August 31, 2019, Strategic Culture
Foundation (Russia) https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2019/08/31/brics-was-created-as-a-tool-of-attack-lula/
Former Brazilian leader Lula speaks from a room in a prison in southern Brazil. Photo: Editora Brasil 247
Pepe ESCOBAR
Former Brazilian leader wishes emerging economies
were closer, recalls Obama ‘crashing’ Copenhagen climate meet
In
a wide-ranging, two-hour-plus, exclusive interview from a prison room in
Curitiba in southern Brazil, former Brazilian president Luis Inacio Lula da
Silva re-emerged for the first time, after more than 500 days in jail, and sent
a clear message to the world.
Amid
the 24/7 media frenzy of scripted sound bites and “fake news”, it’s virtually
impossible to find a present or former head of state anywhere, in a
conversation with journalists, willing to speak deep from his soul, to comment
on all current political developments and relish telling stories about the
corridors of power. And all that while still in prison.
The first part of this
mini-series focused on the Amazon. Here, we will focus on Brazil’s relationship
with BRICS and Beijing. BRICS is
the grouping of major emerging economies – Brazil, Russia, India and China –
that formed
in 2006 and then included South Africa in their annual meetings
from 2010.
My
first question to Lula was about BRICS and the current geopolitical chessboard,
with the US facing a Russia-China strategic partnership. As president, from
2003 to 2010, Lula was instrumental in formatting and expanding the influence
of BRICS – in sharp contrast with Brazil’s current President, Jair Bolsonaro,
who appears to be convinced that China is a threat.
Lula
stressed that Brazil should have been getting closer to China in a mirror
process of what occurred between Russia and China: “When there was a BRICS
summit here in Ceará state in Brazil, I told comrade Dilma [Rousseff, the
former president] that we should organize a pact like the Russia-China pact. A
huge pact giving the Chinese part of what they wanted, which was Brazil’s
capacity to produce food and energy and also the capacity to have access to
technological knowledge. Brazil needed a lot of infrastructure. We needed
high-speed rail, many things. But in the end that did not happen.”
Lula
defined his top priorities as he supported the creation of BRICS: economic
autonomy, and uniting a group of nations capable of helping what the Washington
consensus describes as LDCs – least developed countries.
He
emphasized: “BRICS was not created to be an instrument of defense, but to be an
instrument of attack. So we could create our own currency to become independent
from the US dollar in our trade relations; to create a development bank, which
we did – but it is still too timid – to create something strong capable of
helping the development of the poorest parts of the world.”
Lula
made an explicit reference to the United States’ fears about a new currency:
“This was the logic behind BRICS, to do something different and not copy
anybody. The US was very much afraid when I discussed a new currency and 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. I’m just trying not to
be dependent.’”
One
can imagine how this went down in Washington.
Obama
may have been trying to warn Lula that the US ‘Deep State’ would never allow
BRICS to invest in a currency or basket of currencies to bypass the US dollar.
Later on, Vladimir Putin and Erdogan would warn President Dilma – before she
was impeached – that Brazil would be mercilessly targeted. In the end, the
leadership of the Workers’ Party was caught totally unprepared by a conjunction
of sophisticated hybrid-war techniques.
One
of the largest economies in the world was taken over by hardcore neoliberals,
practically without any struggle. Lula confirmed it in the interview, saying:
“We should look at where we got it wrong.”
Lula
also hit a note of personal disappointment. He expected much more from BRICS.
“I imagined a more aggressive BRICS, more proactive and more creative. ‘The
Soviet empire has already fallen; let’s create a democratic empire.’ I think we
made some advances, but we advanced slowly. BRICS should be much stronger by now.”
Lula,
Obama and China
It’s
easy to imagine how what has followed went down in Beijing. That explains to a
great extent the immense respect Lula enjoys among the Chinese leadership. And
it’s also relevant to the current global debate about what’s happening in the
Amazon. Let just Lula tell the story in his own, inimitable, Garcia
Marquez-tinged way.
“One
thing that the Chinese must remember, a lot of people were angry in Brazil when
I recognized China as a market economy. Many of my friends were against it. But
I said, ‘No, I want the Chinese at the negotiating table, not outside. Is there
any discord? Put them inside the WTO, let’s legalize everything.’ I know that
[Chinese President] Hu Jintao was much pleased.
“Another
thing we did with China was at the COP-15 [Conference of Parties to the UN
Framework Convention on Climate Change] in Copenhagen in 2009. Let me tell you
something: I arrived at COP-15 and there was a list of people requesting
audiences with me – Angela Markel, Sarkozy, Gordon Brown; Obama had already
called twice – and I didn’t know why I was important. What did they all want?
They all wanted us to agree, at COP-15, that China was the prime polluting evil
on earth. Sarkozy came to talk to me with a cinematographic assembly line,
there were 30 cameras, a real show: Lula accusing China. Then I had a series of
meetings and I told them all, ‘Look, I know China is polluting. But who is
going to pay for the historical pollution you perpetrated before China
polluted? Where is the history commission to analyze English
industrialization?’’
“Then
something fantastic happened. An agreement was not in sight, I wanted Sarkozy
to talk to Ahmadinejad – later I’ll tell you this thing about Iran [he did,
later in the interview]. Ahmadinejad did not go to our dinner, so there was no
meeting. But then, we were discussing, discussing, and I told Celso [Amorim,
Brazil’s Foreign Minister], ‘Look, Celso, there’s a problem, this meeting will
end without an agreement, and they are going to blame Brazil, China, India,
Russia. We need to find a solution.’ Then I proposed that Celso call the
Chinese and set up a parallel meeting. That was between Brazil, China, India
and perhaps South Africa. Russia, I think, was not there. And in this meeting,
imagine our surprise when Hillary Clinton finds out about it and tries to get
inside the meeting. The Chinese didn’t let her. All these Chinese, so nervous
behind the door, and then comes Obama. Obama wanted to get in and the Chinese
didn’t let him. China was being represented by Jiabao [Wen Jiabao, the prime
minister].
“Then
we let Obama in, Obama said, ‘I’m gonna sit down beside my friend Lula so I
won’t be attacked here.’ So he sat by my side and started to talk about the
agreement, and we said there is no agreement. And then there was this Chinese,
a negotiator, he was so angry at Obama, he was standing up, speaking in
Mandarin, nobody understood anything, we asked for a translation, Jiabao did
not allow it, but the impression, by his gesticulation, was that the Chinese
was hurling all sorts of names at Obama, he talked aggressively, pointing his
finger, and Obama said, ‘He is angry.’ The Brazilian ambassador, who said she
understood a little bit of Mandarin – she said he used some pretty heavy words.
“The
concrete fact is that in this meeting we amassed a great deal of credibility,
because we refused to blame the Chinese. I remember a plenary session where
Sarkozy, Obama and myself were scheduled to speak. I was the last speaker. When
I arrived at the plenary there was nothing, not a thing written on a piece of
paper. I told one of my aides, please go out, prepare a few talking points for
me, and when he left the room they called me to speak; they had inverted the
schedule. I was very nervous. But that day I made a good speech. It got a
standing ovation. I don’t know what kind of nonsense I said [laughs]. Then
Obama started speaking. He didn’t have anything to say. So there was this
mounting rumor in the plenary: He ended up making a speech that no one noticed.
And then with Sarkozy, the same thing.
“What
I had spoken about was the role of Brazil in the environmental question. I’ll
get someone from the Workers’ Party to find this speech for you. The new trend
in Brazil is to try to compare policies between myself and Bolsonaro. You
cannot accept his line that NGOs are setting fire to the Amazon. Those burning
the Amazon are his voters, businessmen, people with very bad blood, people who
want to kill indigenous tribes, people who want to kill the poor.”
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