What Washington most Fears in President-Elect Lula is his Foreign Policy
by Steve Ellner
Consortium News
President Biden kept a promise to
Lula da Silva by congratulating him minutes after Sunday’s electoral results
were announced. The idea was that calling Brazil’s presidential elections “free,
fair and credible” would deter incumbent Jair Bolsonaro from crying fraud
and refusing to step down from office. Pundits have interpreted the Biden
administration’s words on the Brazilian election as a demonstration that it was
rooting for Lula over his opponent, known as “Tropical
Trump.” This reasoning is at best misleading, if not completely faulty.
What has Washington most worried is
the reemergence of a powerful non-aligned movement and the prospect that a
progressive like Lula be situated at its helm. During his previous two
presidencies from 2003 to 2010, Lula cast himself as a spokesman for the Global
South. Times have changed since then. There is a growing number of
ideologically heterogeneous governments that were formerly subservient to the
U.S. and are now boldly defying Washington’s dictates, thus creating a fertile
ground for a bloc of non-aligned nations.
Furthermore, the total inability of
the world’s major powers, specifically the U.S. and Western Europe, to broker
an agreement to end the Ukraine conflict, opens space for a leader like Lula
who throughout his career has excelled at negotiating with politicians of
distinct political orientations.
Foreign Policy in the Forefront
Lula’s victory on Sunday was razor-thin with 50.9 percent of
the vote. Furthermore, just as during his past presidencies (2003-20010), the
center and right, including Bolsonaro’s allied parties, will control congress.
This unfavorable balance of power will undoubtedly force Lula into making
concessions on the domestic front, such as possibly softening his campaign
pledge to tax the rich.
But on foreign policy he will be under less domestic pressure
and is poised to keep his campaign promise to play a key role in regional and
world affairs. In his victory speech in Sao Paulo on Sunday he pledged to
reverse Brazil’s “pariah” international status, the result of Bolsonaro’s contempt for diplomacy
and his outrageous statements, such as blaming China for COVID and Leonardo
DiCaprio for the Amazonian fires in 2019.
Shortly after coming to power in
2003, the Washington establishment viewed Lula as reliable and moderate and a
counter to firebrands such as Hugo Chávez, Evo Morales and Néstor Kirchner. Mexico’s
former foreign minister Jorge Castañeda, in his famous book Leftovers:
Tales of the Two Latin American Lefts, praised Lula as levelheaded and
contrasted him with the “bad left” of Chávez and company who he characterized
as “populist,” and “anti-American.”
But the favorable characterization
of Lula changed in 2010. And it changed not as a result of Lula’s domestic
policies, but rather his foreign policy, specifically his recognition of a
Palestinian state on the basis of 1967 borders, after which half a dozen other
Latin American governments followed suite. The same year Lula, in the words of
Reuters, “angered
Washington” over his talks with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and defense of Iran’s
nuclear program.
After that, Lula was no longer the pragmatic
leftist answer to irresponsible populism, but was rather himself a populist. The
Wall Street Journal titled an article on the first round of the
presidential elections held on October 2 which favored Lula over Bolsonaro, “Populism
Wins Brazil’s Election” by editor Mary Anastasia O’Grady, who wrote: “Now
candidate Lula is again promising moderation. His greatest political
advantage is his image as a benevolent populist.”
Rhetoric is an important element of
populism, but in Lula’s case, what has the U.S. worried is the concrete actions
that as president he may undertake that would shake U.S. hegemony. The threat
stems largely from the bloc of five powerhouse nations which form BRICS:
Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa. Skeptical Washington actors and
pundits had called the group’s summits “talk
shops” by governments that had little or nothing in common. That was the gist of Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s “Remember BRICS?” tweet upon leaving office in which he
insinuated that India’s and Brazil’s fear of Russia and China made the
organization useless. Now, two years later and with Lula as
president-elect, the skepticism appears completely unfounded.
In an interview from prison in 2019
Lula declared “BRICS
was not created to be an instrument of defense, but to be an instrument of
attack.” His
references on the campaign trail to BRICS, as well as regional organizations
such as CELAC (which Bolsonaro withdrew from) and UNASUR, reinforced this
message. After meeting with Lula on Monday, the day after his triumph,
Argentine president Alberto Fernández stated “‘with Lula, we will now have an activist for our bid’ to join BRICS.”
Washington views BRICS’ expansion
as a threat, exacerbated by Russia’s and China’s membership in the organization.
In the closing weeks of Brazil’s presidential campaign, the National Endowment
for Democracy (NED), wrote “With
the BRICS…set to expand to include Argentina, Iran, and possibly Egypt,
Saudi Arabia, and Turkey, Russia may acquire even more partners, ones that
together represent a significant percentage of global GDP and a large
percentage of the world’s population.”
How “Neutral” is Lula?
Washington can’t be at all pleased
by Lula’s position on the Ukrainian conflict. Lula has insisted that BRICS play
a role in the search for a negotiated solution and that he is committed to attempting
to broker an agreement. In the words of Telesur,
Lula stated that “peace
could be reached at a bar table, which caused uneasiness in the diplomatic
representation of Ukraine in Brazil.”
But it’s not just the fear that
Lula is closer to Russia and China than Washington (which he is) that keeps
U.S. policymakers up at night. Unlike Washington, Lula has acknowledged the legitimacy of
Venezuelan democracy and, in the words of Ben Norton, has told the local media that
U.S.-recognized president Juan Guaidó is a “warmongering
criminal who should be in prison.” On the eve of the elections, Lula told the Economist
“People only talk about Nicaragua, Cuba, and
Venezuela. Nobody talks about Qatar. Nobody talks about the United States.”
Since Lula’s Workers’ Party lost power in 2016, Lula has
insisted that the BRICS’ major shortcoming was its failure to launch a new
currency that would rival the dollar. In an interview from prison, Lula
recalled “when
I discussed a new currency… Obama called me, telling me, ‘Are you trying to
create a new currency, a new euro?’ I said, ‘No, I’m just trying to get rid of
the US dollar.’” In 2022 the prospects for a BRICS reserve currency are much
more promising and its five member countries are behind the idea. Indeed, this
year the currencies of all five BRICS nations have outperformed the Euro.
Washington’s political weaponization of the dollar goes beyond the super-power
rivalry with Russia and China as U.S.-imposed international sanctions have
brought misery to people of the Global South including Cuba, Venezuela, Iran, and
Nicaragua.
The “multipolar world” catchword
frequently used by Lula envisions the emergence of diverse blocs including that
of the non-aligned nations. An article in this summer’s issue of Foreign
Policy by a national security expert reflects the thinking of many in
Washington who are wary of non-alignment. “When
the international system is failing or absent…, it is no surprise that
leaders turn to nonalignment. The more the United States, Russia, China, or
other powers pressure other countries to choose sides, the more those countries
will be drawn to strategic autonomy, which could create a poorer and crueler
world as countries reduce external dependence and consolidate their homefronts.”
Some on the
left are also uneasy with the multipolar world slogan. Longtime political
activist Greg Godels calls multipolarity “a notion first discussed by bourgeois academics looking for tools
to understand the dynamics of global relations” and adds “there are no
guarantees that the poles that emerge or challenge the post-Cold War super-pole
are a step forward or a step back simply because they are alternative poles.” Godels
is correct in the abstract, but so far in the twenty-first century
multipolarity has been a progressive slogan and movement. True, the presence of
the racist government of Narendra
Modi and that of Saudi Arabia in BRICS casts doubts on the organization’s progressiveness.
Saudi Arabia’s recent surprising
decision to buck the U.S. by rejecting Biden’s plea to pump more oil to help
lower international prices and hurt Russia doesn’t make the nation any less
reactionary. But that’s precisely why the leadership of a progressive
like Lula at the world level is of such importance. One has to recall that the
original non-aligned movement was founded in the 1950s by leaders like Josip
Broz Tito, Gamal Abdel Nasser and Kwame Nkrumah, who were hardly “neutral” as all were left leaning
and committed to socialism. The movement played a key role in favor of
decolonization, disarmament, and opposition to racism and apartheid.
Similarly,
Lula is hardly a neutral. Indeed, he has not
hidden his suspicion that U.S. investigators collaborated with Brazilian
prosecutors in putting him behind bars, an accusation that has been well
document by the news outlet Brasilwire.
The best demonstration that Lula’s
pragmatism does not stand in the way of his defense of principled positions on
foreign affairs is his recognition of the Palestinian state and the resultant
overwhelming support he has received from Palestinians both home and abroad. In
the first round of the presidential elections, Lula received 592 votes in the
West Bank, as opposed to Bolsonaro’s 52.
Once again, Latin America has become
the one and only bright spot in the world for progressive politics and goals.
Lula is poised to become the leader of the progressive tide that has swept
Latin America, beginning with Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s electoral victory
in 2018. But the real question mark is whether Lula will put his political
savvy to test by playing a leadership role in favor of a progressive brand of
multipolarity in a growing movement worldwide that is challenging U.S. hegemony
and that cuts across the political spectrum.
Steve
Ellner is a retired professor from Venezuela’s Universidad de Oriente and
currently an Associate Managing Editor of Latin American Perspectives.
His latest book is his co-edited Latin American Social Movements and
Progressive Governments: Creative Tensions between Resistance and Convergence
(Rowman and Littlefield, 2022).
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home