quinta-feira, 10 de julho de 2014

Eleicoes 2014 em ritmo de Copa do Mundo: propaganda eleitoral autorizada

Confeccionado por Maria do Carmo Strozzi Coutinho

National Security Archive: tortura no Brasil durante o regime militar (1970)

National Security Archive:
1970s Brazilian Government Torture Techniques Revealed in Declassified U.S. Documents
by Kevin Y. Kim

BRAZIL: TORTURE TECHNIQUES REVEALED IN DECLASSIFIED U.S. DOCUMENTS
DICTATORSHIP-ERA RECORDS GIVEN BY VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN TO PRESIDENT ROUSSEF
DETAIL "PSYCHOPHYSICAL" SYSTEMS OF TORTURE, SECRET EXECUTIONS
43 STATE DEPARTMENT RECORDS MADE PUBLIC BY BRAZILIAN TRUTH COMMISSION

National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 478
Posted July 8, 2014
Edited by Peter Kornbluh

For more information contact:
Peter Kornbluh 202/374-7281 or peter.kornbluh@gmail.com

Washington, D.C., July 8, 2014 -- The Brazilian military regime employed a "sophisticated and elaborate psychophysical duress system" to "intimidate and terrify" suspected leftist militants in the early 1970s, according to a State Department report dated in April 1973 and made public yesterday. Among the torture techniques used during the military era, the report detailed "special effects" rooms at Brazilian military detention centers in which suspects would be "placed nude" on a metal floor "through which electric current is pulsated." Some suspects were "eliminated" but the press was told they died in "shoot outs" while trying to escape police custody. "The shoot-out technique is being used increasingly," the cable sent by the U.S. Consul General in Rio de Janeiro noted, "in order to deal with the public relations aspect of eliminating subversives," and to "obviate 'death-by-torture' charges in the international press."

Peter Kornbluh who directs the National Security Archive's Brazil Documentation Project called the document "one of the most detailed reports on torture techniques ever declassified by the U.S. government."

Titled "Widespread Arrests and Psychophysical Interrogation of Suspected Subversives," the document was among 43 State Department cables and reports that Vice President Joseph Biden turned over on June 17 to President Dilma Rousseff during his trip to Brazil for the World Cup competition for use by the Brazilian Truth Commission. The Commission is in the final phase of a two-year investigation of human rights atrocities during the military dictatorship which lasted from 1964 to 1985. On July 2, the Commission posted all 43 documents on its website, accompanied by this statement: "The CNV greatly appreciates the initiative of the U.S. government to make these records available to Brazilian society and hopes that this collaboration will continue to progress."

The records range in date from 1967 to 1977. They report on a wide range of human rights-related issues, among them: secret torture detention centers in Sao Paulo, the military's counter-subversion operations, attitudes of the Church on human rights violations, and the regime's hostile reaction in 1977 to the first State Department human rights report on abuses. Some of the documents had been previously declassified under routine release procedures; others, including the April 1973 report on psychophysical torture, were reviewed for declassification as recently as June 5, 2014, in preparation for Biden's trip.

During his meeting with President Rousseff, Biden announced that the Obama administration would undertake a broader review of still highly classified U.S. records on Brazil, among them CIA and Defense Department documents, to assist the Commission in finalizing its report. "I hope that in taking steps to come to grips with our past we can find a way to focus on the immense promise of the future," he noted.

Since the inception of the Truth Commission in May 2012, the National Security Archive has been assisting the Commissioners in obtaining U.S. records for their investigation, and pressing the Obama administration to fulfill its commitment to a new standard of global transparency and the right-to-know by conducting a special, Brazil declassification project on the military era. "Advancing truth, justice and openness is precisely the way these classified U.S. historical records should be used," according to Kornbluh. "Biden's declassified diplomacy will not only assist the Truth Commission in shedding light on the dark past of Brazil's military era, but also create a foundation for a better and more transparent future in U.S.-Brazilian relations."

To call attention to the records and the Truth Commission's work, the Archive is highlighting five key documents from Biden's timely donation.

Check out today's posting at the National Security Archive's website - http://www2.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB478/

Find us on Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/NSArchive

Unredacted, the Archive blog - http://nsarchive.wordpress.com/
________________________________________________________
THE NATIONAL SECURITY ARCHIVE is an independent non-governmental research institute and library located at The George Washington University in Washington, D.C. The Archive collects and publishes declassified documents acquired through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). A tax-exempt public charity, the Archive receives no U.S. government funding; its budget is supported by publication royalties and donations from foundations and individuals.
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quarta-feira, 9 de julho de 2014

Ironias da vida: autor de um guia de sobrevivencia aos touros de Pamplona foi chifrado por um touro de Pamplona...

São dessas coisas que acontecem, algo como se o autor de um livro sobre como ficar rico facilmente, consegue ir à falência em menos de três investimentos...
Esta entra na categoria das histórias deliciosas... sobre as desgraças alheias...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Author of “How to Survive the Bulls of Pamplona” gets gored by bull at Pamplona — but is it irony?

  
The Washington Post, July 9 at 1:31 PM  
By now you must have heard the news.
Bill Hillmann — yes, the man who helped write “Fiesta: How to Survive the Bulls of Pamplona” — just got gored by a bull at Pamplona.
So, how good a guide was it? It was an eBook that went on for pages and pages, when a simple “Don’t run with the bulls at Pamplona” would have sufficed. Ernest Hemingway’s grandson also contributed to the book. AsGawker notes, “Hemingway is the grandson of Ernest ‘Big Papa’ Hemingway, whose book The Sun Also Rises popularized the old-world ritual among adrenalin-addicted manly English-speakers.”
I have taken the liberty of making some edits to the book.
Where they write, “I asked his grandson, John Hemingway, about this [Ernest Hemingway's own 'goring'] and got the following pithy response: Well excuse the pun, but I think there was a lot of bull in my grandfather’s dispatches to Toronto in the ’20s.” I have left it intact. That part is great.
I have gone through the rest of the book with a red pen and replaced most of the advice with a simple series of steps.
1. So, you want to run with the bulls in Pamplona, do you? Like “Papa” did? Great! It is good to have hopes and dreams and bucket-list items. Bucket-list items are most useful when you are really sick or in danger. They give you something to think about and live for. “No,” you say, clinging tighter to the edge of that ledge, “I can’t let go now. I haven’t run with the bulls at Pamplona yet. It has always been my dream to run with the bulls at Pamplona.” The only danger is that if you make it back onto the ledge, you might actually go out and put this dream into practice. That is no good! If you do it, you will have nothing left to live for. And you will inevitably be disappointed and surrounded by people who smell, as one of the book’s author’s puts it, “of urine, alcohol, and vomit. . . . The one thing they do not stink of is fear. Fear itself has no smell, despite what the novelists say.” Sure. Besides, you might get hurt. The point is: Cherish this dream from the comfort of your home.

Nunca Antes na Historia do Brasil: a maior vergonha futebolistica

Uma coleção de manchetes de jornais brasileiros, que valem pelo inusitado da situação e pela criatividade das capas:

http://imgur.com/a/Hs88z#XqFD8jV

Bem, os argentinos devem estar contentes, não é mesmo?
Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Oriente Medio: revisitando os 14 pontos de Woodrow Wilson - David Ignatius (WP)

Rethinking Woodrow Wilson’s 14 Points
David Ignatius
The Washington Post, 9/07/2014

As U.S. policymakers ponder the future shape of the Middle East, they should perhaps recall that the United States was opposed to the 1916 Sykes-Picot agreement, the famous “line in the sand” that is now said to be dissolving.
The United States’ opposition back then was based on its rejection of the secret diplomacy between Britain and France that produced the plan to divide the Ottoman Empire after World War I. The United States opposed this neo-colonial carve-up of the region and called instead for the right to national self-determination.
The tragedy of the U.S. role in the modern Middle East is that it became, without entirely intending or realizing it, the protector of the very post- imperial order it once resisted. That story could fill a book, but for now, let’s refresh our memories about the alternative U.S. vision when the Ottoman Empire collapsed.
President Woodrow Wilson enunciated his framework in his famous “Fourteen Points” statement in January 1918, nine months after the United States had entered World War I. Following the armistice in November 1918, Wilson’s idealistic formula was a contentious centerpiece of debate at the Versailles peace conference. It was an inspiration to those who felt victimized by the old order and an annoyance to France and Britain.
Britain and France prevailed at Versailles, imposing a peace settlement so selfish and shortsighted that it all but guaranteed the rise of a revanchist Germany leading to World War II, and the endless headaches of the modern Middle East. It was, as David Fromkin titled his great 1989 history, “A Peace to End All Peace.” It’s this very fabric that is now ripping apart, as civil wars in Syria and Iraq create de-facto partitions of those countries. The question facing policymakers is whether to redraw the lines or let the region devolve into smaller cantons, like the ethnically cohesive “vilayets” of Ottoman times.
My sense is that it’s too early to judge whether the post-1919 boundaries are finished. After all, Lebanon was effectively partitioned during its 15-year civil war, but Lebanese national identity proved strong enough that its sovereignty was restored in the Taif Agreement of 1989. I’d guess that the Syrian national idea will survive over time, too. I’m not as sure about Iraq, but in any event, these are questions for the peoples of the region to decide, not outsiders.
What can Wilson’s Fourteen Points teach us that’s relevant to the current debate? The first five have some bearing, and they’re worth noting carefully because they set a framework for any reexamination of the Middle East map. Let’s list them, with some notations:
(1) “Open covenants of peace, openly arrived at.” This was Wilson’s reaction to the cynical private deal-making of Sir Mark Sykes and Francois Georges-Picot, which appalled observers such as T.E. Lawrence. Lesson for today: Any new order in the region must have buy-in from the region itself, starting with regional kingpins Iran and Saudi Arabia.
(2) “Absolute freedom of navigation upon the seas.” Still crucial for the United States, the world’s leading maritime power, is ensuring oil flow in the Strait of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf. But as U.S. power recedes, will China embrace this open, rules-based maritime order?
(3) “The removal, so far as possible, of all economic barriers.” The only hopeful vision of the region is one that begins with free trade, in which labor and capital flow across Israeli and Arab boundaries. This economically integrated Middle East could be astonishingly profitable.
(4) “National armaments will be reduced to the lowest point consistent with domestic safety.” The logic of a nuclear-weapons-free Middle East is becoming increasingly obvious, even to Israelis. Does Israel really benefit from a world in which Iran, Egypt and Saudi Arabia compete to match Israel’s undeclared deterrent?
(5) “In determining . . . questions of sovereignty, the interests of the populations concerned must have equal weight with the equitable claims of the government whose title is to be determined.” The heart of the matter. One implication: Kurdish aspirations to nationhood don’t trump Iraqi sovereignty, but they deserve equal weight.
Let us ponder, finally, the self-declared “Islamic State,” which meets none of these Wilsonian conditions. Indeed, it is a textbook example of illegitimate state-making.
The only positive aspect of the Islamic State is that the jihadists, by declaring their caliphate, have given their neighbors (and the world’s counterterrorism forces) an address. Any state that makes itself a safe haven for terrorism becomes a target. In that sense, the Islamic State was born with a suicide pill in its mouth.

Ironias (dramaticas) da Historia: armas quimicas no Iraque

A noticia:

    •  Iraq's government told the United Nations that militants from the group Islamic State have seized a large chemical weapons factory north of Baghdad.

Agora o comentário:
Justo agora? Mas os EUA não tinham invadido o Iraque dez anos atrás justamente para desmantelar armas químicas que nunca encontraram?
Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Diplomacia petista: a fantasia da lideranca regional e global -Editorial Estadao

"Semestre perdido, ano perdido", ressalta editorial do Estadão sobre a tentativa do governo Dilma de fechar um acordo de livre-comércio entre o Mercosul e a Europa. O problema continua sendo a Argentina - e, claro, a submissão do petismo a interesses meramente ideológicos:

Sendo o primeiro possível acordo do Mercosul com um parceiro comercial relevante, o governo brasileiro queria, no início do ano, fechar o acordo de livre-comércio entre o bloco sul-americano e a União Europeia (UE) ainda em 2014. Apesar de o Brasil ter ensaiado alguns lances nesse sentido, as circunstâncias externas (leia-se Argentina) impediram qualquer aproximação do objetivo. Conforme reportagem do Estado (4/7), "dificilmente haverá avanço este ano. O prazo acertado para troca de ofertas era junho, mas, apesar das promessas do Brasil de que o Mercosul teria o que entregar aos europeus, a dura negociação com o governo Cristina Kirchner impediu uma oferta coesa dos quatro países do bloco".
Houve empenho do governo brasileiro, mas talvez com uma tática equivocada, sem enfrentar o principal obstáculo. Em fevereiro, a presidente Dilma esteve em Bruxelas para uma reunião de cúpula com a UE. Em abril, os representantes do Mercosul reuniram-se em Montevidéu, para discutir o acordo com o bloco europeu. Em maio, o ministro do Desenvolvimento, Mauro Borges, voltou a afirmar que o desafio imediato e fundamental era concluir o acordo do Mercosul com a UE. Mas não se passou disso.
O obstáculo maior, como sempre foi, continua sendo a Argentina. O Mercosul precisa apresentar à União Europeia uma oferta de liberalização do comércio, mas até o momento não conseguiu chegar a um consenso sobre o que propor. Continua em discussão a lista de concessões, item essencial de qualquer acordo comercial, já que a proposta da Argentina aos outros países-membros do Mercosul, feita com imenso atraso, está muito distante do que a UE espera. Na prática, inviabiliza qualquer avanço na negociação. A União Europeia sugere 10 anos como prazo de desgravação tributária. Brasil, Paraguai e Uruguai solicitam 12 anos e a Argentina pede 15. E há o tema central: a inclusão de 90% dos produtos da região na lista dos que poderiam ter suas tarifas liberadas, coisa que a Argentina não quer nem ouvir.
Para emperrar de vez o processo, a Argentina está, no momento, voltada para suas questões internas. Briga com os fundos holdout na Justiça norte-americana, que exige o pagamento integral das dívidas do país. Com um problemão urgentíssimo para resolver, não há qualquer condição para analisar acordos de longo prazo.
Como se fossem pequenos os entraves do vizinho, em outubro realizam-se ainda as eleições brasileiras e a troca de comando na União Europeia. Por isso, para 2014, já não há mais esperança.
A questão do acordo entre os blocos está longe de ser teórica, ao menos para o Brasil. A balança comercial brasileira com a União Europeia tinha, em 2011, um superávit de € 3,3 bilhões. Em 2012, passou a um déficit de € 2,3 bilhões, chegando em 2013 a € 7,1 bilhões negativos. Em fevereiro, a estimativa da UE era de que uma zona de livre-comércio entre os dois blocos aumentaria em 12% as exportações brasileiras para o bloco europeu. O atual presidente da Comissão Europeia, José Manuel Durão Barroso, tinha alertado, no início do ano, em Bruxelas: "Num momento em que a Europa está avançando em tantos acordos comerciais, seria uma pena não termos um com nossos amigos do Mercosul". Sinalizava assim que o Mercosul (leia-se o Brasil) está perdendo o bonde.
Como se vê, o governo brasileiro continua refém da Argentina. Impedido de negociar diretamente com a UE, por respeito à regra da união aduaneira do Mercosul, não consegue fazer o bloco sul-americano avançar, pois dele é membro um país que não tem a intenção (e agora, a capacidade) de negociar acordos de livre-comércio. Ou há uma reversão deste processo ou o Brasil ficará assistindo à expansão do comércio internacional submetido a regras que em nada o beneficiam.
É de reconhecer que a atual situação foi criada pelo próprio governo brasileiro. Na última década, os presidentes petistas vestiram a fantasia de "líderes globais" em suas viagens internacionais. No entanto, diante dos países sul-americanos, mostraram-se cabisbaixos, sem saber defender os legítimos interesses nacionais. (Estadão).

Postagem em destaque

Livro Marxismo e Socialismo finalmente disponível - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Meu mais recente livro – que não tem nada a ver com o governo atual ou com sua diplomacia esquizofrênica, já vou logo avisando – ficou final...