quinta-feira, 22 de dezembro de 2022

Nunca foi tão baixo o número de democracias liberais: apenas 34 (Le Monde)

Recesso democrático temporário ou duradouro?

https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2022/12/21/le-nombre-de-democraties-liberales-estime-a-seulement-34-n-a-jamais-ete-aussi-bas-depuis-1995_6155234_3210.html

« Le nombre de démocraties libérales, estimé à seulement 34, n’a jamais été aussi bas depuis 1995 »

Chronique
Gilles Paris
Editorialiste
Le Monde, 22/12/2022

Les démocraties libérales sont réduites à faire le dos rond en espérant que s’épuise la vague autoritaire, analyse, dans sa chronique, Gilles Paris, éditorialiste au « Monde ». 
Hier à 05h00, mis à jour hier à 08h16.Lecture 3 min.
Article réservé aux abonnés

Les défenseurs des normes démocratiques qui se retournent sur l’année écoulée ne peuvent que le constater : cela aurait pu être bien pire. Si l’armée russe s’était révélée aussi modernisée et dominatrice que Vladimir Poutine le professait avec assurance, un pouvoir fantoche serait aujourd’hui installé à Kiev à la place de celui, certes perfectible, qui accompagne l’affermissement dans la guerre d’une nation, et ce pouvoir serait actionné du Kremlin. Il serait aussi légitime que celui d’Alexandre Loukachenko à Minsk, c’est-à-dire qu’il ne représenterait rien des aspirations de son peuple et reposerait exclusivement sur les mêmes ressorts répressifs.

L’Ukraine ne serait plus indépendante, ni souveraine. Il lui serait intimé l’ordre de tourner le dos à l’Europe, alors qu’il s’agit d’une aspiration profonde, à l’origine de la révolution de 2014 à laquelle Vladimir Poutine ne s’est jamais résigné. La contagion autoritaire qui a saisi le monde depuis plus d’une décennie aurait avancé un peu plus. La Géorgie et la Moldavie y seraient plus exposées que jamais. Le discours devenu obsessionnel du Kremlin et de ses épigones d’un déclin irréversible du camp occidental aurait trouvé de nouveaux relais et de nouveaux idiots utiles pour le présenter comme une réalité.

Cela aurait également pu être bien pire, si, aux Etats-Unis, la fièvre de la contestation des résultats électoraux par une partie du camp républicain, lorsque ces derniers lui sont défavorables, n’avait pas reflué lors des élections de mi-mandat, le 8 novembre. Il y avait matière à inquiétude depuis qu’une minorité significative de ce camp justifie désormais le recours à la violence contre le parti adverse.

La mise en garde de Joe Biden à propos de cette dérive, à la veille de ces élections, a cependant rencontré un écho suffisant, y compris de la part d’électeurs républicains modérés. Ces derniers ont en effet refusé de soutenir certains candidats appuyés par Donald Trump, qui prétendaient occuper au niveau des Etats les plus disputés des postes stratégiques dans la perspective de la présidentielle de 2024.

Qual será a postura do governo Lula no tocante à guerra de agressão da Rússia contra a Ucrânia? - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Antecipando a próxima vergonha na frente diplomática: uma escolha consciente de Lula III.

O lado mais escabroso do futuro governo Lula não vai ser sua aliança objetiva com o Centrão e sim sua aliança objetiva com o criminoso de guerra Putin e com os aiatolás assassinos. A diplomacia lulopetista promete retomar o apoio a ditaduras execráveis, mas só às de esquerda.

A tolerância com o Centrão, na frente doméstica, é guiada por critérios incontornáveis de governança: Lula não pode governar apenas com sua base congressual própria. 

A tolerância com a violação da Carta da ONU, com os crimes de guerra continuados sendo perpetrados pelo tirano de Moscou contra a infeliz Ucrânia não é e não será ditada por NENHUMA obrigação externa do Brasil, e seria, como de fato é, contrária ao Direito Internacional e às nossas mais caras tradições de política externa, assim como aos princípios e valores de nossa diplomacia, aliás esculpidos nas cláusulas internacionais da Constituição de 1988. 


Estaremos atentos aos desdobramentos nesse terreno.

Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Brasília, 22/12/2022

Five Foreign Policy Stories to Watch in 2023 - Foreign Affairs

Five Foreign Policy Stories to Watch in 2023 

As 2022 comes to a close, here are five foreign policy news stories to follow in the coming year.
Foreign Affairs, December 2022

 Two thousand twenty-two had its fair share of big news stories. The same will be true of 2023. Some of the events that will make the news will surprise. Here are five that won’t. Each of them figures to make headlines in 2023—and to absorb the time and energy of policymakers in the United States and abroad.

1. The War in Ukraine. Many policymakers and experts a year ago dismissed U.S. and British intelligence reports that Russia would invade Ukraine. Almost everyone expected a quick Russian victory if it did. As 2022 ended, Ukraine had not only turned back the Russian military offensive but gained the upper hand in the fighting. Rather than seeking a face-saving diplomatic exit from his grievous miscalculation, Russian President Vladimir doubled down on his brazen aggression by deliberately targeting Ukraine’s civilian infrastructure. The specter of a brutal winter appears not to have shaken Ukrainian resolve. Western support for Ukraine also appears to be holding, even as European publics recoil at the war’s economic fallout. For his part, Putin has suppressed domestic criticism of his war, dashing hopes that his ouster from office might bring peace. So bitter fighting is likely to continue throughout the winter, even if the prospects for significant breakthroughs on the ground seem slim. That could change in the spring, either because Russia launches a new military offensive, perhaps with Belarus’s support, or Ukraine seeks to reclaim Crimea. Major advances on the ground by either side might create space for diplomacy. But such advances could also spur escalation. Putin has not renounced his implicit threat to use nuclear weapons. Meanwhile, fighting in Ukraine will continue to roil global markets, driving up energy prices and heightening food insecurity across the Global South. One sobering possibility is that the world will live under the shadow of the war in Ukraine for years to come.

2. The Axis of the Aggrieved. President Joe Biden came to office insisting that the contest between democracies and autocracies is the defining division in world affairs. Regardless of whether that framing is the best one for U.S. foreign policy, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has helped solidify what might be called the “axis of the aggrieved”—authoritarian powers that resent U.S. preeminence and Western influence more broadly. On the eve of the 2022 Winter Olympics, Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping affirmed what they called a “friendship without limits.” While Beijing declined to help Moscow rebuild its depleted weapons stocks as its war in Ukraine faltered, it has failed to criticize the Russian invasion and instead has used its media power to blame the West for the war. North Korea moved closer to both China and Russia, including by selling rockets and artillery to help Moscow sustain its war in Ukraine. Iran similarly deepened its military ties with Russia, first by selling Moscow drones and then by selling other advanced military systems and parts. Whether and how these ties deepen remains an open question. Mutual contempt of the U.S.-dominated world order may not provide the firmest foundation for collaboration. China’s support for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine helps make the Biden administration’s case that U.S. friends and partners should limit China’s rise. Likewise, North Korea’s nuclear weapons program complicates life for Beijing in northeast Asia. And Iran worries that China may find Saudi Arabia a more appealing Middle Eastern partner.

3. Tensions Over Taiwan. President Xi has vowed to reunify what China regards as the wayward province of Taiwan. He has set not forth a timetable for accomplishing this goal, or ruled out using force to achieve it. The U.S. Chief of Naval Operations is among the experts warning that China might invade Taiwan before 2024. On balance, that seems unlikely. Mounting a successful amphibious invasion of an island that sits one hundred miles off the mainland is a daunting task, especially for a military that has not seen significant combat in more than four decades. President Biden has said the United States will defend Taiwan in the event of an attack, even though no treaty obligates it to do so. Washington clearly would prefer not to have make good on that vow. Some war games show the United States losingany fight over Taiwan; others show it winning. Either way, the costs would be ruinous for all involved. But an outright invasion is only one possibility. China could also accelerate “grey-zone activities” that probe Taiwan’s defenses and pressure Taipei. China did just that in retaliation for U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s August 2022 visit to Taiwan. The next House Speaker may repeat Pelosi’s visit, which will give Beijing justification to step up pressure on Taiwan. A gradual intensification of Chinese grey-zone activities could present the United States with escalatory dilemmas where the challenge becomes conveying resolve without triggering a clash between Chinese and U.S. forces. A controversy is already brewing in Washington over whether promised military aid is getting to Taiwan fast enough to deter Beijing—or possibly defeat it.

4. Turmoil in Iran. Will the Islamic Republic of Iran still exist on December 31, 2023? The mullahs who have governed Iran for four decades now face the most significant domestic challenge to their rule. The immediate cause of the protests buffeting the regime is the September 2022 death in police custody of Mahsa Amini, a twenty-two-year-old Kurdish-Iranian woman. The reason for her arrest? She wasn’t wearing the required hijab properly. Her death touched a nerve in a country already angry about a stagnant economy, high inequality, government corruption, and growing climate-related challenges. The government has responded to demonstrators chanting “Women, life, freedom!” with more repression. However, shooting some demonstrators in the street and publicly executing others after sham trials has only fueled public opposition. The regime may continue to double down on repression, fearing that conciliatory gestures will just generate more demands. But more repression could also lead the European Union and others to toughen sanctions on Iran. A wild card is the health of eighty-three-year-old Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. He is rumored to be ill. A leadership change in the midst of nationwide protests could split the regime. The protests have likely extinguished the already dim prospects for reviving the 2015 Iran nuclear deal. Iran blames the United States and Israel for engineering the protests, and the Biden administration isn’t likely to sign any agreements while the regime is shooting protesters in the street. The question preoccupying the White House is whether Iran might try to distract attention from its problems at home by acting more malignly abroad.

5. The Biden Administration’s America First Economic Policy. When 2022 started, geopolitical divisions buffeted the West. European leaders dismissed the Biden administration’s warning that Russia was preparing to invade Ukraine, and experts worried that a Russia attacked limited to the Donbass might split the transatlantic alliance. But Putin ordered a large-scale invasion that united the West in opposition. Despite predictions that Western solidarity would quickly crumble, it held up. But as 2022 ended, a new dividing line emerged between the United States and its closest allies: economic policy. Contrary to the hopes of most U.S. trading partners, President Biden left many of Donald Trump’s tariffs in place. In 2022, the U.S. Congress passed, and Biden signed into law, the Inflation Reduction Act and the CHIPS and Science Act. They subsidized U.S. industries and discriminated against producers outside of North America. French President Emmanuel Macron warned that the two laws might “fragment the West.” Many other U.S. allies were equally scathing in criticizing the U.S. embrace of industrial policy. Biden admitted that the Inflation Reduction Act had “glitches” and spoke of making “tweaks” to the law. However, Congress isn’t likely to revise its handiwork. The Biden administration also banned the export of advanced semiconductor chips and equipment that use U.S. technology to China, forcing U.S. trade partners to choosebetween complying or losing critical export opportunities. The U.S. actions came as the war in Ukraine rocked the European economy. That prompted some leading European officials to complain that Washington was championing the Ukrainian cause only because the U.S. economy was profiting from the fighting.

Sinet Adous and Michelle Kurilla assisted in the preparation of this post.


quarta-feira, 21 de dezembro de 2022

O Brasil e a guerra de agressão da Rússia contra a Ucrânia - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

 O Brasil e a guerra de agressão da Rússia contra a Ucrânia 

Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Sobre a questão mais relevante da atualidade das relações internacionais e suas implicações para o Brasil: a guerra de agressão da Rússia de Putin contra a Ucrânia e os bárbaros crimes de guerra e contra a humanidade que vêm sendo ali cometidos, ademais do crime contra a paz e à segurança internacional, tal como estipulado na Carta da ONU.

Independentemente das relações bilaterais do Brasil com a Ucrânia, enquanto Lula não reconhecer que a Rússia é o ESTADO AGRESSOR e que Putin é um CRIMINOSO DE GUERRA, a diplomacia brasileira não estará à altura de sua alegada fidelidade à Carta da ONU e aos princípios mais elementares do Direito Internacional. 

Este não é um postulado filosófico, mas a expressão mais fundamental dos valores e princípios inscritos nas cláusulas de relações internacionais da Constituição brasileira de 1988, assim como o núcleo essencial das diretrizes seguidas implicitamente pela diplomacia brasileira desde sempre, e explicitamente desde o Barão do Rio Branco pelo menos, passando por Oswaldo Aranha e por San Tiago Dantas.

Não se trata mais de ser falsamente e amoralmente “pragmático”, como na tentativa de justificar a injustificável “solidariedade” com Putin, no passado recente, por algumas toneladas de fertilizantes, ou, numa perspectiva futura, a de defender a parceria no BRICS como base para uma impossível “mediação” ou “bons ofícios” entre as partes (como se elas fossem equivalentes), e sim de defender os mais altos princípios de uma diplomacia comprometida com o Direito, com a Justiça e com o desenvolvimento pacífico das relações internacionais e com a cooperação entre as nações e a solidariedade entre os povos, tal como defendidos explicitamente por Rui Barbosa desde 1916 (e anteriormente em 1907).

Qualquer postura eludindo ou elidindo tais fundamentos morais e políticos da diplomacia brasileira entrará em choque com a prática e a experiência da política externa brasileira, assim como o respeito que ela granjeou na comunidade das nações desde muitas décadas.

Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Brasília, 21 de dezembro de 2022

Economic History of Brazil, by Artificial Intelligence - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

 Testei a recomendação do Simon Schwartzman no programa de inteligência artificial e o resultado me pareceu razoavelmente satisfatório:

Economic history of Brazil

The economic history of Brazil has been marked by periods of strong economic growth and development, as well as periods of economic downturn and stagnation.

The Portuguese first arrived in Brazil in 1500 and established a colony there, primarily to exploit the country's natural resources, particularly sugarcane. The sugar industry became the mainstay of the Brazilian economy and helped to drive the country's development throughout the colonial period.

After gaining independence from Portugal in 1822, Brazil underwent a series of economic and political changes that shaped its modern economic development. The country began to industrialize in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and by the 1930s, it had become one of the largest and most industrialized countries in Latin America.

However, Brazil has also experienced several economic crises throughout its history. One of the most significant was the debt crisis of the 1980s, which resulted in high inflation and economic stagnation. More recently, the country has struggled with economic problems such as high levels of debt and slow growth.

Despite these challenges, Brazil remains one of the largest and most important economies in Latin America and has a diverse and dynamic economic base. It is a major producer and exporter of agricultural products, including soybeans, coffee, and sugar, as well as a major producer of iron ore and other minerals. The country is also home to a large and growing service sector, which includes financial services, telecommunications, and tourism.


Quem quiser experimentar, está disponível neste link:



Patrimonialismo político no Brasil descrito pela inteligência artificial - Simon Schwartzman

 Do Simon Schwartzman, sobre um programa de inteligência artificial (passou no teste): 

Vocês já testaram o novo programa de inteligência artificial que responde a perguntas? Eu pedi que ele escrevesse um ensaio de 200 palavras sobe patrimonialismo político no Brasil Eis a resposta (por enquanto ele só trabalha em inglês)


Political patrimonialism is a political system in which political power is exercised through the control and distribution of economic resources and favors, rather than through the formal rules and institutions of the state. In such a system, politicians and public officials often use their positions of power to enrich themselves and their supporters, rather than acting in the public interest.

In Brazil, political patrimonialism has a long history and has been a significant feature of the country's political landscape. One of the key features of political patrimonialism in Brazil is the use of public resources for personal gain, including the distribution of government jobs, contracts, and other favors to supporters and allies. This can create a cycle of dependence and loyalty, as those who receive such favors become obligated to support the politicians who provide them.

Political patrimonialism can also undermine the rule of law and the institutions of democracy, as it can lead to corruption and the abuse of power. It can also have negative consequences for the broader society, as it can lead to the allocation of resources and opportunities based on personal connections rather than merit, and can create barriers to social mobility.

In recent years, there have been efforts in Brazil to address political patrimonialism and reduce corruption. These efforts have included reforms to the legal and regulatory frameworks governing political behavior, as well as campaigns to increase transparency and accountability in the political system. While progress has been made in some areas, political patrimonialism remains a persistent challenge in Brazil and continues to have negative impacts on the country's political and economic development.


Quem quiser experimentar, está disponível neste link:



Simon Schwartzman
sschwartzman@icloud.com

terça-feira, 20 de dezembro de 2022

Lula quer fortalecer relações com um violador da Carta da ONU e perpetrador de crimes de guerra - Guilherme Mazui, Gustavo Garcia (G1, O Globo)

 Lula diz que conversou com Putin e que Brasil busca 'mundo sem fome e com paz'

Presidente eleito utilizou rede social para relatar contato com o presidente da Rússia. Putin teria desejado um 'bom governo' ao petista e manifestado interesse no 'fortalecimento' da relação.

Por Guilherme Mazui e Gustavo Garcia, g1 — Brasília
O Globo, 20/12/2022

O presidente eleito Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (PT) afirmou nesta terça-feira (20) que conversou com o presidente da Rússia, Vladimir Putin, e que o Brasil busca o diálogo com todos os países em "busca de um um mundo sem fome e com paz".

De acordo com o petista, Putin teria desejado a ele um "bom governo" e manifestado interesse no "fortalecimento" da relação Brasil-Rússia.

"Conversei hoje [terça] com o presidente russo Vladimir Putin, que me cumprimentou pela vitória eleitoral, desejou um bom governo e o fortalecimento da relação entre nossos países. O Brasil voltou, buscando o diálogo com todos e empenhado na busca de um mundo sem fome e com paz", escreveu Lula em uma rede social.

Putin já havia reconhecido a vitória de Lula na eleição presidencial de outubro deste ano (relembre no vídeo abaixo).

Um dia após o segundo turno, em 31 de outubro, o presidente russo escreveu: "Espero que, trabalhando juntos, possamos garantir o desenvolvimento de uma cooperação russo-brasileira construtiva em todas as esferas".

A Rússia é um importante parceiro comercial do Brasil. Os dois países integram o Brics com Índia, China e África do Sul. O Brics é um bloco de países com economias emergentes.

Putin manteve boa relação com os presidentes do Brasil nas últimas décadas. Inclusive, recebeu o presidente Jair Bolsonaro (PL) em fevereiro, pouco antes do começo da invasão militar à Ucrânia.

Guerra da Ucrânia
Após vencer as eleições, Lula recebeu os cumprimentos de Putin e do presidente ucraniano Volodymyr Zelensky.

Ao longo do ano, o petista deu declarações criticadas por autoridades ucranianas e tem reiterado a necessidade de se buscar uma saída pacífica para a guerra que se alonga há 10 meses.

Lula, inclusive, já declarou que pretende debater a situação do conflito na viagem que deve fazer ao EUA em 2023, quando terá um encontro com o presidente Joe Biden.

30 minutos de conversa
O g1 apurou que conversa de Lula e Putin por telefone durou cerca de 30 minutos. Putin acenou com a possibilidade de receber Lula em Moscou no próximo ano ou de se encontrar com o presidente brasileiro durante algum evento internacional.

Putin não virá à posse de Lula em 1º de janeiro. A representante russa será Valentina Matvienko presidente do Conselho da Federação Russa.

A assessoria de Lula não informou se a guerra na Ucrânia foi um dos temas discutidos com Putin.


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...