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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.

sábado, 7 de maio de 2022

Lend-Lease: da história para a atualidade: Adam Tooze no Chartbook 119

 

Chartbook #119: Lend-Lease & Escalation

Containers of Dodge trucks awaiting shipment to Russia under the lend-lease agreement, August 1943. Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.; Alfred T. Palmer, photographer (LC-USE6-D-002838)

In 2022, we wait with bated breath to see how Putin will mark “Victory day”, the day of celebration that marks the Soviet Union’s defeat of Nazi Germany. Meanwhile, in Washington DC as well, they are summoning the ghosts of the past. If Putin evokes the Great Patriotic war, on our side the references are to the Cold War, World War II, the spirit of the enlightenment, ancient battle of democracy against autocracy and so forth.

To offer lessons and inspiration at times of crisis is a classic role for history. Indeed, it is, perhaps, the classic role for public history, But, in this role, history is closest to myth-making. It serves as much to close off, as to open debate. “We all know that appeasement was a disaster, so …. ” etc etc. 

To deny the significance of history in this role would be naive and unrealistic. After all, sometimes we need to act and often we need inspiration. 

But, there is also a role for critical history. Not to prejudge the question at hand but precisely to ensure that quasi-mythic history is not being used to foreclose the evaluation of the options that are available to us and the likely consequences of those decisions. Capsule histories, long ago smoothed into triumphant narratives promise outcomes far neater than what we can actually expect. 

In this sense, critical history is not merely academic pee-shooting. It is part of the daily struggle to preserve a realistic attitude. It is part of the daily struggle to orientate ourselves in medias res - in the middle of things - in the actual middle of the actual things, here and now and not in the 1940s. 

During the spring meetings of the Bretton Woods institutions a few weeks ago, the talk was of the Marshall Plan. I discussed in the New Statesman and in a previous Chartbook whether that example is really relevant to our situation. 

The historical Marshall Plan was more complicated and less massive than is commonly imagined. It was also a postwar program. That does not mean that the Marshall Plan was innocent in geopolitical terms. On the contrary, it was a key driver of Cold War division of Europe. By the 1950s it merged with US military assistance to drive the rearmament of Europe and Asia. But the Marshall Plan is not remembered for starting World War III. Instead, we invoke it like a comfort blanket - a big fix for a big problem with a happy end. 

The program under which America bankrolled and supplied Allied victory in World War II was Lend-Lease. Launched in March 1941 It was originally intended to back the British Empire, Greece, China in their separate struggles against Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. After the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union American assistance was extended to the Soviet Union as well. 

Vastly larger than the Marshall Plan and launched into a middle of on-going wars, Lend Lease was a dramatic act of escalation. As the best known history of Lend-Lease remarks: “The Lend-Lease Act marked the point of no return for American policy regarding Hitler’s Germany.” Lend Lease tied together the separate struggles in Europe and Asia to create by the end of 1941 what we properly call World War II. 

Source: Hyperwar

It is striking - to say the least - that already in January 2022, before Putin’s invasion, the US Congress had taken up Lend-Lease as the historical inspiration for a legislative measure that frees the Biden administration’s hands in providing aid to Ukraine. 

The Ukraine Democracy Defense Lend-Lease Act was unanimously approved by the Senate and passed by the House of Representatives by a vote of 417 to 10. Now, according to remarks made by press secretary Psaki, Biden may sign it into law on May 9th. 

Will a new Lend Lease Act be America’s answer to Putin’s “Victory day”? 

As well-informed defense journalists point out, the Lend Lease Act of 2022 adds very little to Biden’s already extensive powers to support to Ukraine. Far more consequential in that regard are the $33 billion in additional aid that Biden has requested. But that isn't the point of the Congressional measure: 

… this is the actual genius of the Ukraine Democracy Defense Lend-Lease Act. Even if the exemption of certain lease provisions isn’t going to do anything that existing authorities don’t already cover, invoking the memory of Lend-Lease is an entirely different issue. Frankly, nobody will wax poetic about the 1961 Foreign Assistance Act. … But Lend-Lease is a term that is ingrained in the American story.

… it’s the spirit of the law that’s vital here. … Achieving something other legislative proposals have not, it has set the proper tone for the conversation. The clear decision of the American people, as represented in Congress, to put the power of American industrial might, guided by Ukrainian hands, into the fight against Russian aggression.

“The American story” was very much to the fore, when, in supporting the measure in the House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi invoked the legacy of her fatherwho was one of the House members who followed FDR’s call to vote for the original bill. 

81 years ago, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt came here to the Congress of the United States, to the House of Representatives – where I’m proud to say my father, Thomas D'Alesandro, served as a Member of Congress – and President Franklin Roosevelt delivered a bold and historic request.

Symbolism aside, the scale of the aid now being envisioned by the Biden administration is unprecedented. As Ben Freeman and William Hartungpoint out at Responsible Statecraft

if Congress signs off on this new request the U.S. will have authorized $47 billion in total spending to Ukraine. That’s more than the Biden administration is committing to stopping climate change and almost as much as the entire State Department budget.

This is twice the maximum amount of money ever provided in a single year to the Afghan army (as opposed to money spent by the US in Afghanistan) and seven times the US military aid budget for Israel. The total request amounts to one third of Ukraine’s prewar GDP. As far as Ukraine is concerned, the US is bankrolling a total war effort and the US political class has with near unanimity declared that the appropriate historical analogy for this effort is 1941 - “All measures short of war”.

As Lockheed Martin has announced it is ramping up production of Javelin anti-tank missile systems to meet the unexpected surge in demand. As Chief executive James Taiclet announced.

“I went over to the Pentagon with my team and basically told the senior leadership there, ‘Look, we’re already investing in increasing the capacity, please make it right and give us the contracts and agreements we need down the road, but we’re going to start investing now,’”.

In a short piece in The Guardian last week I queried what the implications might be of this discursive move. What history are we summoning in evoking the Lend-Lease act of 1941?

Last year, the 80th anniversary of 1941 saw the publication of three substantial books that throw new and often alarming light on that moment. 

As Stephen Wertheim - one of the founders of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft - spells out in his book Tomorrow, the Worldfollowing the collapse of British and French resistance on the continent of Europe to early 1941, American strategists shifted from the Wilsonian stance of wanting to arbitrate world affairs from a vantage point of armed neutrality, to a full-throated interventionism. What was now envisioned was that that the United States should reshape the world order through direct and massive engagement on a global scale. Though this shift in strategy began within the Roosevelt administration in 1940, it was in 1941, with Lend Lease, that it broke into the open. 

In order to supply the fight against the Axis, Roosevelt sought the assent of Congress, as he had not done over the destroyers deal (in 1940). He wagered that noninterventionists, if brought into the open, would suffer a crushing defeat. He was right. The Lend-Lease Act, debated in January and February and passed in early March, removed the cash-and-carry restrictions and empowered Roosevelt to designate future recipients of aid. Under international law, no neutral could assist a belligerent as America was aiding Britain. Interventionist lawyers thus decided that America was not a neutral. Led by Quincy Wright, the political scientist and international lawyer, they popularized the category of nonbelligerent to characterize the U.S. position.31 By shedding the vestiges of neutrality, Roosevelt freed up interventionists to think and speak about the kind of world for which the Anglophone Allies stood. Even before the LendLease Act passed, Borchard lamented that noninterventionists had been “out-shouted.”32

Roosevelt’s wager that he could defeat the non-interventionist would be vindicated. But as Wertheim reminds us it was more of a stretch than the bards of the “American story” might be comfortable remembering. 

In 1940-1941, polling by Gallup showed considerable opposition to greater intervention in the war against Hitler and Mussolini. The original Lend-Lease act passed through Congress against far tougher opposition than the revival of the Act has faced in 2022. Eventually, it passed the House by 260 to 165 and the Senate 60 to 31. 

As Wertheim points out, it was in the course of the Lend-Lease debate, in February 1941, that Henry Luce launched his appeal for his fellow Americans to take up the mantle of the “American Century”, an idea that continues to hang over the “American story” today. 

The question that must haunt us today is whether Lend Lease in 1941 set America on an inescapable path towards war. Both critics and supporters of FDR always insisted that Lend Lease had in effect set a trap. As Warren F Kimball reports in The Most Unsordid Act. Lend-Lease 1939-1941

A day or so after Roosevelt’s announcement of the Lend-Lease idea, Hull (Secretary of State) remarked to Breckinridge Long (Assistant Secretary) that, depending upon Hitler’s actions, America could be in the war within ten days or six months. Long, who was closely akin to Joseph Kennedy in his views of the situation, was more inclined to believe that America’s belligerency would depend on the amount and type of aid given to Great Britain. Either way, both men found their thoughts running in the direction of war as a result of the President’s newly announced program.

On the other side of the Atlantic, Britain of course devoutly hoped that Lend Lease was just the beginning and the US would soon be dragged, willy-nilly into the war. As the debate raged, Britain waited anxiously to know how the Congressional vote would go. As Kimball reports, 

H. Duncan Hall, who was attached to the British Embassy in Washington at the time, captured the tense emotion: “For the first time in its history the United Kingdom waited anxiously on the passage of an American law, knowing that its destiny might hang on the outcome. London waited with an imperfect knowledge of American legislative processes and little understanding of American public opinion.” 73 The effects of the Great War, long hidden from public view, had wrought a permanent change in the Britain of Castlereagh, Kipling, and Churchill. The king was dead—long live the king!

But, as Cordell Hull had remarked, assuming that American public opinion would not back a unilateral declaration of war by the United States, the future depended not on Washington or London, but on the reaction in Berlin. 

In Wages of Destruction, back in 2006, this is how I described the reaction of Germany to the announcement of Lend-Lease. 

 The first line of the report from the Washington embassy on lend-lease, received by the Foreign Ministry, the Wehrmacht high command, the army and the Air Ministry, stated bluntly: 'The Lend-Lease Act currently  before Congress . . . stems from the pen of leading Jewish confidants of the President. It is intended to give him the possibility of pursuing without limitation his policy of influencing the war through all means "short of war". With the passage of the law the Jewish world-view will therefore have firmly asserted itself in the United States.' It then went on to itemize the huge deliveries that could now be expected by 'England, China and other vassals'.46

For me, as for Tobias Jersak and an interpretive line that runs back to Saul Friedländer’s early book Prelude to downfall: Hitler and the United States 1939–1941 (1967), Lend Lease was a key moment in the escalating tension between the United States and Nazi Germany that impelled not just military strategy but also the radicalization of the regime’s racial policy. 

The idea that FDR was under the control of Jewish influence did not originate with Lend-Lease but in earlier antagonism between the Third Reich and the United States. The attention of Nazi racial ideologues had shifted to the US over the winter of 1938-1939 following FDR’s denunciation of the Kristallnacht pogrom and the so-called war of words between Hitler and the White House. 

Most openly the coming confrontation with the United States was anticipated by Hitler in his ominous speech to the Reichstag of 30 January 1939 in which he linked the prospect of a world war i.e. a war with the United States, to the threat that European Jewry would be annihilated. 

Throughout 1939 and 1940 German military planners paid anxious attention to America’s armaments efforts and purchases in the US by Britain and France. Regime literature directed towards the inner core of the Nazi party and the SS was studded with references to Jewish influence in the United States. 

Against this backdrop, Lend-Lease was a dramatic escalation that confirmed the Nazi’s worldview. Britain and the United States were linked in an antagonistic alliance, motivated by dark forces bent on Germany’s destruction. 

In the compass of the very short Guardian piece, the editors and I decided to bracket this dimension of the history of 1941. It is simply too explosive and too easily misread as some kind of absurd equation between Hitler and Putin. But if you want to wrestle with the actual history of Lend Lease you cannot side step its entanglement in Hitler’s Manichean anti-semitic worldview. 

2021 saw the publication of two new historical studies that reinforce this line of interpretation. As we learn from Klaus Schmider’s meticulous reconstruction of the build-up to the German declaration of war on the United States on December 11, in Hitler’s Fatal Miscalculation (2021), Hitler was, indeed, deeply concerned about Lend-lease. As he told his entourage on March 24 1941: 

‘the Americans have finally let the cat out of the bag; if one felt so inclined, it would be legitimate to interpret this as an act of war. He was now in a position to allow a war to break out without further ado. However, right now, it was not something he was keen on. The war with the US was sure to come sooner or later anyway. Roosevelt and the Jewish financiers have no other choice to than to strive for this war, since a German victory in Europe would mean enormous financial losses for the American Jews. It is merely regrettable that as yet no planes existed which could bomb American cities. This is a lesson he would like to teach the American Jews. To be sure, this new Lease Law would bring him additional major problems. He had now come to the conclusion that its success could only be prevented by ruthless naval warfare.’

When Hitler met Japan’s Foreign Minister in April 1941 he told him that war with the United States was already “taken into account”. 

As Lend-Lease deliveries ramped up, this set the stage for the Atlantic Charter meeting between FDR and Churchill on 14 August 1941, from which would emerge the United Nations. That too, as Tobias Jersak first argued, was interpreted in Berlin as a tightening of the global conspiracy against the Nazi regime. And that had ominous implications. 

Throughout the autumn of 1941 as the struggle on the Eastern Front entered its climactic stage, references multiply to Hitler’s prophecy i.e. his Reichstag speech of 30 January 1939. 

In his address to the troops of Army Group Centre on 2 October ahead of the final push to Moscow (operation Typhoon), Hitler linked the decisive battle for Moscow directly to the racial struggle not just on the soil of the Soviet Union but worldwide. Germany was now at war both with Bolshevik Russia and capitalist Britain, behind which stood the United States. Superficially different, the two economic systems were in fact fundamentally alike. Bolshevism was no better than the worst kind of capitalism. It was a creator of poverty and destitution and 'the bearers of this system', 'in both cases', were 'the same: Jews and only Jews!’ The assault on Moscow was to deliver a 'deadly thrust' against this arch-enemy of the German people.”

Hitler’s problem was how to conduct that global war. Without a powerful navy or a strategic air force he had few ways to strike at the British Empire, let alone the United States. It was that calculation that ultimately bound Nazi Germany to Imperial Japan and drove Hitler towards his declaration of war on the United States on December 11.

As Brendan Simms and Charlie Laderman make clear in their extraordinary reconstruction of the events between Pearl Harbor and Germany’s declaration of war, Hitler did not stumble into war, his declaration of war on December 11 1941 was a deliberate gamble

Simms and Laderman’s book deserves far more attention than it has received. Its effort to reconstruct a week in global history - perhaps the most fateful week in history - on a minute by minute basis strikes me as a fascinating and original way of writing the history of an “event”. Others may know better, but I have never read a historical account that starts with a map of global timezones. In the current moment, it is hauntingly evocative. 

The pay off from Simms and Laderman’s meticulous blow by blow account is to sharpen our sense of how vertiginously contingent the escalation to global war seemed in the second week of December 1941, even as it was happening. Above all they highlight the fact that the immediate impact of Pearl Harbor was not to confirm the logic of Lend Lease but - to the horror of London and Moscow - to cause Lend Lease to be suspended. If Hitler’s intention was to ally himself with Japan so as to divert resources from the Atlantic to the Pacific, his strategic vision was, for those few days at least, massively confirmed. 

Indeed, as Simms and Ladermann argue, FDR was convinced that Japan was acting essentially as a German proxy. He refused to credit Japan with strategic autonomy. Hitler knew better and it was with a view to binding Japan to the German cause that he took the decision to declare war on the United States. After all, as far as Hitler was concerned, war between Germany and the United States was already “taken into account”.

As Simms and Ladermann remark:

It was Hitler’s declaration of war on the United States, much more than Pearl Harbor, that created a new global strategic reality and, ultimately, a new world. America did not enter “the war”—the conflict with Hitler—on December 7, 1941. Rather, the United States was plunged that day into a new and initially separate struggle against Japan. America did not truly join the war until December 11, 1941, and unlike the First World War, the United States did not take the initiative. It was, as British air marshal Arthur Harris had predicted, “kicked into the [European] war.”

As Roosevelt’s speech writer Robert Sherwood put it, Hitler had followed Japan in solving Roosevelt’s “sorest problems”. For Hitler too this was a moment of culmination. On 12 December, the day after Hitler’s declaration of war, Goebbels spoke to the Gauleiter, the regional officials of the Nazi party, and spelled out the connection. 

“Regarding the Jewish question, the Führer is determined to clear the table. He warned the Jews that if they were to cause another world war, it would lead to their own destruction (30 Jan 1939). Those were not empty words. Now the world war (the war with the USA, AT) has come. The destruction of the Jews must be its necessary consequence. This question is to be regarded without sentimentalism. We are not here to have sympathy with the Jews, but rather with our German people. If the German people have sacrificed 160,000 dead in the eastern campaign, so the authors of this bloody conflict will have to pay for it with their lives.”

It was no coincidence that within a few weeks of Hitler’s declaration of war on the United States, Reinhard Heydrich and the State Secretaries would convene at the conference center on the Wannsee to scheme out what they called the final solution of the Jewish question in Europe. Originally, the Wannsee meeting had been scheduled for December 9 1941. It marked the culmination of a year-long planning project that had been set in motion over the winter of 1940-1941 when the invasion of the Soviet Union and the global escalation of the war came clearly into view. Heydrich’s meeting was put back to 20 January 1942, on account of the crisis on the Eastern front and the declaration of war on the USA. 

Behind the sugar-coated narrative of a “good war” won by the “arsenal of democracy” - “the American story” evoked in Congress in recent weeks - lurks the actual history of the haphazard and contingent unleashing of an apocalyptic world war. To complete the picture, it was in October 1941 that Roosevelt issued an executive order green-lighted the atomic bomb program and cooperation with the British on scientific research. 

****

In openly declaring our intention to adopt all measures short of war to ensure Russia’s military defeat and in invoking Lend Lease in doing so, we must surely ask ourselves that question, what is our theory of Putin? And beyond Putin what is our model of the escalatory dynamics at work in 2022? 

In swathing ourselves in historic garments, are we inviting Putin to do the same? Are we inviting him to fully inhabit the role of the maniacal dictator who can only be crushed out of existence? Are we, as in 1941, crossing the point of no return? Are we, consciously or not, assuming further escalation? 

In so doing, are we assuming that escalation will have the same kind of “happy end” that World War II eventually had for the United States in 1945? The kind of “happy end” that makes Lend Lease into a myth shrouded in good feelings - a grand chapter. in the “American story”? 

Or, are we, in fact, hoping that 2022 unfolds as 1941 did not? That Putin is not suicidal? That this time the escalation remains confined to Ukraine and Russia? That this becomes, as some American strategists envisioned Lend Lease in 1941, a calculated exercise in using the dogged resistance of a client - then the British now Ukrainians - to attrit a geopolitical antagonist? 

These are not comfortable questions. So much so that merely raising them can lay you open to accusations of defeatism. But that is beside the point. Supplying weapons may well be the best thing to do under the circumstances. It is certainly what the Ukrainian government is asking for. But to weigh the consequences of our actions and the risks attendant on them, to assess the costs and who pays them is a basic imperative of responsible politics. In so doing we need a clear head and democracy demands that clarity is not just something that is achieved behind closed doors. 

Ukrainians at this moment may need history to give them courage. For us to revel in mythic references to the 1940s and “the American story” is a shameful, sentimental self-indulgence. If we are to evoke the past at all, let us do so in a critical and exploratory fashion, not to “prove” facile points one way or another, but to better understand how we arrived at this moment and to infer what its possibilities and risks might be.

Livro: Nas Teias da Diplomacia: diplomatas brasileiros do século XIX - Ana Paula Silva e Gabriel Passetti (orgs.)

Publicação do livro Nas teias da diplomacia: percursos e agentes da política externa brasileira no século XIX, organizado pelos professores Ana Paula Barcelos Ribeiro da Silva (UERJ) e Gabriel Passetti (UFF). Esta é a primeira obra coletiva do LAHPIS, o Laboratório de História da Política Internacional Sul-americana.


O livro conta com prefácio escrito pela profa. Maria Ligia Coelho Prado (USP) e pelos seguintes capítulos:

1. "A ação diplomática de Pedro de Souza Holstein no Congresso de Viena e as relações ibero-americanas", de Fernando Comiran (FURG)

2. "A atuação de José Agostinho Barbosa Júnior como cônsul e encarregado dos negócios estrangeiros do Império do Brasil nas Províncias Unidas do Rio da Prata (1829-1831)", de Luan Mendes de Medeiros Siqueira (UFRJ)

3. "O Visconde do Uruguai e a política para a América do Sul oitocentista", de Pedro Gustavo Aubert (FEUC)

4. "'O vulcão da anarquia': Miguel Calmon du Pin e Almeida, o Marquês de Abrantes, entre a América e a Europa", de Daniel Rei Coronato (Unisantos)

5. "Lamas e Paranhos: diplomacia, história e redes de sociabilidade no Brasil e no Rio da Prata em meados do século XIX", de Ana Paula Barcelos Ribeiro da Silva (UERJ)

6. "A Revolução Mitrista na Argentina de 1874: contradições entre neutralidade, ordem e estabilidade nos olhos imperiais do diplomata brasileiro Luiz Augusto de Pádua Fleury", de Gabriel Passetti (UFF).

7. "Entre jantares e gabinetes: Barão de Penedo e o gentlemanly capitalism, 1855-1889", de José Augusto Ribas Miranda (Universidad Austral de Chile)

8. "Conde Villeneuve: Um diplomata brasileiro entre a África e a Europa (1884-1885)", de Frederico Antonio Ferreira (Arquivo Histórico do Itamaraty)

9. "Rotas em colisão: a disputa pela fronteira entre Brasil e Argentina na foz do Iguaçu por meio da ótica dos agentes do Estado (1882-1905)", de Bruno Aranha (IFC)

Minibiografias

Sobre os Autores


O livro já está à venda nas livrarias virtuais, mas com preço mais camarada no site da editora Mauad (https://mauad.com.br/nas-teias-da-diplomacia). Também está disponível em formato ebook (https://books.google.com.br/books?id=xRhtEAAAQBAJ&pg).

Prefácio 










Os intelectuais, a revolução e o totalitarismo - Franco Venturi sobre os narodniks

   O absolutismo czarista foi combatido, em primeiro lugar, pelos “dezembristas”, no início do século XIX, depois pelos narodniks, os populistas revolucionários, em parte anarquistas, da segunda metade daquele século, depois pelos socialistas de diversas tendências, no início do século XX, para renascer com toda força, sob o disfarce do stalinismo, entre os anos 1930-50, já sob o peso do comunismo


leninista. Depois do fim do comunismo, em 1991, o absolutismo neoczarista assumiu a forma do putinismo cleptocrático e imperialista. Ele já não precisa de Gulags, pois manda assassinar ou encarcerar seus opositores, e não hesita em invadir outros países, como faziam os czares e o tirano Stalin. O novo déspota de Moscou é tão cruel quanto eles, tendo ao seu lado o poder “espiritual” da Igreja Bizantina. Como Stalin, ele não precisa de nenhum Rasputin, mas tem alguns ideólogos a seu serviço. E ainda tem o apoio internacional de muitos idiotas estrangeiros, de esquerda e de extrema-direita. O livro de Franco Venturi (1952) fica nos narodniks; o resto fui eu que opinei.

Rui Barbosa: Relatório de 1891 sobre a situação da economia nacional : Arnaldo Godoy e Bruno Fuga (orgs.)

 Rui Barbosa, no seu grande Relatório de 1891 sobre a situação da economia nacional:

 


“O desequilíbrio entre a receita e a despesa é a enfermidade crônica da nossa existência nacional. (…)

[Entre 1883 e 1887, o déficit fiscal oscilou entre 21 e 35 mil contos de réis.]

O [ano] de 1888 não deixou déficit. Mas legou-nos o ônus de um empréstimo de 6 milhões esterlinos. (…)

Os governos revolucionários não são, não podem ser governos econômicos. (…)

Desse complexo de causas, a que, na situação particular do Brasil, acresceram outras, peculiares à Revolução de 15 de novembro e às condições de organização do Governo Provisório, nasce ordinariamente a exageração da despesa pública em seguida às grandes revoluções nacionais. (p. 49-51) (…)

O Império desconfiava da imigração, e reduzia ao mínimo possível a medida dos seus favores à indústria brasileira. Após mais de sessenta anos de administração monárquica, o trabalho, entre nós, vegetava ainda raquiticamente no estado mais rudimentar. (p. 139)

Rui Barbosa: Relatório do Ministro da Fazenda, Situação Atual do Ministério da Fazenda. Rio de Janeiro: Imprensa Nacional, 1891

In: Arnaldo Sampaio de Moraes Godoy e Bruno Augusto de Sampaio Fuga (orgs.), Rui Barbosa, tributarista. Londrina: Editora Thoth, 2022.

Das conclusões dos organizadores:

“Rui Barbosa foi um pioneiro no Brasil na utilização de conceitos tributários como mínimo existencial, seletividade, capacidade contributiva, generalidade, extrafiscalidade e substituição tributária. Também foi pioneiro quando cogitou de um sistema tributário que atendesse às peculiaridades do Distrito Federal. (…)

(…) A teoria tributária de Rui tem como pano de fundo uma tentativa de resolver as tensões entre a União e as unidades federadas, em um contexto absolutamente novo, vivido pela República que então se iniciava.

Rui também foi um entusiasta de uma Corte de Contas, mostrando-se o seu maior defensor. O Tribunal de Contas, na sua feição contemporânea, deve muito ao esforço de Rui.

(…) Deve ser realçada sua contribuição para a construção de um modelo nacional de imposto de renda… Ainda que o imposto de renda se tenha tornado uma realidade somente na década de 1920, Rui antecipou-se nos problemas e dilemas que essa fórmula de tributação direta suscitaria. (p. 42-43)


sexta-feira, 6 de maio de 2022

Quantos generais russos já morreram na guerra de agressão contra a Ucrânia? - Ben Tobias(BBC News)

Desde que esta matéria foi publicada em 26 de março, outros generais podem ter sido atingidos pelas forças ucranianas. A Rússia tem muitos generais, mas os que ainda estão na Rússia estariam dispostos a ir lutar na Ucrânia, sabendo que a inteligência americana os está seguindo de perto?

Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Russian general Yakov Rezantsev killed in Ukraine

By Ben Tobias
BBC News

Published, 26 March
Yakov RezantsevImage source, Denis NASik/WikimediaCommons
Image caption, 
Yakov Rezantsev was reportedly killed in the Kherson region

Ukraine's defence ministry says another Russian general, Lt Gen Yakov Rezantsev, was killed in a strike near the southern city of Kherson. 

Rezantsev was the commander of Russia's 49th combined army.

A western official said he was the seventh general to die in Ukraine, and the second lieutenant general - the highest rank officer reportedly killed. 

In a conversation intercepted by the Ukrainian military, a Russian soldier complained that Rezantsev had claimed the war would be over within hours, just four days after it began. 

Ukrainian media reported on Friday that the general was killed at the Chornobaivka airbase near Kherson, which Russia is using as a command post and has been attacked by Ukraine's military several times. 

Another lieutenant general, Andrei Mordvichev, was reportedly killed by a Ukrainian strike on the same base. 
Kherson was the first Ukrainian city to be occupied by Russian forces, although there are reports that daily protests are held there against the Russian occupation
Although Russia has confirmed the death of only one general, Kyiv and western officials believe up to seven have been killed in fighting since the war began. 

However the death of Maj Gen Magomed Tushayev of the Chechen national guard has been disputed. 

It is unusual for such senior Russian officers to be so close to the battlefield, and western officials believe that they have been forced to move towards the front lines to deal with low morale among Russian troops. 

The unexpectedly strong Ukrainian resistance, poor Russian equipment and a high death toll amongst Russian troops are all thought to be contributing to the low morale. 

Russian forces are believed to be relying in part on open communication systems, for example mobile phones and analogue radios, which are easy to intercept and could give away the locations of high-ranking officers.

A person inside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's inner circle told the Wall Street Journal that Ukraine had a military intelligence team dedicated to targeting Russia's officer class.

So far, Vladimir Putin has only referred to the death of one general, thought to be Maj Gen Andrey Sukhovetsky, in a speech soon after the start of the war. 

Russia says 1,351 soldiers have died since the war began in Ukraine, although Kyiv and western officials say the number is much higher. 

Russia's lost generals

Yakov Rezantsev

Lt Gen Yakov Rezantsev was reportedly killed by a Ukrainian strike on the Chornobaivka airbase near the city of Kherson. 

He was promoted to lieutenant general last year, and was commander of the 49th combined army of Russia's southern military district. 

He is said to have taken part in Russia's military operation in Syria. 

Andrei Mordvichev

Andrei Mordvichev was killed by a strike on the Chornobaivka airbase near Kherson, according to Ukrainian officials. 

He was the commander of Russia's 8th combined army of the southern military district. 

His death was reported on 18 March. 

Oleg Mityaev graphic

Maj Gen Oleg Mityaev reportedly died somewhere near the city of Mariupol, a city in south-east Ukraine which has seen some of the heaviest fighting so far. 

The nationalist Azov regiment claims to have killed him. 

He was a commander of the Russian army's 150th motorised rifle division, a relatively new unit formed in 2016, and based in the Rostov region close to the Ukrainian border. 

Ukraine claims that the unit was created in order to take part in the conflict in separatist-controlled areas of eastern Ukraine, although Russia denies that its military was involved in fighting there. 

Andrei Kolesnikov graphic

Maj Gen Andrei Kolesnikov, of the 29th combined army, was killed in fighting on 11 March, according to official Ukrainian sources. 

The circumstances of his death were not given. 

After Kolesnikov became the third Russian general reportedly killed in Ukraine, one western official told the Press Association that the Russian army may be suffering from low morale, which is why high-ranking military officers are moving closer to the front line. 

Vitaly Gerasimov

Maj Gen Vitaly Gerasimov, chief of staff of Russia's 41st combined army, was killed on 7 March outside the eastern city of Kharkiv, according to Ukraine's defence ministry. 

Kharkiv, close to the Russian border, has come under sustained attack from Russian forces. 

Ukraine's military released a recording of what it said was two Russian security service officials discussing Gerasimov's death, and complaining that their secure communication networks no longer worked in Ukraine. 

Gerasimov was involved in the second Chechen war, the Russian military operation in Syria, and in the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014. 

Andrey Sukhovetsky

Maj Gen Andrey Sukhovetsky, a deputy commander at the same unit as Gerasimov, was reportedly killed by a sniper on 3 March.

Like Gerasimov, Sukhovetsky was part of Russia's military operations in Crimea and in Syria. 

Unlike the other generals, Sukhovetsky's death was reported in the Russian media and Russian President Vladimir Putin confirmed in a speech that a general had died in Ukraine. 


Vladimir Potemkin: Putin's Disaster and What Could Happen Next - By Christian Esch, Susanne Koelbl und Fritz Schaap ­(Der Spiegel)

 Esta matéria da Der Spiegel começa antecipando o 9 de Maio, o grande da vitória russa contra o nazifascismo. Mas a parada será um pouco melancólica, imagino...

https://www.spiegel.de/international/world/putin-s-disaster-and-what-could-happen-next-a-e8c89bfa-b7a3-4e32-908a-7642a301eda6?sara_ecid=nl_upd_1jtzCCtmxpVo9GAZr2b4X8GquyeAc9&nlid=bfjpqhxz


Vladimir Potemkin
Putin's Disaster and What Could Happen Next
­Der Spiegel, May 6, 2022


The world has overestimated Putin's power. His army is much weaker than thought, his intelligence services have failed and sanctions are starting have an impact. Will all this weaken the Russian president or make him more dangerous?

May 9, 2022 – what a victory celebration it should have been! Just imagine: Vladimir Putin, Gatherer of the Russian Lands, greets the victorious returning troops on Red Square. Ukraine shattered as a country, its capital Kyiv taken in a surprise attack, its government exiled. Along with the battlefield triumph, Russia also celebrates its ruler, who boldly changed the course of history, triggering the biggest celebration since the 1945 parade held to celebrate the victory of Stalin's army over Nazism.

Given the events of the past few months, that was likely what Putin had been hoping for. But the reality has turned out rather differently. On May 9, Russia will again celebrate Victory Day with a military parade, as it does every year, but the army that will parade through Red Square this time will be a humiliated one. Two and a half months after the invasion of Ukraine, Russia's armed forces are no longer the feared power they once were.
Russia's military pride has turned out to be something of a sham, like the village backdrops that Prince Grigory Potemkin once allegedly set up for his czarina to fool her into thinking he was settling empty territories.

Putin's troops have experienced a military and moral fiasco in Ukraine. Poorly led, poorly supplied, poorly motivated and poorly equipped, they have failed against an enemy thought to be much weaker. They had to retreat from their positions near the capital city of Kyiv. And what had been planned as a blitzkrieg has turned into a tough slog, a war of attrition.

It is all just as surprising as it is devastating to the system Putin has built. The Kremlin leader has spent years preparing his country for a major confrontation with the West – in military, economic and political terms. His declared goals are maximum sovereignty and autonomy, for Russia to be an independent pole of power in the world. Now, it has turned out that the highly equipped army is unable to overrun its poorer neighbor. Russia's economy – dependent on imports. Most of its vast foreign reserves – blocked by Western sanctions. Its intelligence services – unable or unwilling to properly inform the ruler.

Is Putin's system of power itself a Potemkin village, without the world, including Vladimir Putin himself, having noticed? What does it mean when this system's weaknesses are suddenly exposed? And does that make it more dangerous?

A pet project of Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu is located an hour's drive west of Moscow: the army amusement park called "Patriot." At the park, you can ride in toy tanks, shoot with real AK-47s, watch re-enacted World War II battles and buy army souvenirs. Since 2020, it has also featured a church co-designed by Shoigu in olive green – the "Main Cathedral of the Russian Armed Forces." House-sized mosaics depict Russia's armed victories through the centuries – all the way up to the 2014 annexation of Crimea and Russia's intervention in Syria. A mosaic featuring Putin and Shoigu and the country's political elite had also initially been planned. In the lower church, a spacious baptismal font allows for the baptism of troops, and weapons looted from the Nazi Wehrmacht have been melted into the steps.

The church's inauguration is symbolic of the new prestige the army has acquired during Putin's rule – in part attributable to the ambition of Defense Minister Shoigu. He brought glamour to the military, a new level of self-confidence and societal status. He gave the army not only its church, but also dashing new uniforms, a youth organization (Yunarmiya) and political officers for the kind of ideological indoctrination conducted in Soviet times. He kept the troops busy with large-scale, snap exercises. Russia's air force operation in Syria could even be seen as a patriotic film in theaters.

With the invasion of Ukraine, though, that facade has collapsed and bizarre shortcomings have come to light. Just this week, a secretly recorded conversation emerged in which contract soldiers from the Caucasus detailed all that had gone wrong for them. The men returned home on their own in late March to South Ossetia, a de facto Russian-controlled area on Georgian territory. In a conversation with the region's president, they complained of armored personnel carriers that wouldn't start, tanks that refused to fire, officers who hide from their soldiers out of fear, artillery that missed targets by two kilometers and wounded soldiers who weren't provided with treatment. They also lamented a lack of information, maps and radios and of grenade launchers they said were bent. South Ossetia's president rebuked the men and asked if they thought Russia would lose the war. "Yes, we do," came the reply.

Moscow prefers to keep silent about the number of Russians who have actually been killed in Ukraine. The latest official figures are about a month and a half old. In April, the British government said it estimated 15,000 soldiers had been killed, whereas the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces cites nearly 25,000 fallen. One military analyst in Brussels estimates that the Russians have lost close to 1,000 tanks. At least seven Russian generals have been killed. The flagship of the Russian Black Sea Fleet, the guided missile cruiser Moskva sank, apparently after being fired upon by anti-ship missiles.

The first days of the invasion, in particular, when the Russian army advanced on the Ukrainian capital, baffled Western analysts. "The strategic mistakes are completely crazy," John Spencer, an expert on urban warfare at the Madison Policy Forum think tank, told DER SPIEGEL at the time. Many observers now agree that the strength of the Russian military has been overestimated.

One of the most visible weaknesses is logistics. Overstretched, poorly secured supply routes turned into easy targets for small, mobile Ukrainian units, especially in the early weeks of the war. Just a few days after the war began, a U.S. official said that 70 percent of Russian forces would soon run out of fuel and food, or had already.

Glaring failures have also emerged in equipment maintenance – a result of sloppiness or corruption: Expensive air defense systems are getting stuck because their tires are defective, some missile launchers still have tires with "Made in the USSR" labels on them. "Their logistics have been disastrous throughout," says military historian Phillips O'Brien. "They just assumed they would steamroll the Ukrainians and they wouldn't have to worry about supply." Since Russia began concentrating its attacks on the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine, these massive logistics problems have been less frequent, in part due to the fact that supply routes are shorter and the advance has faltered.


quinta-feira, 5 de maio de 2022

Roberto Morena: líder anarco-sindical desde 1917, no PCdoB e PCB desde 1924: arquivos no CEDEM-UNESP

 Acabo de ouvir um pequeno pod-cast do Cedem-Unesp sobre Roberto Morena, mas gravado em 2018: 

Trajetória de Roberto Morena, líder anarco-sindical brasileiro com atuação nas primeiras décadas do Século XX 

MOMENTO UNESP - CEDEM

publicado em 11/06/2018 

https://www.radio.unesp.br/noticia/2668


Meu depoimento sobre ele: 

Conheci Roberto Morena em Praga, e ao conhecer sua história gravei seu depoimento, em especial sua participação na Guerra Civil Espanhola. Deixei diversos registros de meus encontros com ele e com seus familiares no Brasil, ainda na época da ditadura militar: 

1977: 

042. “Movimento Operário e Formações Políticas”, São Paulo, março 1977, 10 p. manuscritas. Projeto de trabalho, em forma de esquema cronológico sumário sobre o movimento operário, alinhando, em três colunas, a situação econômica, política e social, nacional e internacional, o movimento operário e sindical brasileiro, bem como formações e partidos políticos, com destaque para o PCB, e elementos de informação sobre a vida do líder sindical Roberto Morena. 


1978:

054. “Roberto Morena e o sindicalismo brasileiro: roteiro cronológico”, Brasília, abril 1978, 7 p. Esquema, em formato de tabela em quatro partes, colocando em perspectiva a vida do líder sindicalista brasileiro. 


1979: 

058. “Roberto Morena: 60 Anos de Militância Sindical”, Brasília, 26-28 janeiro 1979, 12 p. Artigo biográfico sobre o líder sindical brasileiro, falecido em Praga. Publicado [PR] em Plural (São Paulo, Ano I, n. 4, abril-junho 1979, p. 68-81). Digitalizado em 23/12/2016. Relação de Publicados n. 009.

059. “Lista Sumária dos objetos de Roberto Morena”, Rio de Janeiro, 26 março 1979, 2 p. Descrição dos itens (fotos, documentos e correspondência pessoais) pertencentes ao espólio pessoal, para remessa ao Archivio Storico del Movimento Operaio Brasiliano, de Milão.

063. “Os Brasileiros na Guerra Civil Espanhola”, Brasília, 25 agosto 1979, 1 p. Projeto de pesquisa histórica sobre os integrantes, o itinerário e as modalidades da participação de combatentes brasileiros no conflito espanhol.

064. “Os Brasileiros na Guerra Civil Espanhola, 1936-1939”, Brasília, 6-7 agosto 1979, 5 p. Questionário encaminhado aos ex-combatentes e seus familiares, aplicado por via de correspondência postal ou conversação telefônica, seguida de entrevistas orais diretas ou depoimentos escritos. Originais dos questionários recebidos em arquivo pessoal.

066. “Brasileiros na Espanha: Um Estudo Preliminar sobre a Participação de Brasileiros na Guerra Civil Espanhola”, Brasília, 9-28 outubro 1979, 28 p. Ensaio de pesquisa histórica, sintetizando informações de fontes primárias e secundárias. Publicado [PR] em Temas de Ciências Humanas (São Paulo, Ano 1980, volume 9, p. 125-158). Relação de Publicados n. 013.


1981: 

069. “Voluntários na Guerra Civil Espanhola”, Berna, 8 fevereiro 1981, 2 p. Tabela dos voluntários brasileiros (e estrangeiros residentes no Brasil) recenseados em pesquisa em fontes primárias e secundárias. Inédito.

074. “Roberto Morena: o Operário, o Militante, o Homem”, Berna, 21-23 agosto 1981, 10 p. Curta biografia política e social, sem menção a fontes de pesquisa. Publicado [PR] em Memória e História (São Paulo, n. 3, Instituto Astrojildo Pereira - Archivo Storico del Movimento Operaio Brasiliano - Editora Novos Rumos, 1987, p. 15-32). Relação de Publicados n. 038.


1986: 

125. “Guerra Civil Espanhola”, Brasília, julho 1986, 1 p. Resenha de três artigos enfeixados no conjunto “Spanish Civil War” da revista History Today (vol. 36, July 1986, p. 15-29). Preparado para o Boletim Informativo e Bibliográfico, editado pelo Centro de Documentação do Ministério das Relações Exteriores para divulgar textos de interesse disponíveis na Biblioteca do Itamaraty. Publicado (sem cópia).


1998: 

608. “Brasileiros na Guerra Civil Espanhola, 1936-1939: combatentes brasileiros na luta contra o fascismo”, Brasília, 9 março 1998, 47 p. Artigo de natureza histórica sobre a participação de brasileiros, majoritariamente pertencentes ao Partido Comunista, na guerra civil espanhola e sobre o contexto político-diplomático do conflito espanhol. Baseado em pesquisa original feita em fontes primárias (entrevistas e questionários com ex-combatentes e seus familiares) e em fontes secundárias. Preparado para a Revista de Sociologia e Política, da Universidade Federal do Paraná. Pareceres dos Profs. João Quartim de Moraes e Geraldo Lesbat Cavagnari, da Universidade de Campinas, fazendo pequenos reparos formais ao texto. Revisto com base nesses pareceres em 04.07.98 e enviada nova versão ao Prof. Adriano Neves Cordato. Publicado na revista Sociologia e Política (Curitiba, PR; ano 4, nº 12, junho 1999, Dossiê: Política Internacional, p. 35-66; ISSN 0104-4478, impressa; 1678-9873, online; DOI: https//:10.5380/rsocp.v0i12.39262 http://dx.doi.org/10.5380/rsocp.v0i12.39262; links: http://revistas.ufpr.br/rsp/article/view/39262; pdf: http://revistas.ufpr.br/rsp/article/view/39262/24081). Postado no blog Diplomatizzando em 14/09/2016 (link: http://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com.br/2016/09/guerra-civil-espanhola-1936-1939-um.html). Relação de Publicados nº 238.


2000: 

751. “O Brasil e a Guerra Civil espanhola: participação de brasileiros no conflito”, Washington, 18 out. 2000, 40 p. Versão resumida do trabalho n. 608. Publicado in Hispanista (v. II, n. 5, abr/may/jun 2001; ISSN 1676-9058; http://www.hispanista.com.br/revista/artigo37esp.htm; revista eletronica da Associação Brasileira de Hispanistas). Relação de Publicados n. 280.


2016:

3035. “O Brasil e a Guerra Civil Espanhola: 80 anos de um conflito seminal”, em voo, Porto Alegre-Brasília, 5 setembro 2016; revisão Brasília, 12 setembro, 5 p. Notas para uma exposição que não foi confirmada, por problemas políticos na Faculdade de Direito da USP. Texto guia para palestra na abertura da Semana de Artes, na Faculdade de Direito da USP, no dia 26 de setembro de 2016.

3053. “Dimensões internacionais da guerra civil espanhola (1936-1939)”, Porto Alegre, 5 setembro; Brasília, 30 outubro 2016, 18 p. Artigo sobre a guerra civil internacional da Espanha, com base no artigo 608 (revista Sociologia e Política), com acréscimo de novos materiais e novos argumentos sobre a internacionalização do conflito. Enviado ao Dr. Antonio Cabrera, coordenador do Centro Mackenzie de Liberdade Econômica, em 4/05/2016


2019:

3504. “Homenagem a José Correia de Sá: um combatente da liberdade”, Brasília, 21 agosto 2019, 12 p. Novo ensaio sobre a guerra civil espanhola e aproveitamento do ensaio de 1999, com as partes sobre a participação do combatente, feito a pedido de sua filha, Eliane Dutra Correia de Sá (elianecorreasa@gmail.com); Apresentado no blog Diplomatizzando (24/08/2019; link: https://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com/2019/08/jose-correia-de-sa-homenagem-um-ex.html); disponível na plataforma Academia.edu (link: https://www.academia.edu/40158786/Homenagem_a_Jose_Correia_de_Sa_um_combatente_da_liberdade_2019_). Publicado in: Sá, Eliane Dutra Corrêa de. Um pai nada óbvio: fragmentos de minha infância (Rio de Janeiro: Arquimedes Edições, 2020; ISBN: 978-65-87992-00-6; p. 92-99). Relação de Publicados n. 1464.

3535. “O Brasil no turbilhão da guerra civil espanhola”, Brasília, 11 novembro 2019, 22 p. Contribuição ao volume A Guerra Civil espanhola e as Américas, coordenação de Ismara Izepe de Souza, Angela Meirelles de Oliveira e Matheus Cardoso da Silva (orgs.), pela editora Todas las Musas. Relação de Publicados n. 1436.



Nosso parlamentarismo de fachada - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

 Nosso “parlamentarismo” de fachada

Paulo Roberto de Almeida


O Brasil já chegou ao “parlamentarismo”, mas de um tipo disfarçado, deformado e até criminoso, pois que apenas exercido no sentido da apropriação, em vários casos da extorsão, de recursos públicos por parte dos “parlamentares”, com finalidades exclusivamente patrimonialistas.

Isso se deve ao fato de que o presidente atual é um completo inepto em matéria de governança e por isso transferiu — ou transferiram — a essência do seu desgoverno aos profissionais do ramo, os mesmos que elevaram os fundos indecentes a extremos de apropriação.

Se trata de um “parlamentarismo” podre, no qual os parlamentares não assumem nenhuma responsabilidade pela gestão, apenas se dedicam a arrancar nacos do orçamento para seus fins pessoais e familiares. Uma espécie de familiocracia miliciana.

O Brasil já chegou ao parlamentarismo - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

 Nosso “parlamentarismo” de fachada

O Brasil já chegou ao “parlamentarismo”, mas de um tipo disfarçado, deformado e até criminoso, pois que exercido no sentido da apropriação, em vários casos da extorsão, de recursos públicos por parte dos “parlamentares”.

É um parlamentarismo com finalidades exclusivamente patrimonialistas. Tal se deve ao fato de que o presidente atual é um completo inepto em matéria de governança e por isso transferiu — ou transferiram — a essência do seu desgoverno aos profissionais do ramo.

Os “profissionais” são os mesmos que elevaram os fundos indecentes a extremos de apropriação. Se trata de um “parlamentarismo” podre, no qual eles não assumem nenhuma responsabilidade pela gestão, apenas se dedicam a arrancar nacos do orçamento para fins pessoais e familiares.

No contexto atual, se trata de uma espécie de familiocracia miliciana. Mas pode conhecer outras modalidades, se por acaso o sindicalismo corrupto se unir aos prebendalistas congressuais para continuar a divisão dos despojos do Estado brasileiro. Não acreditam? Esperem…

Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Brasília, 5/05/2022



Uma questão sensível: a diplomacia “africana” do Brasil e a “cor” da representação

 O Itamaraty tem um histórico declarado de discriminação no caso da misoginia nos primeiros dez anos de existência dos concursos promovidos pelo Instituto Rio Branco. A partir de meados dos anos 1950 os exames são impessoais, mas uma etapa intermediária de entrevistas diretas, até meados dos anos 1980, pode ter vetado negros, mulheres, homossexuais e outras minorias. Atualmente, os exames são rigorosamente impessoais e a composição do corpo diplomático reflete exatamente as características da sociedade brasileira, com as desigualdades sociais persistentes que se sabe existirem. Seria uma discriminação absolutamente sem sentido se o MRE fosse escolher diplomatas afrodescendentes para servir nas representações diplomáticas brasileiras na África negra.

Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Dos 90 diplomatas brasileiros em África, apenas um é negro

Perfil da diplomacia brasileira em terras africanas reforça pouco interesse do Brasil no continente africano; Europa, com menor número de países, possui quase quatro vezes mais profissionais em exercício da função

Fernanda Rosário
4 mai 2022 13h55 | atualizado às 14h01

"Informa-se, por oportuno, que o Ministério [de Relações Exteriores] não mantém cadastro dos seus servidores baseado no critério de raça, cor ou etnia", diz a pasta em resposta a uma solicitação de Lei de Acesso à Informação (LAI) sobre o perfil dos diplomatas brasileiros atuantes em África.

Apesar do que informa o Itamaraty, um levantamento elaborado pela Alma Preta Jornalismo constatou, por meio de heteroidentificação, que, dos 90 diplomatas em exercício pleno da função no continente africano, apenas um é negro, o embaixador do Brasil no Quênia, Silvio José Albuquerque e Silva.

Dados da pesquisa feita pela reportagem mostram ainda que dentre os demais profissionais ativos na África, 65 são brancos e um é amarelo. Em 23 casos, não foi possível identificar a raça ou etnia, pois o Ministério de Relações Exteriores (MRE) não possui um cadastro de informações atualizadas.

Se categorizados por gênero, também existe discrepância no perfil diplomático atuante no continente africano: dos 90 diplomatas, 73 são homens e apenas 17 são mulheres, sendo todas elas brancas.

O diplomata é um servidor público que trabalha para promover os interesses brasileiros e estimular as relações entre o Brasil e outros países. Trata-se de um profissional de carreira lotado no Ministério das Relações Exteriores (MRE), também conhecido como Itamaraty.

África e Europa

Segundo o cientista político Mathias Alencastro, especialista em Política Africana, as relações diplomáticas entre o Brasil e a África são muito condicionadas pela vontade política e pelo perfil do chefe de Estado. Ele destaca que, durante o mandato do ex-presidente Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (PT), e na gestão do também ex-presidente Fernando Henrique Cardoso (PSDB), houve engajamento em manter o diálogo diplomático com o sul-global, fato que não se estendeu para o governo de Michel Temer (MDB), tampouco para a gestão de Jair Bolsonaro (PL)

'Entenda a importância de uma embaixada para aprofundar as relações entre o Brasil e os países africanos'

"Na Era Bolsonaro, esse engajamento praticamente desapareceu. E isso é sintomático do fato que ainda é uma relação diplomática que depende muito de um impulso político. É claro que um presidente dinamiza, acelera ou desacelera a relação, mas a relação teria que existir independente do presidente e isso não é caso nas relações entre Brasil e África", enfatiza Mathias, que também foi assessor internacional da Secretaria de Assuntos Estratégicos da Presidência em 2015.

Como já noticiado pela Alma Preta Jornalismo, nos últimos anos, sobretudo durante o governo Bolsonaro, não houve avanços diplomáticos entre Brasil e África. Uma preferência brasileira pela Europa, por exemplo, é percebida quando se observa o número de diplomatas em terras europeias: enquanto a África, com seus 54 países, possui menos de 100 profissionais em exercício da função, a Europa, por sua vez, conta com 338 diplomatas, divididos em diversos postos consulares nos 50 países que compõem o continente.

Racismo exportado para a África

O especialista em Política Africana Mathias Alencastro também destaca que a realidade das embaixadas em África é inconstante e desigual. Isso favorece a existência de representações diplomáticas nesses países com uma boa memória institucional e disputada pelos diplomatas e outras desconectadas da política externa brasileira, sem embaixadores de alto escalão ou relegadas a atividades mais secundárias.

Alencastro reforça que as representações continuam sendo muito condicionadas pelo peso político. Além disso, às vezes, acabam-se tendo situações desagradáveis como foi aí o caso da Guiné-Bissau, quando, em 2021, o embaixador do Brasil no país africano, Fábio Franco, deixou o cargo após denúncias de racismo praticado por sua esposa Shirley Carvalhêdo Franco. Ambos são brancos.

De acordo com reportagem publicada pela Folha de São Paulo, a esposa do embaixador interferia nas atividades da representação diplomática mesmo sem ter vínculo com o Ministério das Relações Exteriores. As denúncias apontavam que Shirley assediava moralmente e fazia declarações racistas contra os trabalhadores da representação.

"Eu acho que esse é o tipo de escândalo que acontece quando falta integração e coordenação entre as embaixadas e o Itamaraty e quando falta um interesse real da parte de todos de acompanhar o que está acontecendo. Quando isso não acontece, as embaixadas ficam muito soltas e os funcionários desenvolvem muita autonomia", explica Alencastro.

Além disso, o cientista político acredita que o Brasil precisa reconhecer que o racismo estrutural existe no país e que ele atinge também os diplomatas, o que evitaria casos como o da Guiné-Bissau.

"Esse tipo de incidente deveria ser punido com muito mais gravidade, não é algo que deveria passar batido. Nesse sentido, tem que haver uma discussão profunda dentro do Itamaraty, dentro de todas as instituições, sobre como lidar com o racismo estrutural da sociedade brasileira", destaca.

"Há todo um nível de preparo que o diplomata tem, mas o diplomata tem que ser um especialista do Brasil e, para ser especialista do Brasil, ele tem que, não apenas entender os objetivos do país, mas também entender as contradições. Viajar com todos os clichês racistas do Brasil certamente não ajuda", complementa o cientista.

Expertise dos diplomatas e nomeação controversa

A indicação de pessoas inexperientes ou por motivos considerados inadequados para a ocupação de embaixadas em África mostra-se também como um entrave para o avanço diplomático entre o Brasil e o continente africano. Também em 2021, houve a indicação de Jair Bolsonaro para que Marcelo Crivella (Republicanos), ex-prefeito do Rio de Janeiro, ocupasse o cargo de embaixador na África do Sul.

A indicação de Crivella, que é bispo licenciado da Igreja Universal do Reino de Deus, surgiu em um contexto de dificuldades da agremiação religiosa em Angola e Moçambique. A ocupação do posto pelo ex-prefeito do Rio, então, poderia favorecer uma articulação em favor da igreja. Após cinco meses sem uma resposta por parte da África do Sul, o presidente Jair Bolsonaro retirou a indicação de Crivella ao cargo.

Sobre o assunto, Mathias Alencastro destaca que não é necessariamente contra a indicação de pessoas que não são da carreira para o cargo de embaixador, mas acredita que é um tema que tem que ser tratado com muito cuidado e que deve haver um processo de filtragem dos nomes bem institucionalizados.

"Eu acho que você pode ser um grande representante do Brasil e não precisa ter feito uma carreira no Itamaraty para isso. Mas o problema disso é que, quando se está com más intenções, as escolhas podem ser catastróficas. No caso do Crivella, a indicação tinha uma única motivação, que era agradar os setores evangélicos que apoiam o Bolsonaro e esse tipo de motivação não pode haver", explica o cientista político.

A Alma Preta Jornalismo também questionou o Itamaraty sobre o motivo da discrepância do número de diplomatas em África e na Europa, além de pedir um posicionamento da pasta sobre a prevalência de um perfil branco e masculino no continente africano. Até o fechamento do texto, o Ministério não se pronunciou. Quando as respostas forem enviadas, o texto será atualizado.

https://www.terra.com.br/nos/dos-90-diplomatas-brasileiros-em-africa-apenas-um-e-negro,92e4708b9a871d9ae4b7a5f8d8677c77w08t6atj.html