quarta-feira, 11 de dezembro de 2024

Mercosul revigorado - Rubens Barbosa O Estado de S. Paulo,

 Opinião: Mercosul revigorado

Com a futura assinatura do acordo com a UE, o bloco sul-americano pode iniciar um círculo virtuoso de inserção internacional

Por Rubens Barbosa

O Estado de S. Paulo, 10/12/2024 


A reunião presidencial do Mercosul, em Montevidéu, na semana passada, foi uma das mais importantes desde sua criação em 1991, em função da decisão dos países do Mercosul e da União Europeia (UE) de dar por concluída definitivamente a negociação do acordo de parceria em discussão há 30 anos.

Com a futura assinatura do acordo com a UE, o Mercosul sai do isolamento e pode iniciar um círculo virtuoso de inserção internacional. Foi assinado acordo comercial com o Panamá e iniciadas conversações com os Emirados Árabes Unidos.

Na fase mais recente, em 2019, Mercosul e UE acordaram os principais trade-offs da negociação, como as diversas cotas em bens agrícolas acertadas entre o Mercosul e a UE. Em 2023/2024, foram propostos reajustes para preservar a capacidade do Estado para alavancar políticas de interesse público, como em compras governamentais (foram excluídas todas as compras do SUS do capítulo de compras, pela importância que possuem para o acesso a medicamentos, assim como para reforçar o sistema produtivo de medicamentos). Para equilibrar algumas partes do acordo, foram recusados os termos do documento adicional (side letter) sobre comércio e desenvolvimento sustentável apresentado no início de 2023 pela UE. De forma inédita, foi agora estabelecido um mecanismo para evitar que medidas unilaterais das partes prejudiquem o equilíbrio estabelecido no acordo, pois tais medidas têm o potencial de comprometer concessões comerciais negociadas e desequilibrar o resultado acordado. Após o “acordo político” de 2019, a UE adotou legislações que, a depender da forma como sejam implementadas, poderão romper o equilíbrio do entendimento de 2019 em temas que não foram renegociados na etapa iniciada em 2023. É o caso, por exemplo, das cotas oferecidas pela UE para a exportação de carnes do Mercosul, que não foram reabertas na etapa de 2023. Estabeleceu-se que uma arbitragem definirá se houve esvaziamento dos compromissos assumidos e em que montante, independentemente de ter havido violação ou não do acordo. Se for o caso, a parte que restringiu o comércio deve oferecer compensações comerciais (abertura de mercado) ao outro lado. Se não houver acordo quanto à compensação, há direito à “retaliação” (suspensão de benefícios previstos no acordo), no montante definido em arbitragem, com vistas a restabelecer o equilíbrio do que foi negociado.

Em mais de 30 anos de existência, o Mercosul negociou acordos comerciais de pouca relevância para a economia nacional (Egito, Israel, Cingapura e, em breve, entrará em vigor o com a Palestina). O acordo com a UE, o segundo mercado (16%) para o Brasil, de mais de 800 milhões de pessoas e 27 países, é de longe o mais importante até aqui e manda uma mensagem poderosa à comunidade internacional quanto à colaboração ampliada entre duas regiões que defendem os mesmos valores e interesses, além de sinalizar o fim do isolamento do Mercosul. Cerca de 90% dos produtos dos dois países terão tarifa zero no primeiro ano do acordo.

Para o Brasil, a assinatura do acordo reforça a projeção externa do País e fortalece a política de independência e equidistância em uma das questões geopolíticas que dividem hoje o mundo: as tensões entre os EUA e a China. No caso da UE, amplia as áreas de contato com uma região líder em segurança alimentar, energia limpa e que passou a priorizar o meio ambiente. É importante lembrar que não se trata apenas de um acordo comercial, mas também de um ambicioso acordo de associação estratégica com a União Europeia, que inclui três vertentes: a política, a de cooperação e a do livre comércio. Em seguida, deverá ser assinado o acordo com a Efta, a Associação Europeia de Livre Comércio, integrada por Suíça, Noruega, Islândia e Liechtenstein.

As transformações na economia e na ordem global tornam o acordo entre o Mercosul e a UE ainda mais estratégico tanto para o Mercosul quanto para a União Europeia. Os dois lados perceberam que esse acordo, no contexto atual, representa mais do que interesses comerciais e passa a ser importante também pelas implicações geopolíticas globais.

Resta agora a assinatura e aprovação dos acordos de diálogo político, de cooperação e de livre comércio. O comercial, pelo Conselho da União Europeia e pelos Congressos dos países do Mercosul, e os demais pelos Parlamentos dos países-membros da UE. A oposição da França, da Itália e da Polônia ao comercial terá de ser superada pela maioria liderada pela Alemanha, Portugal e Espanha.

Outra matéria importante incluída na pauta do Mercosul foi o pedido da Argentina para que seja revista, para dar maior flexibilidade, a regra da Resolução 32 pela qual as negociações de acordos comerciais devem ser feitas conjuntamente pelos países-membros. Com isso, o governo argentino espera poder negociar acordo de livre comércio isoladamente com os EUA, embora pareça pouco provável que os EUA mudem sua política e abram negociações comerciais com a Argentina. A proposta argentina não tem chance de ser aceita pelos países do Mercosul (e agora a UE também vai demover Javier Milei), mas adquire um caráter sensível porque a Argentina coordenará os trabalhos do Mercosul no primeiro semestre de 2025.

 

PRESIDENTE DO INSTITUTO DE RELAÇÕES INTERNACIONAIS E COMÉRCIO EXTERIOR (IRICE), FOI COORDENADOR NACIONAL DO MERCOSUL

 

https://www.estadao.com.br/opiniao/rubens-barbosa/mercosul-revigorado/


terça-feira, 10 de dezembro de 2024

Colaborações a obras coletivas, Paulo Roberto de Almeida, 1987-2019: livros doados à Biblioteca do Itamaraty (2020)

 Colaborações a obras coletivas, Paulo Roberto de Almeida, 1987-2019 

Livros impressos doados à Biblioteca do Itamaraty, na primeira fase (2020). Lista revista em 12 de março de 2020 (24 páginas).

Lista completa neste link: 

https://www.academia.edu/126228180/Colaboracoes_a_obras_coletivas_Paulo_Roberto_de_Almeida_doacoes_%C3%A0_Biblioteca_do_Itamaraty_2020_

 

1.             “O Paradigma Perdido: a Revolução Burguesa de Florestan Fernandes”, in Maria Angela d’Incao (org.), O Saber Militante: Ensaios sobre Florestan Fernandes(São Paulo-Rio de Janeiro: UNESP-Paz e Terra, 1987, p. 209-229; ISBN: 85-7139-000-5); disponível Academia.edu (links: https://www.academia.edu/5546799/001_O_Paradigma_Perdido_a_Revolu%C3%A7%C 3%A3o_Burguesa_de_Florestan_Fernandes_1987_e https://www.academia.edu/attachm ents/32642223/download_file). Relação de Publicados n. 42. Relação de Originais n. 124.

2.             “The ‘New’ Intellectual Property Regime and its Economic Impact of Developing Countries: a preliminary overview” in Giorgio Sacerdoti (ed), Liberalization of Services and Intellectual Property in the Uruguay Round of GATT (Fribourg [CH]: University Press of Fribourg, 1990, p. 74-86; Progress and Undercurrents in Public International Law, vol. 6); disponível em Academia.edu

(link: https://www.academia.edu/5782659/002_The_New_Intellectual_Property_Regime

_and_its_Economic_Impact_of_Developing_Countries_a_preliminary_overview_1990_)

. Relação de Publicados n. 59. Relação de Originais n. 174.

3.             “A Diplomacia do Liberalismo Econômico: As relações econômicas internacionais do Brasil durante a Presidência Dutra”, in José Augusto Guilhon de Albuquerque

(org.), Sessenta Anos de Política Externa Brasileira (1930-1990), vol. I: Crescimento, modernização e política externa(São Paulo: Cultura Editores associados, 1996, p. 173- 210); (…)


(…)


149.             “Perspectivas do Mercosul ao início de sua terceira década”, in: Ribeiro, Elisa de Sousa Ribeiro (coord.), Direito do Mercosul. 2ª ed.; Brasília: Uniceub, 2019, 1247 p.; ISBN: 978-85-7267-009-8; e-book; link: https://repositorio.uniceub.br/jspui/handle/prefix/13134), pp. 1211-1247.

150.             “Uma nova etapa da grande cooperação científica Brasil-França”, in: Journées Jeunes chercheurs em sciences humaines et Sociales: regards croisés France Brésil = Jornadas Jovens pesquisadores em ciências humanas e sociais. Olhares Cruzados França Brasil. Brasília: Embaixada da França no Brasil, Serviço de Cooperação e Ação Cultural (SCAC), Universidade de Brasília (UnB), Fundação Alexandre de Gusmão, 2019, 520 p.; ISBN: 978-85-5054-000-5; pp. 13-16. Relação de Originais n. 3367; Relação de Publicados n 1321; Relação de Publicados n. 1322.

151.              As relações internacionais do Brasil na era militar (1964-1985), In: Jorge Ferreira e Lucilia de Almeida Neves Delgado (orgs.), O Brasil Republicano 4: o tempo do regime autoritário; ditadura militar e redemocratização; Quarta República (1964-1985). (Rio de Janeiro: Editora Civilização Brasileira, 2019, pp. 287-312; ISBN: 978-85-200-1360-1). Relação de Originais n. 3078.

152.             “Thomas Sowell: um intelectual completo”, Prefácio a Dennys Garcia Xavier (org.), Thomas Sowell e a aniquilação de falácias ideológicas: Breves Lições, com organização de Dennys Xavier (São Paulo: LVM, 2019, 312 p.; ISBN: 978-6550520168). Relação de Originais n. 3491; Relação de Publicados n. 1330.

 

 

Paulo Roberto de Almeida, n. 4812.

Lista elaborada em 12/03/2020.

Inserida na plataforma Academia.edu em 10/12/2024 (link: https://www.academia.edu/126228180/Colaboracoes_a_obras_coletivas_Paulo_Roberto_de_Almeida_doacoes_%C3%A0_Biblioteca_do_Itamaraty_2020_).

 

Trump will be more disruptive than some currently expect – especially on Mexico - Brian Winter (Foreign Affairs)

 Dear friends,

For Foreign Affairs, I spoke to about two dozen people, including officials in Donald Trump’s first administration, to anticipate what his return might mean for Latin America.

My takeaway: I believe the president-elect will be more disruptive than some currently expect – especially on Mexico.

There are also clear (and realistic) opportunities for greater investment, and a growing group of leaders in the region who will welcome his return.

All feedback welcome as always.

Abrazo

Brian 

 

https://www.foreignaffairs.com/guest-pass/redeem/gkNtnMeZQMo

 

Latin America Is About to Become a Priority for U.S. Foreign Policy

Trump Will Disrupt Three Decades of “Benign Neglect”

 

By Brian Winter

December 10, 2024

 

  • BRIAN WINTER is Editor in Chief of Americas Quarterly.

 

While traveling throughout Latin America in recent years, visitors heard the same refrain: Washington isn’t paying enough attention to the region. Business leaders, academics, and politicians on both the left and the right agreed that the United States lacked a clear strategy for engagement and was losing influence and economic opportunities, especially to China. Such talk is hardly new. A 1973 article in Foreign Affairs warned that “the United States has no Latin American policy, save one of benign neglect.” But these laments seemed to reach a crescendo during the Biden administration, which was seen as too focused on the United States’ growing rivalry with Beijing and the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East to devote even minimal bandwidth to its southern neighbors.

 

As the old adage goes, be careful what you wish for. Donald Trump’s second presidency seems destined to focus more attention on Latin America than any U.S. administration in perhaps 30 years, including the incoming president’s first term. The reason is straightforward: Trump’s top domestic priorities of cracking down on unauthorized immigration, stopping the smuggling of fentanyl and other illicit drugs, and reducing the influx of Chinese goods into the United States all depend heavily on policy toward Latin America. His stronger-than-expected electoral mandate (winning the popular vote plus control of both houses of Congress) coupled with a substantial increase in the flows of migrants and narcotics since he first occupied the White House mean that Trump will be even more emboldened than before to pressure Latin American governments to help achieve his goals. He will resort if necessary to punitive measures including tariffs, sanctions, and perhaps limited military action, such as drone strikes against Mexican cartels, to try to get his way.

 

Trump’s heightened interest in the region will be welcomed by fellow conservatives, such as Argentine President Javier Milei, El Salvadorian President Nayib Bukele, and others at a time when the ideological right appears to be ascendant throughout much of Latin America. The appointment of U.S. Senator Marco Rubio as secretary of state, if confirmed by the Senate, would not only elevate a son of Cuban immigrants and fluent Spanish speaker but also make him probably the most well-traveled and connected official on Latin American issues to serve at such a high level in Washington since Nelson Rockefeller was vice president under President Gerald Ford in the 1970s. Trump and Rubio’s approach could, over time, bring new and unexpected opportunities for economic integration and investment to Latin American countries the administration perceives as cooperative and friendly.

 

But especially in the short term, Trump’s policies toward the region are likely to be highly disruptive—and could risk pushing key Latin American countries further away from Washington rather than reversing the drift of recent years. Mexico faces the biggest challenges, including the possibility of severe damage to trade with the United States, the destination of more than 80 percent of its exports, unless it meets Trump’s demands to help secure the countries’ 2,000-mile-long shared border. Trump’s recent threats to implement a 25 percent tariff on Mexico upon taking office were only the start of a protracted and tense negotiation that no one should assume is a bluff. Indeed, Mexico is not alone. Other countries, stretching from Guatemala to Colombia, will also face tariffs or other sanctions unless they are seen to be halting the northward flow of migrants through the Darien Gap and other key transit points and taking back citizens swept up in Trump’s promised mass deportations. A second Trump administration will try to pressure Latin American governments including Brazil, Panama, and Peru to stop accepting Chinese investment for sensitive projects such as ports, electric grids, and 5G telecommunications networks. Many Republicans perceive these linkages, and the growing Chinese presence in Latin America more broadly, as unacceptable violations of the Monroe Doctrine, the 201-year-old edict that the Western Hemisphere should be free of interference from outside powers, an idea that has enjoyed a certain revival among Republicans in today’s era of heightened great-power competition.

 

Whether Trump’s policies toward the region result in a widespread backlash, a series of quiet accommodations, or an era of stronger U.S.-Latin American ties will depend on several factors. Some of them, such as the crises driving record migration in recent years from several countries across the region, will be largely beyond the president-elect’s control. The biggest question, some Republican officials say, is whether Trump comes to see Latin America as not just a source of the United States’ biggest problems but also a potential solution to them.

 

HEADING SOUTH

 

It is fair to note that many of the most dire prophecies about Trump’s first term in Latin America failed to come true. After Trump launched his 2016 presidential campaign by accusing Mexico of sending rapists to the United States, threatening to withdraw from the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and promising to make Mexico pay for a new border wall, some predicted that he would take a hostile approach not just to Mexico but also to the entire region.

 

His policies proved to be more nuanced. Despite clear ideological differences between Trump and former Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, a leftist, the two leaders managed to forge a relationship that was transactional and ultimately respectful. As long as López Obrador cooperated on migration issues—by ordering Mexican troops to stop northward bound migrants before they reached the U.S. border, for example—Trump left Mexico alone to pursue its domestic agenda without interference or even much commentary. The two countries approved a new trade deal with Canada, known as the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), that even some free-market advocates saw as an improvement on its predecessor NAFTA due to its enhanced protections for intellectual property and labor rights. Elsewhere, Trump established cordial relationships with several like-minded Latin American leaders, helping secure a $57 billion International Monetary Fund loan package—the largest in the history of the Washington-based lender—for his longtime friend President Mauricio Macri of Argentina. Most of Trump’s vitriol and ire was focused on the socialist dictatorships of Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua, which he targeted with sanctions and other policies that enjoyed broad support elsewhere in the hemisphere at the time.

 

But the relatively benign outcomes of Trump’s first term in Latin America may now be breeding a certain complacency about his second. U.S.-Mexican ties were salvaged during his first term only after Mexican officials secured repeated last-minute interventions from sympathetic interlocutors in the White House, including Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and his former chief of staff John Kelly, who helped convince the president not to unilaterally close the border or withdraw from NAFTA, according to accounts at the time. Those moderating voices may be absent or at least outnumbered in a second term, overshadowed by more hawkish officials such as incoming national security adviser Mike Waltz, a Florida congressman who introduced legislation in 2023 seeking to authorize U.S. military force against Mexican cartels. Waltz has said that the legislation would not include the deployment of U.S. troops on Mexican soil, but it would allow the use of drones, cyberwarfare, “intelligence assets [and] naval assets” to target organized crime groups. The incoming vice president, JD Vance, a Marine Corps veteran, also voiced support during the campaign for sending the U.S. military to “do battle with the Mexican drug cartels,” an idea that has become much more widely accepted in Republican circles since Trump’s first term.

 

There is no doubt that the issues of drug trafficking and migration along the border have become more urgent. Although overdose deaths in the United States fell slightly in 2023 to about 107,000 people, that number is still about 70 percent higher than when Trump first took office in 2017. About three-quarters of the fatalities were caused by fentanyl, which U.S. officials say comes mostly from Mexico. The number of unauthorized migrant crossings detected at the U.S.-Mexican border tripled under Biden’s watch, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data, although migration has sharply declined in recent months after Biden implemented more stringent controls prior to the November election. Meanwhile, bilateral trade has also evolved in a way not to Trump’s liking, with the United States running a record trade deficit with Mexico of $152 billion in 2023. Throughout his campaign, Trump described tariffs on Mexico not just as a tool to secure greater cooperation on migration but also as a necessary step to protect U.S. manufacturing, suggesting that he might implement duties of 100 percent or higher on Mexican-made vehicles.

 

Officials in both countries know that Trump is a dealmaker, and some believe the conduct of his presidency will ultimately be less harsh than his rhetoric. New tariffs on Mexico would damage the U.S. economy as well, given how deeply supply chains have become intertwined over the last 30 years, and they risk a resurgence of the inflation that drove many Americans to vote for Trump this year. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, a protégé of López Obrador who took office in October, will likely be able to satisfy some of Trump’s demands, including receiving migrants from third-party countries as they await entry to the United States. Trump sounded pleased in public remarks regarding a large seizure of fentanyl by authorities in Mexico in early December, days after he made a particularly dramatic tariff threat.

 

Nevertheless, Mexican officials fear that difficult times are still ahead. Trump has repeatedly cast Mexico as a source of the United States’ biggest problems, and he often sounded during the 2024 campaign as if he believed a fundamental split between the countries would bring jobs back to the United States and other benefits for his working-class base. It’s also unclear whether Mexico has the resources or the political will to fully secure the vast border or to confront organized crime groups that have grown even more powerful in recent years and that by some estimates now control as much as one-third of Mexico’s territory. (Mexico’s government strongly rejects such estimates.) As fate would have it, the USMCA is set for a previously scheduled review by its three members in 2026. Some close to Trump say he never liked the deal in the first place, viewing it as a first-term concession to business interests, whose support will be less critical now that he is not seeking reelection. Mexico’s recent decisions to replace its judiciary through direct elections and move toward abolishing autonomous regulatory agencies may violate the USMCA’s terms, making it even easier for Trump to try to overhaul its provisions—or simply walk away.

 

TOUGHENING UP

 

Mexico certainly won’t be the only country facing intensified pressure. During Trump’s first term, migrants came largely from Mexico and the so-called Northern Triangle countries of El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. More recently, the profile has been much more diverse, with record outflows from Cuba, Haiti, and Venezuela, as well as from Ecuador, Peru, and other countries in the region struggling with organized crime and economic stagnation. Just as many Latin American officials complained in recent decades about a narcotización of their relationships with the United States, as narcotics dominated all other subjects, regional ties may see a migratización in coming years, with tariffs and other punishments doled out to governments perceived as failing to stop the flow of migrants northward.

 

The leftist dictatorships in Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela will also receive tougher treatment, although it’s unclear how much attention Trump will devote to them. During his first term, Trump adopted a “maximum pressure” strategy of sanctions against Venezuela and its dictator Nicolás Maduro, recognizing the opposition figure Juan Guaidó as the country’s legitimate president—a decision supported by numerous other Latin American governments, as well as by Canada and the European Union. The strategy ultimately failed to dislodge Maduro, however, and sanctions only deepened Venezuela’s economic crisis, contributing to an even greater exodus of Venezuelan migrants to the United States and elsewhere in the region. The Biden administration tried negotiating with Maduro’s regime, only to see it resort to massive fraud in July presidential elections and lock up yet another round of political opponents. Trump will almost certainly return to a more adversarial approach toward all three dictatorships, which are particularly important causes for Rubio and others among Trump’s Florida-heavy team of advisers. Yet there appears to be a split between those who believe the regimes are “weak and teetering,” as Florida Representative Mario Díaz-Balart recently contended, and other Republicans who, burned by the experience of Trump’s first term, argue that major new sanctions and other pressure tactics would stand little chance of restoring democracy and risk unleashing yet another large wave of outward migration.

 

Indeed, Trump and his team may save their energy for what they see as the larger threat: China. Latin America’s trade with China has exploded from $18 billion in 2002 to $480 billion in 2023, and Beijing has increasingly become a key investor in infrastructure projects including ports, public transportation, and electric grids. No one on Trump’s team believes the new administration can convince Latin American countries to turn their backs on Beijing entirely, but officials do plan to be more aggressive in trying to keep the Chinese away from the most sensitive civilian and military assets in the region, which they see as a matter of national security.

 

For example, Trump’s former top Latin America aide, Mauricio Claver-Carone, recently proposed applying a 60 percent tariff on any imports to the United States that have passed through Peru’s massive new port of Chancay, which was built by China at a cost of $1.3 billion. Claver-Carone called his proposal a “shot across the bow” meant to deter any country in Latin America from accepting Chinese investment in critical infrastructure. Trump officials have also deemed Huawei, the Chinese telecommunications provider, and Chinese companies that produce electric vehicles in Mexico to be strategic threats. It’s unclear how governments around the region will react to such pressure, since ties with China often have little to do with ideology—even Milei, the first foreign leader to meet with Trump after his election, is reportedly now considering a visit to Beijing in early 2025. Attempts at pressure could backfire and convince some countries, including Brazil and Colombia, to deepen their ties with Beijing and other nonaligned groups such as BRICS, the partnership whose first members were Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa.

 

THE CHINA FACTOR

 

Perhaps ironically, some Trump backers believe that the United States’ competition with China may ultimately be what compels the president-elect to pursue a more constructive relationship with Latin America. If Trump is truly intent on reducing Chinese imports, the theory goes, he may see allied countries in the Western Hemisphere as alternative sources of cheap labor that would help strengthen the U.S. supply chain. The growth of near-shoring, which accelerated under the Biden administration, could also boost the economies of the region—and, over time, give potential migrants a reason to stay home. In a July essay for Americas Quarterly, Claver-Carone cited “the inextricable link between U.S. national security and mutual economic growth” in the hemisphere and proposed using the Development Finance Corporation and other U.S. agencies to finance investments and “Make the Americas Grow Again.”

 

It is unclear whether Trump, once in office, will come to see Latin America as more of an opportunity than a threat. But such integration-minded proposals and other parts of the Trump agenda would win considerable support in a region eager for economic growth and greater engagement with Washington. Even Trump’s immigration and deportation policies may find sympathy at a time when the likes of Argentina, Chile, and Costa Rica have themselves struggled to accommodate rising migration from poorer countries. Widespread frustration over organized crime throughout the hemisphere, as well as social changes such as the spread of evangelical Christianity, mean that right-wing leaders may be favored to win upcoming elections in Chile in 2025 and Brazil and Colombia in 2026. It is entirely possible to imagine Trump working with a broad array of like-minded governments in the region to address security and other shared challenges.

 

But others sound a note of caution. The stagnation that has supposedly plagued U.S. ties with Latin America in recent years may have had less to do with a lack of bandwidth or ambition in Washington than some believe. Competing with China, for example, has been exceedingly difficult now that, for the first time since World War II, both political parties in Washington fundamentally do not believe in the benefits of free trade. Unlike China, the United States cannot order its companies to do business in Latin America and expect them to wait years for a profit—or simply to invest for geopolitical reasons. The past 30 years of U.S.-Latin American relations, seen in a different light, can be interpreted as an unglamorous but methodical construction of trade and other ties that have supported mutual economic growth, favored the strengthening of democracies, helped address challenges such as climate change, and promoted more equal relationships in the wake of the Cold War. Whether “benign neglect” will be replaced with something better during Trump’s second presidency remains to be seen.

 

 

Brian Winter

Editor-in-Chief, Americas Quarterly

Follow me at @brazilbrian

 


Brian Winter

Editor-in-Chief, Americas Quarterly

Vice President, Americas Society/Council of the Americas

680 Park Avenue - New York, NY 10065

Follow me at @brazilbrian

The Military Balance 2024 - The Annual Assessment of Global Military Capabilities and Defense Economics (IISS)

The Military Balance 2024 

The Annual Assessment of Global Military Capabilities and Defense Economics 

London: International Institute of Strategic Studies, 2024

Available at:

https://www.academia.edu/126202804/The_Military_Balance_2024


 
  
  

segunda-feira, 9 de dezembro de 2024

The Great Transformation: China's Road from Revolution to Reform - Odd Arne Westad, Chen Jian (Yale University Press, 2024)

The Great Transformation: China's Road from Revolution to Reform

Odd Arne WestadChen Jian

Yale University Press, 2024, 424 páginas

The first thorough account of a formative and little understood chapter in Chinese history.

Odd Arne Westad and Chen Jian chronicle how an impoverished and terrorized China experienced radical political changes in the long 1970s and how ordinary people broke free from the beliefs that had shaped their lives during Mao's Cultural Revolution. These changes, and the unprecedented and sustained economic growth that followed, transformed China and the world.

In this rigorous account, Westad and Chen construct a panorama of catastrophe and progress in China. They chronicle China's gradual opening to the world--the interplay of power in an era of aged and ailing leadership, the people's rebellion against the earlier government system, and the roles of unlikely characters: overseas Chinese capitalists, American engineers, Japanese professors, and German designers. This is a story of revolutionary change that neither foreigners nor the Chinese themselves could have predicted.

Sobre os autores :

Odd Arne Westad is the Elihu Professor of History and Global Affairs at Yale University. His books include The Global Cold War: Third World Interventions and the Making of Our Times, winner of the Bancroft Prize, and Restless Empire: China and the World since 1750. He lives in New Haven, CT. 

Chen Jian is Distinguished Global Network Professor of History at NYU and NYU Shanghai and Hu Shih Professor of History Emeritus at Cornell University. His books include China's Road to the Korean WarMao's China and the Cold War, and Zhou Enlai: A Life. He lives in Ithaca, NY.


Índice


1 Introduction, 1

1 To the Cultural Revolution, 8

2 Great Disorder under Heaven, 36

3 A Successor Dies, 61

4 Americans, 86

5 The Fall and Rise and Fall of Deng Xiaoping, 109

6 1976, 135

7 Succession Struggles, 165

8 Visions of China, 189

9 Imagining the World, 216

10 A New China, 247

11 To the Point of No Return?, 273

12 The Making and Unmaking of Chinese Reform, 300

Notes, 311

Sources Cited, 369

Index 395


Relato de um jornalista que foi prisioneiro dos terroristas que acabam de tomar o poder na Síria, por 2 anos - Theo Padnos (Persuasion)

Persuasion: 


When I Was a Hostage

When I Was a Hostage

·
FEB 14
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In the fall of 2012, when Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), the military power now in charge of Syria, was a mere minor terrorist organization, a band of their fighters in Aleppo took me prisoner. Back then they were known as Jabhat al-Nusra. I remained in the group’s custody for two years—often in solitary confinement cells, but not always. During this time, it often happened that news of some stupendous victory would make its way, via the fighters’ two-way radios, into our prisons. It was a surreal experience then to listen as a government checkpoint got blown into the sky, for instance, or a truckload of government troops fell into my captors’ hands. 

What’s going on now, however, is surreal beyond anything I saw or heard when I was in Syria. I’ve spent the past few days watching my former captors’ wildest dreams come true. Actually, I suspect that all Syrians, in every corner of the world, are watching these events unfold in a mood of unremitting shock and awe.

Nevertheless, certain sights have become familiar. Those who’ve been following the rebels’ advance have gotten used to seeing them standing in the midst of the government armories and air force bases surrounded by expensive-looking military kit.¹ “By the grace and favor of God, the Almighty,” the men scream into the camera as they pump their Kalashnikovs into the sky, “we are in complete control here.”

Technically speaking, they ought not to be quite so astonished. I’m sure they know this. This is a religious army, after all. According to the dogmas, God wrote down every last detail of what’s occurring now at the beginning of time. In the presence of an act of God, however miraculous, the correct attitude is calm submission to His will. Somehow, in their enthusiasm, the footsoldiers sometimes forget this. But the leadership never does. They know the religion much better than their underlings do, have internalized the law more deeply, and enforce such discipline as there is. It won’t be long before the leaders put a stop to the soldiers’ love of making a show of themselves.

In the early days of my capture, the flags on all the fighters’ pickups bore the legend “Victory Front, the al-Qaeda System in the Levant.” It was imprinted on the stationery and scrawled across their t-shirts and bandannas. Even back then, however, the thinkers within the high command were doubting the wisdom of presenting themselves to the world as terrorists.

On one hand, people within the army generally liked the brand image of al-Qaeda, since it suggested fearsomeness and a dark, globe-spanning power that could spit in the eye of each great Western nation, one by one. On the other hand, the Western nations could not be brought around to seeing even a shred of good in al-Qaeda. By the summer of 2014, their intelligence agencies had all but cut off the flow of weapons and cash with which they had earlier nourished the Syrian rebellion. That summer, after the day’s work had been done, when they were lounging on their pillows and scrolling through their iPads, the high command sometimes allowed me to sit with them. Though many learned men debated the question at great volume late into the night, even then it was obvious, at least to me, that the al-Qaeda brand was about to be kicked into the gutter.

“They called us terrorists/ I told them, what an honor you’ve done me.” This was the opening line of one of Jabhat al-Nusra’s most crowd-pleasing, brand-amplifying anthems. It certainly filled the rank and file with esprit de corps. It brought along the schoolkids too, as it had a catchy tune and audacious lyrics (“We destroyed the trade towers/with civilian airplanes we did it/ reduced them to dust, ahh!”) Increasingly, however, the outside world was failing to understand. Thus, that summer, whenever a media contact outside Syria rang up a commander inside the truck, whoever was closest to the stereo system made sure to kill the volume. 


Política externa de Lula 2 já queria estreitar relações com a Siria do ditador Assad - Jamil Chade (Wikileaks)

 Transcrevendo apenas: 

Os telegramas secretos de Assad

Por Jamil Chade


A guerra civil na Síria, em 2011, interrompeu de forma brusca uma ofensiva diplomática entre o Brasil e o então presidente Bashar al-Assad para estreitar relações, numa estratégia que incluía até mesmo o estabelecimento de uma zona de livre comércio entre a Síria e o Mercosul.

Isso é o que revelam dezenas de emails enviados por autoridades sírias e brasileiras entre a capital do país no Oriente Médio, Brasília e São Paulo.

Os documentos fazem parte do 2 milhões de emails que o grupo Wikileaks conseguiu reunir envolvendo a Síria e suas relações com dezenas de países pelo mundo. Os emails são enviados pelo gabinete de Assad, por diversos ministérios, embaixadas, consulados e pessoas ligadas ao governo.

O UOL teve acesso aos emails que escancaram uma relação intensa entre Brasília e Damasco nos últimos meses de 2010, às vésperas do início de uma guerra que duraria mais de dez anos. Em fevereiro de 2011, começaria o confronto entre rebeldes e o governo de Assad que gerou mais de 5 milhões de refugiados e mais de 300 mil mortos.

Num dos documentos, de 16 de agosto de 2010 e enviado pela chancelaria síria, um plano completo da aproximação é desenhado. Além de acordos no setor da educação, em tributação e mesmo no setor de saúde incluindo o Hospital Sírio Libanês, o projeto cita explicitamente a abertura de negociações para o "estabelecimento de uma zona de livre comércio entre a Síria e o Mercosul". Hoje, o Mercosul já tem um acordo similar com Israel.

Em outro email, membros do Protocolo do Itamaraty explicam aos sírios como deveria ser organizado o desembarque do presidente Assad no aeroporto de Guarulhos, em São Paulo. Além de disponibilizar mais de dez carros blindados, com motoristas que faziam parte da Policia Federal, os organizadores da chegada de Assad alertam para o "trânsito de São Paulo".

Mas lamentaram o fato de que não teriam como "fechar ou bloquear ruas" para a passagem do cortejo do ditador.

Leia matéria completa:

https://noticias.uol.com.br/colunas/jamil-chade/2024/12/09/telegramas-revelam-interesse-de-assad-pelo-brasil-e-proposta-ao-mercosul.htm


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