelling spoke this most un-Schelling-like word at a time when neither he nor his colleagues knew yet about the secret, pulverizing B-52 bombing of Cambodia that Kissinger had been personally directing for a year.

3.
Not only was Kissinger possessed of “tremendous drive and discipline,” Ferguson writes, he was “brillian[t] as a prose stylist.” Another way to introduce Kissinger would be to note that until 1968, the only remarkable aspect of his career as an pedestrian Cold Warrior was his skill at acquiring bedazzled patrons. His thinking was the standard stuff of the defense intellectuals whom C. Wright Mills reasonably dubbed “crackpot realists.” It is true that Kissinger’s wartime and immediate postwar reports from embattled and then occupied Germany were sparkling—these, quoted at length, are the Ferguson book’s chief revelations, signs of the intelligence that Kissinger had to keep contained, if not drowned, in order to make his illustrious career in social climbing. It is to Ferguson’s credit that he and his research assistants have dredged through so many cubic feet of Kissinger diaries, correspondence, and drafts that they have unearthed more than enough material to demonstrate that Kissinger was not only an accomplished stylist but an intellectual hack when he was not a raving hysteric.
Much of what Ferguson credits as “brilliance” reads as the sheerest banality, yet it leaves the biographer breathless. For example, Kissinger’s dissertation on Metternich and post-Napoleonic Europe, published in 1957 as A World Restored, contains, Ferguson tells us, “striking formulations” such as these:
• “To plan policy on the assumption of the equal possibility of all contingencies is to confuse statesmanship with mathematics.”
• “[C]alculations of absolute power lead to a paralysis of action … strength depends on the relative [Kissinger’s italics] position of states.”
1 + 1 = 2, writes the great man. But there is worse. Ferguson is also “struck” by this Kissingerian aperçu:
[T]o divine the direction on a calm sea may prove more difficult than to chart a course through tempestuous waters, where the violence of the elements imparts inspiration through the need for survival.
Which is to say that only the inspired, the action freaks, are entitled to rule. The agonist is the divine.
Indeed, as early as his Harvard undergraduate thesis, written in 1950 at age 27, Kissinger insisted that “inaction has to be avoided” to overcome the bureaucracy’s “incentive for inaction.” The state has its reasons about which citizens need not inquire, and the belligerence that Kennedy would later call “vigor” is always imperative. Because the state is august, its struggles are near-holy. One theme that runs throughout Kissinger’s writing of the fifties and sixties is his dismay over the inefficiency that arises from diffusion of power.
The struggle to overcome the self-canceling inefficiencies and indecisions of bureaucrats would become Kissinger’s lifelong cause, probably the single conviction that recommended him most to Richard M. Nixon, who had his own reasons to conquer his own underlings. Grandin, by the way, makes too much of Kissinger’s undergraduate work, a mishmash of Spengler and, weirdly, Kant (thus Ferguson’s subtitle, “The Idealist”), but he is right to note that Kissinger’s saw grandeur in his ideal of the self-justifying nation-state that is morally (though incoherently) bound to bring forth its own purpose like a rabbit out of a hat.

4.
In A World Restored, Kissinger wrote of the otherwise admirable Austrian Prince Metternich that he lacked
the attribute which has enabled the spirit to transcend an impasse at so many crises of history: the ability to contemplate an abyss, not with the detachment of a scientist, but as a challenge to overcome—or to perish in the process.
Kissinger could stare at the abyss with aplomb. As he applied his heroics to the problem of making the world safe for “limited nuclear war,” Kissinger had what he construed to be the courage to accept that millions, tens or hundreds of millions of human beings might actually perish along with Kissinger’s ideal hero-statesman. Kissinger would neglect Nietzsche’s warning that “if you gaze long enough into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you.” No matter. Kissinger seemed to revel in bringing abyss news from abysmal Europe to impress naïve Americans. His complaint about Metternich served, among other things, as Kissinger’s memo to himself to stay tougher than suckers, the self-description of a man of limitless ambition and no small gift for self-promotion learned early to put his European aura to huge use making connected friends and influencing impressionable people.
So, seemingly discontented with the haughty provincialism that grows on trees in Harvard Yard, Kissinger went about working his way up the greasy influence pole. As rubber-jointed sage he could go ponderous or he could go witty. He cultivated, among many others who might be of use, Harvard’s McGeorge Bundy, dean of the faculty and later national security adviser and leading war hawk under both Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. Bundy got Kissinger a job at the Council for Foreign Relations, which led, in turn, to years of service at the side of—or elsewhere near the anatomy of—New York Gov. and putative Republican front-runner Nelson Rockefeller. Kissinger proved a virtuoso of sycophancy. And one good feat of sycophancy deserved others: Not surprisingly, “Dr. Kissinger” was lionized for years by Nightline’s Ted Koppel and still is so, by Koppel’s current epigones.
How, apart from his gravitas-bearing accent, did Kissinger pull off this feat? Part of the explanation was that Kissinger was not original; he was, for the most part, conventional. Virtually everything he wrote during his surprising climb to fame in the 1950s was either a) the taken-for-granted wisdom of his time (the Russians, a revolutionary power, were always coming), or b) nonsense (a passage from his diary: “Spiritual force, multiplied by economic force, multiplied by military force, is roughly equal to security”); or—and here is where some originality crept in—c) wild-eyed hysteria in the face of the USSR’s conventional military might and its accumulating nuclear bombs.
The hysterical mode gave rise to sentences like this (from 1955): “If we refused to fight in Indo-China [on the French side] when the Soviet nuclear capability was relatively small because of the danger that a limited war might become general, we shall hardly be readier to risk nuclear bombing for the sake of Burma or [the Shah’s] Iran or even Jugoslavia.” Such unmanly unreadiness to risk nuclear bombing was, in Kissinger’s world, a very bad thing. But he breathed easier at more pleasant prospects in Southeast Asia: “In Indo-China, an all-out American effort may still save at least Laos and Cambodia.” Kissinger worried about “substantial Soviet gains among the uncommitted peoples of the world” but did not begin to grasp that they were not only uncommitted peoples but poor and ex-colonial peoples who were ready to follow compelling nationalists like Ho Chi Minh.
The wild-eyed part was Kissinger’s panic about Soviet nuclear weapons. He criticized President Eisenhower let-’er-rip strategy to blast away all the Soviet Union’s cities if the Red Army went on the move. “There had to be some alternative to massive retaliation,” as Ferguson puts it. Kissinger came up with that alternative: Prepare for limited nuclear war. In his overblown, lavishly reviewed and 1957 “magnum opus” (as Ferguson calls it), Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy, Kissinger built up the fantasy of a nuclear war that could be kept “limited.” Richard Nixon admired this book, Ferguson tells us. Ferguson calls the book “coherent” and lauds its “appealing toughness”—although Kissinger delicately called for “pauses for calculation between bouts of fighting and negotiation between two sides even as the [limited nuclear] war was going on. Ferguson does note: “Conspicuous by its absence … was any serious discussion of what a limited nuclear war might actually be like.” But any flaws in the book, he insists, were not Kissinger’s but “reflect the reality that … the book remained, at root, the work of a committee.”
Weirdly, Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy became a best-seller. The Sputnik scare helped by pumping up American panic. It was as if a casting call went out for a gravel-voiced, heavily accented German-Jewish sage, heavy with tragic aura, to intone that the world was complicated and therefore it was necessary to prepare to fight a limited nuclear war in Central Europe. Mind you, such a war, Kissinger proposed, should obey rules. One was this: each “battlefield nuclear weapon” should observe “a 500-kiloton maximum”—that is, the equivalent of 25 Hiroshimas. After Central Europe was to be rendered a smoking radioactive ruin, the United States would pause to chat with the Kremlin about what would happen next.
Kissinger had long patented, as if original, the boilerplate notion that “it was an inherently moral act to make a choice between lesser and greater evils.” He brandished such self-justifications so often, it was as if he thought he was making a grand contribution to moral philosophy. In truth, the limited nuclear war fantasy was sheer lunacy. Indeed, three years later, Ferguson tells us, Kissinger had “repudiated” the thesis that had established him as the nation’s Big-Thinker-in-Chief, noting that “[s]ince no country has had any experience with the tactical use of nuclear weapons, the possibility of miscalculation is considerable.” Oh.

5.
To judge from Ferguson’s biography, when it suited Kissinger to take credit for noting the uncertainties of the world, because they made the world safe for vigorous statesmanship, he did so. At other times, it suited him to argue, as in 1957, after the Soviets’ panic-inducing satellite launch:
We’re really in trouble now. We’ve been pushed back gradually, position by position. … The basic trend is against us. [The Soviets] had “superior organization and superior doctrine. … If things continue as they are, our expulsion from Eurasia is a mathematical certainty.”
A mathematical certainty. This was sheer hysteria speaking. As it continued to speak in 1958: “We’re losing the Cold War.” “We simply lost our nerve.” In 1959, Kissinger was so distraught at hearing that his patron Rockefeller was withdrawing from a run as presidential nominee, he described a “feeling almost of despair. … We are heading, I am convinced, for dark, perhaps desperate times.” By which he did not mean that nuclear war was a clear and present danger—it came within a hair’s breadth of breaking out on Oct. 27, 1962, in the midst of the Cuban missile crisis. Kissinger meant that Western collapse was nigh and the Western alliance was crumbling because Washington was guilty of an “abdication of doctrine.” That is, Washington lacked himself.
Picking up part-time work running errands for the Kennedy White House, Kissinger brandished his résumé as a hack militarist plumping for precisely that “credibility” fetish that delivered the United States into the grotesque and, in the strategic terms beloved of Kissinger, utterly pointless, war in Southeast Asia. It wasn’t just that he participated in what Ferguson delicately calls “the missile gap era” (as if everyone believed in such nonsense at a time when the gap was vastly in America’s favor). “By June 1960,” Ferguson tells us, “Kissinger was no longer debating that ‘the “missile gap” will materialize in the period 1960-64”; the only question was whether it would lead to “a Soviet surprise attack or merely to ‘the piecemeal erosion of the free world.’ ”
For such sagacity, Kissinger was courted not only by Rockefeller (who put up a grateful Kissinger in his Caribbean “palace”) but by John F. Kennedy. Desperate to get to the right hand of power, Kissinger courted the two at the same time. Ferguson exempts him from the charge of obsequiousness on the ground that Kissinger must have understood that his patron Nelson Rockefeller would never be president. But his time with Rockefeller was time well spent legitimizing Kissinger as a Great Mind. By 1961, in the midst of Kennedy’s Berlin crisis, he was grumpy about being treated as a mere “idea man.” For Kissinger craved the thick of the diplomatic action.
To speak of his power lust is a decided understatement. When it came to power, Kissinger had an urgent zipper problem. When the time came for the Richard Nixon he “loathed” to come calling, Kissinger could adapt. He was ever-ready. His wartime mentor Fritz Kraemer warned him that “the trap is in your own character.”
When Kissinger said, in 1962, that the United States must make “the internal commitment to ourselves to see that a sufficient military effort is made to end the guerrilla attacks” in Vietnam, Ferguson speaks of “the conditional nature of Kissinger’s position.” He claims that in August 1965 Kissinger “already knew” that “this was a war that could not be won by military means.” For this claim, for all the thousands of pages he had access to, Ferguson offers no serious evidence. While Kissinger recognized that the military briefers in Vietnam were obfuscating, he still welcomed “an outcome in which we achieve a major pacification.” A couple of months later, after briefly forfeiting his standing as an insider by giving a press briefing, Kissinger whined to Bundy about the injustice of it all when he, Henry Kissinger, had “consistently supported Administration policy in Vietnam.” The nerve of Johnson’s ungrateful underlings! It was this Kissinger who, Ferguson writes, was not the sort of gullible fool whom Graham Greene brilliantly described in The Quiet American. For one thing, Ferguson says, Kissinger lacked the “insufferable self-assurance” of  Greene’s character. Right.

6.
It’s to Ferguson’s credit that he lays before careful readers ample—bulging—material for such severe judgment. Look no further than his own numerous quotations for heaps of testimony to Kissinger’s banality. Ferguson also, to my eyes, makes mincemeat of the charge that Kissinger, by relaying inside information about the 1968 Paris negotiations that Lyndon Johnson was sponsoring, helped sabotage those talks and therefore to elect Richard Nixon. (Even Grandin, who concludes that Kissinger was “implicated in Nixon’s preelection machinations” to get the Saigon government to scuttle the talks so that Johnson could not announce a deal that might put his acolyte Hubert Humphrey over the top, thinks Kissinger has been over-blamed for sabotage on that occasion.) And even as he is swallowing Kissinger’s conventionality as insight, Ferguson is not without criticisms of his own. When Kissinger went on about America’s “margin of survival” having “narrowed dangerously” to the point that “national disaster” loomed and the United States was “in ‘mortal danger’ of a Soviet surprise attack,” Ferguson allows that his uproar “seems overdone.” But don’t count on Ferguson to point to the sheer craziness of so much that Kissinger maintained.
Kissinger was surely one of the most gifted exponents of an intellectual disaster that led to moral disaster. But such exponents were legion. Mario Del Pero , a professor of international history at Sciences Po in Paris and author of The Eccentric Realist: Henry Kissinger and the Shaping of American Foreign Policy, has it right:
Kissinger has been a quintessential 1950s U.S. Cold War intellectual. He was not particularly original or bold, once we scratch away from his writings the deliberately opaque and convoluted prose he often used, possibly to try to render more original thoughts and reflections that were in reality fairly conventional…. What the archival record has so far revealed is that Kissinger was often simplistic, binary and even uninformed….His often broadcasted realism notwithstanding, he tended to adhere to a dogmatic, zero-sum-game of the international game. In short, he wasn’t a war criminal, he wasn’t a very deep or sophisticated thinker, he rarely challenged the intellectual vogues of the time (even because it would have meant to challenge those in power, something he always was—and still is—reluctant to do), and once in government he displayed a certain intellectual laziness vis-à-vis the intricacies and complexities of a world that he still tended to see in black-and-white.
Ferguson’s readers need reminding what kind of thought was conventional during the years of Kissinger’s ascent and his White House reign as (to borrow the brilliant title of Russell Lees’s 1974 play) Nixon’s Nixon. Kissinger’s heedlessness was thought with a bludgeon. As for his time in the White House, no better introduction to Kissinger’s wartime achievement there can be found than that contributed by his onetime Harvard colleague (they taught classes together), the most hard-headed realist Stanley Hoffmann. Hoffmann, whose inspiration was the underrated French liberal Gaullist political writer Raymond Aron, early in his Harvard career was raking peaceniks like this writer, then his admiring though skeptical student, over the coals. By the late Sixties, Hoffmann had fervently turned against Kissinger and the war. When a British journalist named William Shawcross published his devastating 1979 bookSideshow: Kissinger, Nixon and the Destruction of Cambodia, Hoffmann began his review with this quote from the work: “Cambodia was not a mistake; it was a crime.” Hoffmann continued:
This is what William Shawcross demonstrates in his careful, detailed, and incisive book. Sideshow is both masterly and horrifying. It lays bare the fallacies and the shame of the Vietnam war with so much evidence and force that recent attempts at rewriting this tragic story in order to vindicate American policy appear as ludicrous as the policy itself….[It] presents hard and irrefutable documentary evidence showing that the monsters who decimated the Cambodian people [the Khmer Rouge, who slaughtered at least 1.7 million Cambodians between 1975 and 1979 until they were brought down by the Vietnamese invasion, as case of “liberal Intervention” if there ever was one] were brought to power by Washington’s policies…. the ordeal inflicted on the Cambodian people by its rulers since April 1975 was not merely preceded but prepared by America’s own atrocious policy
Hoffmann came round to describing Kissinger’s view of the world as an “Olympian but distorted view,” which “was accompanied by another form of hubris: a self-intoxicating confidence in our capacity to manipulate other societies.”
But such hubris could not be purchased without a massive capacity for dissembling. In 25 small-print pages in a 1987 Appendix to Sideshow, Shawcross amply demonstrated that Kissinger was a serial liar. He lied in 1970 about the Cambodia bombing. When, in 1979, the interviewer David Frost, working for NBC, and Kissinger, looking angry, admitted to making a public statement then that was “not correct,” Kissinger moved “heaven and earth” to convince NBC executives to eliminate this exchange from the broadcast. He called them “dozens of times,” Shawcross wrote. He lied, and covered up, and lied about lying and about covering up. Examples are legion; see, for example, accounts by Nick Thimmesch , Bob Woodward ,Walter Isaacson , Seymour Hersh , Rep. Joshua Eilberg , and the late Christopher Hitchens , among others . This is a man who does not stint at self-taxidermy or taking evasive action. An authorized rebuttal published under the name of Kissinger’s amanuensis, Peter Rodman, smeared Shawcross for “political apologetics” and called it “obscene.” Pot, meet kettle.
Shawcross noted that the final 894 pages of Kissinger’s first memoir, White House Years, included no mention at all of the horrors that the American bombing and the consequent Khmer Rouge takeover (itself inconceivable without the American bombing) brought to Cambodia. “Indeed,” as Shawcross wrote, “White House Years demonstrates more forcefully and more conclusively than any of his critics could do that for Kissinger Cambodia was a sideshow, its people expendable in the great game of large nations.” It will be interesting to see how Ferguson deals with the horrors of Cambodia, and Kissinger’s dissembling about how they came to pass, in his second volume.
One also looks forward to seeing how Ferguson will deal, for example, with a 2001 book by Kissinger called Does America Need a Foreign Policy? (Spoiler alert: Yes, it does; and guess who can supply it.) There, Kissinger wrote that America’s allies held themselves “aloof” from the Vietnam war—Aloof! In truth, France’s Charles de Gaulle and Great Britain’s Harold Wilson both tried mightily to dissuade the Americans from their nightmare course. Before, during, and after Kissinger served Nixon, it never dawned on him that what actually threatened the Western alliance was the American insistence on defying sound advice against the nation’s deep dive into the wicked and doomed Vietnam war.
We shall see if the Ferguson of Vol. II agrees with Kissinger’s congratulating Nixon for what he called “negotiated extrication from Vietnam.” With extrication like that, who needed war? It will be interesting, too, to see how Ferguson deals with such items as Kissinger’s memorandum  of his 1976 conversation with Chile’s dictator Agosto Pinochet, in which, by his own account, Kissinger told the murderous Pinochet: “My evaluation is that you are a victim of all left-wing groups around the world and that your greatest sin was that you overthrew a government that was going Communist.”
Where Henry Kissinger is concerned, so many smoking guns are still smoking, it will take superhuman strength for the biographer to hold his nose as the stench reaches high heaven.
***
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Todd Gitlin, professor of journalism and sociology and chair of the Ph.D. program in Communications at Columbia University, is the author of The Sixties: Years of Hope, Days of Rage; Occupy Nation: The Roots, the Spirit, and the Promise of Occupy Wall Street; and, with Liel Leibovitz, The Chosen Peoples: America, Israel, and the Ordeals of Divine Election.



Comparacoes: Lula e Getulio - Ivar A. Hartmann (2015)

Este autor, sociólogo como eu, comparou Lula e Hitler. Eu também compararia; e isso desde que visitei o Museu dos Congressos Anuais do Partido Nazista em Nuremberg, em 2012, e assisti alguns vídeos de Hitler, arengando as massas, no mesmo tom que o palanqueiro sempre fez aqui no Brasil.
Fiquei tentado de escrever algo a respeito, mas por falta de tempo não o fiz.
Ele o fez, mas não disponho do artigo dele neste momento.
Ele divulgou este outro, que reproduzo.
Eu não seria elogioso a Getúlio Vargas, um ditador que depois virou  populista.
Mas, não deixa de ser interessante ler esta comparação.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Ivar A. Hartmann 
Doutorado em Direito Público pela Universidade do Rio de Janeiro, Mestre em Dirreito Público pela PUC, LLM pela Harvard Law School.

Getúlio e Lula ( Imperdível ) 
Há semanas escrevi as biografias comparativas de Hitler e Lula. Alguns não gostaram. Mas nada foi ideia minha: apenas comparei as igualdades existentes. Vamos então comparar Getúlio Vargas e Lula da Silva. O primeiro nasceu rico, o segundo pobre. Getúlio morreu com o que herdou dos pais, pois sua vida foi dedicada à política.
Lula enriqueceu por caminhos que só a cúpula petista conhece, e sua vida é dedicada à política. 
Getúlio formou-se em advocacia e foi um bom promotor de justiça. 
Lula formou-se na escola primária e foi um mau metalúrgico, tanto que perdeu o dedo. 
Getúlio liderou uma revolução popular contra a corrupção e o empobrecimento do país. 
Lula lidera uma revolução de canalhas proeminentes a favor da corrupção. 
Getúlio, presidente e ditador, levava multidões de trabalhadores aos estádios para ouvi-lo. 
Lula leva multidões de empregados do governo para ouvi-lo. 
Getúlio continua sendo “o pai dos pobres”. Lula é o padrasto dos pobres e o protetor de bandidos. 
Getúlio criou a CLT para proteger os operários. 
Lula acoberta o MST para proteger os desocupados. Getúlio, amigo de alemães e americanos, usou a Segunda Guerra para trazer dinheiro americano e iniciar o processo de industrialização do país, através da CSN.
Lula, amigo da Bolívia, Cuba, Uganda, Guiné Bissau e Nicarágua, manda o dinheiro dos brasileiros, via BNDES para industrializar estes países. 
Getúlio criou a Petrobras. Lula destruiu a Petrobras. Getúlio era o homem do chimarrão. Lula é o homem da cachaça. 
Getúlio fazia promoção do Brasil levando a imagem de um estadista sempre bem vestido e bem falante com uma esposa que se dedicava aos pobres do Brasil. 
Lula tem a imagem do Jeca Tatu do Monteiro Lobato, com uma esposa alheia aos interesses dos pobres. 
Getúlio teve um caso de corrupção em seu governo, chefiado por Gregório Fortunato, chefe de sua guarda pessoal. Pelo cargo de Gregório já imaginam os leitores o valor do escândalo. Matou-se de vergonha. Lula teve vários casos de corrupção em seu governo. Muito ainda agora sendo apurados, como é o caso da Petrobrás. Ministros, parlamentares e amigos próximos dele ou cumprem pena por bandidos ou estão respondendo a processo. 
Bilhões e bilhões de reais roubados dos brasileiros. Até o momento em que concluo, não há notícias de que tenha tentado o suicídio. 
Ambos brasileiros. Getúlio um homem. Lula um molusco.

Amazonia: alerta do comandante do Exercito, em 2015

Esta matéria, da agência do Senado, é de 13/08/2015, ou seja de três anos atrás...

Comandante do Exército adverte sobre 'déficit de soberania' na Amazônia


O general Eduardo Villas Bôas em audiência no Senado (13/08/2015)

O Brasil tem um déficit de soberania sobre a Região Amazônica. A advertência foi feita por ninguém menos que o comandante do Exército Brasileiro, general Eduardo Villas Bôas, em recente audiência pública realizada pela Comissão de Relações Exteriores e Defesa Nacional do Senado, para analisar o controle de fronteiras e o combate ao tráfico de drogas e armas na região. Na ocasião, ele destacou a necessidade de se ter uma maior atenção com a atuação das ONGs internacionais que operam no País e ressaltou a ameaça representada pelo projeto do "corredor ecológico" proposto pelo governo da Colômbia.

De acordo com Villas Bôas, os militares estão apreensivos em relação a situações que limitam a autoridade do País em relação a questões estratégicas para o desenvolvimento da região, além de atender às aspirações dos brasileiros - em especial os da população da Região Amazônica. Como exemplo, citou o plano do "Corredor Triplo A" propos to ao Congresso de seu país pelo presidente da Colômbia, Juan Manuel Santos, para a criação de uma zona de preservação ecológica dos Andes até o Oceano Atlântico, que, se implementada, poderá "esterilizar" 1,35 milhão de quilômetros quadrados dos territórios da Colômbia, Brasil e Venezuela. A intenção é apresentar o projeto para a análise da 21ª Conferência das Partes da Convenção-Quadro das Nações Unidas sobre Mudança do Clima (COP-21), a ser realizada em Paris, em dezembro (ver mapa - Alerta Científico e Ambiental, 30/04/2015).


Mapa do Corredor Triplo A proposto pelo governo da Colômbia

O general lembrou que a Amazônia representa 62% do território brasileiro e a eventual criação do "corredor" inviabilizaria a exploração de recursos naturais avaliados em mais de 23 trilhões de dólares, como reservas de minérios raros e biodiversidade. Ele aproveitou para se posicionar contra as propostas de se manterem os recursos naturais amazônicos "congelados" para sempre, e disse acreditar ser possível conciliar a preservação ambiental com o uso racional das riquezas da região. Para ele, tal condição configura um "déficit de soberania": "Esse déficit de soberania, esse processo todo é como combater fantasmas, porque a gente não sabe de onde vêm, o que são, o que fazem e quais são os seus objetivos, mas o resultado geral a gente pode verificar (Agência Senado, 16/07/2015)."

A proposta do "Corredor Triplo A" foi concebida pela ONG britânica Gaia International, cuja filial colombiana é a Fundación Gaia.
Além disso, Villas Bôas criticou o modelo atual de demarcação de terras indígenas, com grande concentração na Amazônia, inclusive, em áreas com forte concentração de riquezas minerais: "Não sou contra unidades de conservação em terras indígenas. (.) mas temos que compatibilizar esse objetivo com a exploração dos recursos naturais."

A falta de projetos que permitam que a exploração das riquezas naturais amazônicas seja feita de forma organizada e com fiscalização, observou, é um problema que tem provocado o contrabando ilegal desses mesmos recursos. Como exemplo, citou o caso da exploração ilícita de diamantes cor-de-rosa em terras indígenas de Rondônia, que continuam sendo extraídos e exportados sem qualquer controle. "Isso é uma hemorragia; são riquezas que o país perde, que sai pelas estruturas de contrabando, e o país não se beneficia em nada com isso", questionou.

O comandante também expôs a situação do narcotráfico na região amazônica, e observou que o Brasil é usado como corredor de passagem de cocaína para o exterior, por fazer fronteira com os três maiores produtores da droga no mundo: Colômbia, Peru e Bolívia. Villas Bôas informou que foram identificadas e destruídas pequenas plantações de coca no interior de nosso território, e que há informações da ação de traficantes brasileiros e mexicanos na Amazônia: "Já foi detectada a presença de cartéis mexicanos, aqui, na Colômbia e no Peru. O cartel mexicano tem um modus operandi extremamente violento, e essa violência já começa a transbordar para o nosso lado."

Já o tráfico de armas, é mais presente em fronteiras no Sul do país, afirmou.
Para proporcionar um monitoramento mais efetivo das fronteiras, principalmente na Amazônia, está sendo implantado o Sistema Integrado de Monitoramento de Fronteiras (Sisfron), desenvolvido pelo Exército e composto de sistemas de comunicação, radares e veículos aéreos não tripulados (Vants), com 70% de tecnologia nacional. O sistema começou a ser implantado em Mato Grosso, com previsão de conclusão em todo o País para 2023, embora possam haver atrasos, devido aos cortes orçamentários do governo federal, observou Villas Bôas.

O sistema pode recuperar o investimento realizado em dez anos, contribuindo para uma economia de mais de R$ 13 bilhões em gastos com segurança, nesse período.

É de extrema relevânci a uma autoridade com a responsabilidade do comandante do Exército venha a público denunciar o caráter danoso do radicalismo ambientalista-indigenista praticado pelo aparato internacional de ONG que, há mais de duas décadas, colocou o Brasil na sua alça de mira. Aguardemos para observar as repercussões relevantes na cúpula do governo federal, principalmente, no tocante às propostas que serão apresentadas na COP-21.
Para comandante do Exército, soberania sobre a Amazônia enfrenta 'déficits'

Em audiência pública na Comissão de Relações Exteriores e Defesa Nacional (CRE), nesta quinta-feira (16), o comandante do Exército, general Eduardo Dias da Costa Villas Bôas, alertou para riscos de enfraquecimento da soberania do Brasil sobre a parte nacional da Amazônia. Contraditado pelos senadores, ele esclareceu que não se referia a am eaças à integridade territorial, mas a situações que limitam a autoridade do país sobre decisões estratégicas para o desenvolvimento equilibrado da região, buscando atender os interesses do país e, principalmente, da população dos estados amazônicos.

- Isso se caracteriza muito bem como os 'déficits de soberania' que nós estamos admitindo dentro da Amazônia - conceituou.

O comandante citou como exemplo de iniciativa capaz de comprometer a autoridade do país a recente proposta do presidente da Colômbia, Luiz Manoel dos Santos, ao Congresso de seu país. Segundo ele, Santos sugeriu a criação de um corredor ecológico na Amazônia continental, do Andes até o Oceano Atlântico, compreendendo a Amazônia brasileira. O objetivo é levar a ideia - chamada "tríplice way" - para análise da próxima reunião da Conferência de Mudanças Climáticas (CoP 21).

Riquezas intocadas

De acordo com o general, a intenção é manter toda a extensão do corredor intocado, sem exploração de suas riquezas, como contribuição para deter as mudanças climáticas. Pelo projeto, esse corredor seria implantado em até cinco anos. Antes, registrou que a Amazônia se estende por 830 mil quilômetros quadrados, em área de nove países, inclusive o Brasil (com 62% de todo o território). As riquezas são estimadas em mais de US$ 230 trilhões, com reservas de minérios raros e rica biodiversidade.

O comandante informou que a proposta de criação do corredor tem origem na Fundação Gaia, organização não-governamental instalada na Colômbia e vinculada à entidade Gaia Internacional, a provedora dos recursos para os estudos. Disse que a ideia fundamental é a de que os recursos naturais da Amazônia devem ficar congelados para sempre. Ao contrário disso, ele defendeu ao longo da exposição que é possível conciliar a preservação e o uso racional das riquezas na região.

- Esse processo [radicalismo pela preservação] é como combater fantasmas, porque a gente não sabe de onde vêm, quem são, o que fazem e quais são seus reais objetivos - comentou.

O general Villas Bôas foi convidado para audiência em decorrência de requerimento apresentado pelo senador Aloysio Nunes Ferreira (PSDB-SP), que também presidiu os trabalhos. O objetivo foi debater as questões da Amazônia, como a situação do controle das fronteiras, ameaças do tráfico de drogas e armas, além do nível de coordenação com as forças militares dos países limítrofes.

Reservas indígenas

O comandante do Exército fez também restrições ao modelo de reservas indígenas, concentradas sobretudo na Amazônia. Julgou questionável a "coincidência" do estabelecimento de reservas em áreas com forte concentração de riquezas minerais, o que procurou demonstrar com a apresentação de mapas das reservas indígenas e de jazidas minerais já identificadas.

- Não sou contra unidades de conservação em terras indígenas. Ao contrário, temos que ter desmatamento zero, temos que proteger nossos indígenas, mas temos que compatibilizar essa objetivo com a exploração dos recursos naturais - defendeu.

Sem projetos para que a exploração das riquezas seja feita de modo equilibrado, sob controle e fiscalização, o general disse que tudo passa a acontecer clandestinamente. Como exemplo, citou os veios de diamantes cor-de-rosa nas terras indígenas Roosevelt, em Rondônia. Disse que os diamantes continuam sendo extraídos e saindo ilicitamente do Brasil.

- Isso é uma hemorragia; são riquezas que país perde, que sai pelas estruturas de contrabando, e o país não se beneficia em nada com isso - criticou.

Narcotráfico

De acordo com o general, o país ainda não é produtor de cocaína, mas está sendo usado como corredor de passagem de droga para o exterior. Isto, além de representar grande mercado consumidor, o segundo do mundo depois dos Estados Unidos. Até o momento, Villas Bôas disse que foram detectados e erradicados pequenos pl antios dentro do país. Porém, já teriam sido captados sinais preocupantes de articulações de narcotraficantes do país e mesmo do México. Quanto ao tráfico de armas, esclareceu que essa atividade é mais presentes em fronteiras da Região Sudeste e Sul.

Por parte das Forças Armadas, segundo o general, a resposta para aumentar a proteção das fronteiras, inclusive na Amazônia, é a implantação do Sistema Integrado de Monitoramento de Fronteiras (Sisfron). Desenvolvido pelo Exército, o sistema envolve radares, sistemas de comunicação e veículos aéreos não tripulados (Vant), com 70% de tecnologia nacional.

Explicou que o Sisfron começou a ser implantado pelo Mato Grosso do Sul, com previsão de conclusão em 2023, ao fim de dez anos. No entanto, admitiu que o projeto pode atrasar, em razão de cortes orçamentários. Segundo o comandante, mesmo se o sistema tivesse apenas 1,5% de eficácia, poderá contribuir em dez anos para uma economia de R$ 13,5 bilhões em gastos com segurança, recuperando todo o investimento.

Com grande participação de senadores, a audiência foi concluída com a promessa de apoio para incremento de recursos que permitam acelerar a implantação do Sisfron.

Fonte: Agência Senado