The
diminishing of Brazil
Brazil's
Lula da Silva has been humiliated by Venezuela's
Hugo Chávez. But there are limits to the new
giant's clout
May
11th 2006 | BRASÍLIA - IT HAS long been the dream
of Brazil's politicians and diplomats to augment their
country's stature in the world by positioning it as
the undisputed leader of a united South America. But
as Latin America's leaders gather this weekend in Vienna
for a meeting with their European counterparts, their
region has rarely looked so divided. And many Brazilians
complain that their president, Luiz Inácio Lula
da Silva, is being turned into an irrelevant bystander
in his own backyard by Hugo Chávez, Venezuela's
oil-rich populist leader.
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"Where
Brazil wants to integrate, Venezuela wants to
divide."
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The
immediate uproar was prompted on May 1st by the decision
by Evo Morales, Bolivia's socialist president, to order
the nationalisation of his country's oil and gas industry.
He was fulfilling a campaign promise. But he was advised,
and apparently inspired, by Mr Chávez. The chief
victim of his decision was Brazil. It is the largest
consumer of Bolivian gas. Petrobras, the Brazilian national
oil company, was the largest investor there. Brazil
may now have to pay up to 60% more for the gas.
Lula's
response looked feeble. Instead of asserting Brazil's
contractual rights, he held a meeting not just with
the Bolivian leader and Argentina's president, Néstor
Kirchner, but also with Mr Chávez on May 4th.
Lula said that Bolivia was acting within its rights.
In return, Mr Morales offered to refrain from cutting
off gas supplies and to negotiate their price.
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But
Brazil has failed to articulate a clear alternative
to chavismo.
For
that, Brazilians may soon pay a price.
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To
critics of the Lula government, Brazil's meekness unmasked
the confusion at the heart of its foreign policy. In
making alliances, they claim, it has put presumed ideological
affinity above national interest and a rules-based approach
to regional integration. The entire thrust of
Brazilian diplomacy for the past 20 years has been damaged,
wrote Rubens Barbosa, a former ambassador to Washington,
in a newspaper column.
Since
Lula is likely to seek a second term at an election
in October, there is some partisanship in such criticisms.
Officials say that Brazil will never use a big stick
against its neighbours. But there is also some foundation.
Take the United States, Brazil's largest single trading
partner. Celso Amorim, the foreign minister, insists
that good relations are essential for Brazil.
But according to his deputy, Samuel Pinheiro Guimarães,
who is the foreign ministry's chief ideologue, Brazil
must react to the political initiatives...of the
hyperpower by promoting political alliances
with the states of the periphery.
That
has led Brazil to stress relations with countries in
Africa, the Middle East and Asia, with meagre results.
For good reasons, Brazil favoured the Doha round of
world-trade talks over the 34-country Free Trade Area
of the Americas (FTAA), sponsored by the United States.
But with the Doha round floundering, Brazil is left
with few alternatives.
On
taking office in January 2003, Lula proclaimed regional
integration to be his top foreign-policy priority. Yet
Mercosur, the putative customs union established by
Brazil with Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay in 1994,
has never been in greater disarray. Brazil went
for a dream of South American unity before strengthening
and deepening Mercosur, says Alfredo Valladão
of Sciences-Po, a French university.
A
12-country South American Community of Nations, launched
in 2004, is doomed to irrelevance by internal splits.
Colombia and Peru have joined Chile, Mexico and Central
America in signing bilateral trade agreements with the
United States. Now Uruguay is threatening to follow
suit. Mercosur is more a problem than a solution
for Uruguay, its president, Tabaré Vázquez,
said recently. Brazil has done nothing to restrain Argentina's
Mr Kirchner from trying to bully Uruguay into halting
two big paper mills, which he claims will pollute a
shared river.
We
have not done everything we should have done for smaller
economies in Mercosur, admits Mr Amorim. The group
needs an integrated industrial policy and
a common policy on government procurement, things which
require a change in culture, especially in the
bigger countries, he says.
Mr
Chávez's project is very different from Brazil's.
He has signed up Mr Morales to the Bolivarian
Alternative, his political alliance with communist
Cuba. He wants nothing to do with countries that sign
trade agreements with the United States. Where Brazil
wants to integrate, Venezuela wants to divide. Under
Mr Chávez, an elected autocrat, Venezuela has
respected neither contracts nor democratic norms. Yet
not only has Brazil remained silent about such conduct,
it has encouraged Venezuela to join Mercosur. Such reticence
to scold is partly because Brazilian construction firms
have big projects in Venezuela, says Rafael Villa, a
Venezuelan at the University of São Paulo.
A
hard line against Venezuela would backfire, counters
Mr Amorim. He says that within the limits of non-intervention
Brazil uses whatever influence it has to reinforce democracy
in Venezuela. That influence, he claims, is limited
by the United States, which has blocked the sale of
Brazilian aircraft to Venezuela. The verbal cold
war between Mr Chávez and George Bush's
administration makes it much more difficult to build
bridges between Venezuela's government and the opposition,
he says.
Maybe
so. But Brazil has failed to articulate a clear alternative
to chavismo. Not so long ago, its leaders had a vision
of regional integration based on the outspoken defence
of democracy, respect for treaties and on linking Mercosur
to the world through, for example, a free-trade pact
with the EU. It is hard not to conclude that this vision
is being sacrificed to a puerile impulse to embrace
those who peddle the populist rhetoric of anti-imperialism.
For that, Brazilians may soon pay a price.
