US Media Suppressed Their Government's Role in Ousting Brazil's Government
DECEMBER 20, 2023
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BRIAN MIER
In a new peer-reviewed academic article in Latin American Perspectives (11/19/23), Anticorruption and Imperialist Blind Spots: The Role of the United States in Brazils 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 Brazils long coup. This was the period from 2014, beginning with the lead up to the illegitimate 2016 impeachment of Dilma Rousseff, to the November 2019 release 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 governments role in removing Brazils front-running presidential candidate in the 2018 elections, opening the door for the right-wing extremist No. 2 candidate, Jair Bolsonaro.
For nearly five years, Brazils huge anti-corruption investigation, called Operation Car Wash (Lava Jato in Portuguese), received glowing coverage in US media (FAIR.org, 3/8/21). 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 Silvas defense teams law offices (Consultor Jurídico, 12/19/19).
This narrative began to crack in 2019, thanks to a long, slowly released series of articles in the Intercept, based on a huge archive of hacked Telegram chats revealed 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 didnt have enough evidence to prosecute Lula in a fair trial (Intercept, 6/9/19).
More:
https://fair.org/home/us-media-suppressed-their-governments-role-in-ousting-brazils-government/