By Andres Oppenheimer. aoppenheimer@herald.com. Posted on
Thu, Aug. 15, 2002 in The Miami
Herald.
SAO PAULO - Luiz Inacio ''Lula'' da Silva, a longtime critic of the U.S.
role in Latin America, could become Brazil's next president, but he rejects
speculation that he would form a political alliance with Venezuela and Cuba to
promote anti-American sentiment in the region.
Still, da Silva said, he considers himself ''a friend of Cuba'' who would
demand the island's inclusion in the U.S.-proposed Free Trade Area of the
Americas.
In his first public reaction to claims by U.S. conservatives that he would
form an ''axis of evil'' with Fidel Castro and Hugo Chávez of Venezuela,
the veteran leftist leader said in written responses to questions submitted by
The Herald that such forecasts see the world "as if we were in the midst of
the Cold War era.''
Last week, conservative former White House aide Constantine C. Menges wrote
in The Washington Times that "if the pro-Castro candidate [da Silva] is
elected president of Brazil, the results could include a radical regime . . .
developing close links to state sponsors of terrorism such as Cuba, Iraq and
Iran.''
Da Silva, leading in the polls for the October presidential election,
rejected the suggestion as absurd. The 57-year-old former steelworker, who has
already made three failed attempts to win the presidency, defined himself as a
democratic fighter for social justice whose heroes are Nelson Mandela, Mahatma
Gandhi and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
''I have never been a populist, and I will never become one,'' he said.
Da Silva said that ''the real axis of evil'' was made up of the U.S.-backed
pro-free-market presidents who ruled Latin America's biggest countries in the
preceding decade: Carlos Salinas of Mexico, Carlos Menem of Argentina, Alberto
Fujimori of Peru and Fernando Collor de Mello of Brazil.
''As it became clear later,'' da Silva said, "the four were corrupt
presidents, who ruled their countries as if they were playing roulette in a Las
Vegas casino.''
LEADS IN POLL
According to a poll released by the Vox Populi firm this week, da Silva is
leading in voters' preferences with 34 percent, followed by left-of-center
former Ceará Gov. Ciro Gomes with 29 percent and government-backed
centrist Jose Serra with 12 percent. The election is Oct. 6. If no candidate
wins a majority, the top two candidates will face a runoff Oct. 27.
Alternating harsh anti-American rhetoric reminiscent of the 1960s with
efforts to moderate his language in pursuit of middle-class voters, the Workers'
Party candidate tried to distance himself from the Forum de Sao Paulo, a group
of mostly hard-line communist and leftist parties from around the world that he
helped found in 1990. Its last meeting was held in Havana in December.
But, he added, "What unites us is the rejection of the economic
policies that have been imposed over the past 15 years in most countries of the
hemisphere.''
Da Silva declined to explicitly criticize the absence of fundamental
freedoms in Cuba, unlike other democratic left-of-center leaders around the
world who have asked for more political space for the political opposition.
Asked whether, in addition to condemning the U.S. economic sanctions on
Cuba, he would criticize the lack of democracy on the island, he said, "I
have been in Cuba many times over the past 20 years, and I don't hide the fact
that I consider myself a friend of Cuba, and an admirer of the Cuban people.
Cuba is a small country that managed to face and resist to this date the
pressures from the United States, and that pays a high cost for that.
"Naturally, the fact of being a friend of Cuba doesn't mean that I or
the Workers Party agree with everything they [the Cubans] do. In one of my last
trips, I had the opportunity to tell Fidel Castro publicly that, for us, in
Brazil, Cuba is not a model, just as the United States, France or other
countries aren't our models.''
Da Silva reiterated his opposition to the U.S.-backed Free Trade Area of the
Americas (FTAA), a plan to create a hemisphere-wide free-trade area by 2005. He
described the main problem as "North American protectionism.''
''If I'm elected, I'll do for Brazil exactly what the U.S. government is
doing for the United States: defend the interests of my country, of my country's
population,'' he said. "Which is exactly what the government of [Brazilian
President] Fernando Henrique Cardoso has not been doing, and is not doing.''
COUNTRIES CO-CHAIRS
Under the current trade calendar, Brazil and the United States will become
co-chairs of the last leg of the hemispheric free-trade negotiations starting in
January, the very month when Brazil's next president takes over.
Asked whether he would boycott the trade talks or demand new conditions, da
Silva replied: "We will sit down, we will try, but it should remain clear
that the FTAA proposal, as it reads now, amounts to a kind of annexation of the
Latin American economies to the U.S. economy, causing enormous damage to our
industry, agriculture, commerce, services, and our own culture. If I become
president, Brazil will not suffer any annexation process.''
In addition to requesting better access to the United States, which recently
imposed protectionist measures on steel and agricultural products, da Silva said
he will demand that Cuba be part of any hemispheric trade agreement.
''We want a real integration, political, economic, cultural, without
exclusions, and that's why we must include Cuba. What sense does it make to
exclude Cuba? The United States continues with its stupid and outdated embargo
policy against the island, but it is increasingly isolated in that regard,'' he
said.
But he later tempered the remark by saying that Cuba's possible inclusion
must be ''discussed'' in the negotiations, hinting that it would not be a
crucial issue in the upcoming talks. The Bush administration has invited all
democratic countries of the Americas to be part of the free-trade area, which
automatically excludes Cuba.
Brazil's first priorities, rather than the hemisphere-wide free-trade
agreement, will be to strengthen Mercosur -- the ailing South American
free-trade bloc made up of Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay -- and bring
Andean countries into that agreement.
In addition, Brazil should improve commercial ties with the 15-member
European Union, China, India and South Africa, da Silva said.
On domestic issues, the candidate said he would not roll back the economic
privatizations that occurred in the preceding decade as Brazil adopted
free-market policies. "What has been privatized, is privatized: There will
be no nationalization of companies.''
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