From FAIR <[email protected]>
Subject US Media Suppressed Their Government's Role in Ousting Brazil's Government
Date December 20, 2023 11:55 PM
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US Media Suppressed Their Government's Role in Ousting Brazil's Government Brian Mier ([link removed])


In a new peer-reviewed academic article in Latin American Perspectives (11/19/23 ([link removed]) ), "Anticorruption and Imperialist Blind Spots: The Role of the United States in Brazil’s Long Coup," Sean T. Mitchell, Rafael Ioris, Kathy Swart, Bryan Pitts and I prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that the US Department of Justice was a key actor in what we call Brazil's "long coup." This was the period from 2014, beginning with the lead up to the illegitimate ([link removed]) 2016 impeachment of Dilma Rousseff, to the November 2019 release ([link removed]) of then-former, now-current President Lula da Silva from political imprisonment.

"For over half a century, intervening against democratically elected governments has been only half the story," we wrote; "the second half involves justifying, minimizing or denying US involvement." The article criticized US scholars on Latin America for ignoring a significant body of evidence of this involvement. It called on Latin Americanists to return to the anti-imperialist tradition that established their field as a leading source of informed criticism of US foreign policy.

In this article, I will make the same call to US journalists who lived in Brazil during this period who remained silent about their government's role in removing Brazil’s front-running presidential candidate in the 2018 elections, opening the door for the right-wing extremist No. 2 candidate, Jair Bolsonaro.


** Collusion revealed
------------------------------------------------------------
Intercept: Keep It Confidential

The Intercept (3/12/20 ([link removed]) ) explored "The Secret History of US Involvement in Brazil’s Scandal-Wracked Operation Car Wash."

For nearly five years, Brazil’s huge anti-corruption investigation, called Operation Car Wash (Lava Jato in Portuguese), received glowing coverage in US media (FAIR.org, 3/8/21 ([link removed]) ). Articles treated investigation and trial judge Sergio Moro as a heroic, anti-corruption crusader, rarely challenging the public prosecutors' official narrative. Media failed to question judicial overreach, even when prosecutors did things like illegally wiretap former President Lula da Silva’s defense team’s law offices (Consultor Jurídico, 12/19/19 ([link removed]) ).

This narrative began to crack in 2019, thanks to a long, slowly released series of articles ([link removed]) in the Intercept, based on a huge archive of hacked Telegram chats revealed ([link removed]) by hacker Walter Neto Delgatti. The texts showed collusion between the Operation Car Wash taskforce and Judge Sergio Moro, and revealed, among other things, that they knew they didn’t have enough evidence to prosecute Lula in a fair trial (Intercept, 6/9/19 ([link removed]) ).

Four months after Lula was released from jail, while the Covid-19 pandemic was dominating world headlines, Intercept Brazil’s 97th article in the series (3/12/20 ([link removed]) ) revealed that a team of 18 FBI agents, led ([link removed]) by special agent Leslie Backschies, had met regularly with members of the Car Wash taskforce for years.

During these meetings, FBI agents coached the Brazilian prosecutors on using media leaks to damage the reputation of top-ranking Workers Party officials, including Lula. They also gave lessons on effective use of the coerced plea bargain, an ethically questionable ([link removed] prosecutors use the threat,a plea despite their innocence.) tactic, widespread in the US, that had recently been legalized in Brazil.

The Intercept article was the final evidence that Brazilian journalists who had been challenging the official narrative on Operation Car Wash had been waiting for for years. However, there was already enough public record ([link removed]) of the DoJ role in Car Wash before the Intercept article. In June 2019, Brazilian congressmember Paulo Pimenta had presented a dossier ([link removed]) to the European Parliament, and a group of Democratic US congressmembers, in which he made a convincing argument that DoJ wasn't just a partner, it was leading the investigation.


** Hardly a secret
------------------------------------------------------------
NYT: Secret Unit Helped Brazilian Company Bribe Government Officials

This 2016 New York Times article (12/21/16 ([link removed]) ) was the paper's last acknowledgment of the US role in Brazil's corrupt anti-corruption taskforce until 2021 (2/26/21 ([link removed]) ).

The US role in Operation Car Wash was hardly a secret that had to be uncovered by rigorous investigative reporting. Between December 2016 and June 2019, the DoJ publicly acknowledged its relationship with the Car Wash taskforce in a handful of press releases and a speech (7/19/17 ([link removed]) ) made by Acting Assistant Attorney General Kenneth Blanco at the Atlantic Council.

For example, the DoJ put out a press release (12/21/16 ([link removed]) ) about the largest foreign bribery case ever settled in a US court, which levied $3.5 billion in fines on Brazil's Odebrecht Construction Company and Braskem Petrochemicals. The release bragged about the collaboration of the FBI's New York field office, the DoJ Criminal Division’s Office of International Affairs and the US SEC with Brazil's Federal Public Ministry and Federal Police.

A Reuters article (12/21/16 ([link removed]) ) on the same subject described Operation Car Wash as a Brazilian investigation that involved collaboration with US authorities, who said they hoped "to pursue more criminal cases that fall under their jurisdiction."

The New York Times article (12/21/16 ([link removed]) ) on the ruling described Operation Car Wash and quoted Sung-Hee Suh, deputy assistant attorney general of the DoJ Criminal Division:

Such brazen wrongdoing calls for a strong response from law enforcement, and through a strong effort with our colleagues in Brazil and Switzerland, we have seen just that.

In 2016, US collaboration in Operation Car Wash was also widely covered in Brazil's corporate media. For example, one of Brazil's largest daily newspapers, Estado de S. Paulo, ran an article (5/21/16 ([link removed]) ) whose headline translates as "US Justice Department Increases Corruption Investigations Against Car Wash Companies." The story reported:

DoJ staff have been in permanent contact with the Brazilian judiciary in search of information on corruption, and also to collaborate with Brazilian investigations, say our sources. Recently, the chief of the Department of Justice's FCPA Unit, Patrick Stokes, came to Curitiba, where he spent four days meeting with Judge Sergio Moro and members of the Car Wash taskforce.

December 21, 2016, was the last time US involvement in Operation Car Wash would be mentioned in the New York Times until February 26, 2021, in an op-ed article (2/26/21 ([link removed]) ) by Gaspard Estrada.


** Disappearing connection
------------------------------------------------------------

Anyone who was following news on Brazil closely should have known by the end of 2016 that the US DoJ was a partner in Operation Car Wash. Furthermore, even if a journalist had missed all the articles in the US and Brazilian media about the DoJ's role in the investigation in 2016, wouldn't the long history of US interference in progressive governments in Latin America prompt any reporter interested in finding the truth to investigate the issue?

To the contrary, during that horrible year of 2017, when the coup government set labor rights back ([link removed]) 80 years, privatized ([link removed]) key sectors of Brazil's economy, drove millions below the hunger line ([link removed]) and set up Brazil's most popular ([link removed]) political leader in history for arrest without presenting any material evidence, the issue of US involvement in the process all but disappeared in the US media.

In July 2017, Acting Assistant Attorney General Kenneth Blanco gave a speech at the Atlantic Council that was transcribed and published on the DoJ website ([link removed]) and made available for viewing on YouTube. In it, he bragged about Lula's conviction and praised the constant, informal communications between DoJ officials and the Car Wash taskforce.
New Yorker: The Most Important Criminal Conviction in Brazil’s History

The New Yorker labeled the trumped-up prosecution of Lula da Silva "the Most Important Criminal Conviction in Brazil's History"—but failed to note the US role in taking Lula down.

That September, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist turned Fox News regular Glenn Greenwald gave a keynote speech ([link removed]) at an event hosted by Canadian billionaire Peter Allard, in which he heaped lavish praise on the Car Wash taskforce. Nevertheless, in early 2019, he would accept a portion of the leaked Telegram chats between the taskforce members, leading to the Intercept article series that demonstrated their collusion with Judge Sergio Moro. It was a brave act of journalism that earned Greenwald numerous death threats. But as of April 2022, as documented in a FAIR article (4/3/22 ([link removed]) ), he still hadn't mentioned US involvement in the investigation.

On the pages of the New Yorker in July 2017 (7/13/17 ([link removed]) ), Alex Cuadros, who had honed a progressive image, labeled the kangaroo court procedure that removed Lula from the 2018 elections, which ushered in the presidency of the neo-fascist Bolsonaro, "the Most Important Criminal Conviction in Brazil's History." He made no mention of the DoJ's role in this "most important" conviction.

Moving forward, a slew of 2019 "what went wrong" articles released after Lula's arrest, Bolsonaro's rise to the presidency, and his appointment of Car Wash judge Sergio Moro as Justice Minister, including Vincent Bevins' Atlantic article "The Dirty Problems With Operation Car Wash" (8/21/19 ([link removed]) ), failed to mention the dirty hand of the US.

Even progressive Jacobin, which ran 38 articles with a negative take on the Brazilian Workers Party between 2014 and the end of 2017 (Brasilwire, 12/12/18 ([link removed]) ), appears to have only run its first ([link removed]) article mentioning US involvement in Operation Car Wash in August 2020, five months after the Intercept (3/12/20 ([link removed]) ) finally published leaked Telegram chats documenting collusion with the DoJ and FBI and 9 months after Lula was released from jail.


** Too high a career cost?
------------------------------------------------------------

Why would so many Brazil specialists—even those like Greenwald and Bevins, who have reputations as being fierce critics of US involvement in coups in other countries—remain silent on the DoJ's role in Brazil's long coup?

Could they have simply missed the 2016 New York Times and Reuters articles, the DoJ press releases and the Brazilian press coverage of the issue? If so, it shows that they aren't as knowledgeable about Brazilian politics as they present themselves to the reading public.

But more likely, the omission of the DoJ role suggests that there’s a much higher perceived cost, career-wise, to saying “the US has corrupted this government” than “this government is corrupt.”

If, for whatever motive, journalists knew about Washington's involvement and chose not to write about it—as a Guardian journalist made clear to me in a personal conversation in April 2018, on the eve of Lula’s arrest—they are complacent in what Gaspard Estrada (New York Times, 2/26/21 ([link removed]) ) calls "the biggest judicial scandal in Brazilian history."



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