Washington’s Dog-Whistle Diplomacy Supports Attempted Coup in Brazil
Image: Victor T.
By Mark Weisbrot, on Huffington Post
The day after the impeachment vote in the lower house of Brazil’s congress, one of the leaders of the effort, Senator Aloysio Nunes, traveled to Washington, D.C. He had scheduled meetings with a number of U.S. officials, including Thomas Shannon at the State Department.
By Mark Weisbrot, on Huffington Post
The day after the impeachment vote in the lower house of Brazil’s congress, one of the leaders of the effort, Senator Aloysio Nunes, traveled to Washington, D.C. He had scheduled meetings with a number of U.S. officials, including Thomas Shannon at the State Department.
Shannon has a relatively low profile in the media, but he is the
number three official in the U.S. State Department. Even more
significantly in this case, he is the most influential person in the
State Department on U.S. policy in Latin America. He will be the one
recommending to Secretary of State John Kerry what the U.S. should do as
the ongoing efforts to remove President Dilma Rousseff proceed.
Shannon’s willingness to meet with Nunes just days after the
impeachment vote sends a powerful signal that Washington is on board
with the opposition in this venture. How do we know this? Very simply,
Shannon did not have to have this meeting. If he wanted to show that
Washington was neutral in this fierce and deeply polarizing political
conflict, he would not have a meeting with high-profile protagonists on
either side, especially at this particular moment.
Shannon’s meeting with Nunes is an example of what could be called
“dog-whistle diplomacy.” It barely shows up on the radar of the media
reporting on the conflict, and therefore is unlikely to generate
backlash. But all the major actors know exactly what it means. That is
why Nunes’ party, the Social Democracy Party (PSDB), publicized the
meeting.
To illustrate with another example of dog-whistle diplomacy: On June
28, 2009, the Honduran military kidnapped the country’s president, Mel
Zelaya, and flew him out of the country. The White House statement in
response did not condemn this coup, but rather called on “all political
and social actors in Honduras” to respect democracy.
This dog-whistle signal worked perfectly; most importantly the coup
leaders and their supporters in Honduras, as well as every diplomat in
Washington, knew exactly what this meant, even as statements condemning
the coup and demanding the restoration of the democratic government came
pouring in from around the globe. Everyone knew that this was, in
diplomatic code, a clear statement of support for the coup. The events
that followed over the next six months, with Washington doing everything
it could to help consolidate and legitimize the coup government, were
pretty much predictable from this initial statement. Hillary Clinton
later admitted in her 2014 book, “Hard Choices,” that she worked
successfully to prevent the return of the democratically elected
president.
Tom Shannon has a reputation among Latin American diplomats as an
amiable fellow, a seasoned career foreign service officer who is willing
to sit down and talk with governments that are at odds with U.S. policy
in the region. But he has had a lot of experience with coups. Some of
Hillary Clinton’s released emails shed additional light on his role in
helping to consolidate the Honduran coup. He was also a high-level State
Department official during the April 2002 coup in Venezuela, in which
there is substantial documentary evidence of U.S. involvement. And when
the parliamentary coup in Paraguay took place in 2012 — something
similar to what is happening in Brazil but with a process that impeached
and removed the president in just 24 hours — Washington also
contributed to the legitimation of the coup government in the aftermath.
(By contrast, South American governments suspended the coup government
in Paraguay from MERCOSUR, the regional trading bloc, and UNASUR [the
Union of South American Nations).] Shannon was ambassador to Brazil at
that time, but was still one of the most influential officials in
hemispheric policy.
The U.S. State Department responded to questions about Nunes’
meetings by saying, “This meeting had been planned for months and was
arranged at the request of the Brazilian embassy.” But this is
irrelevant. It merely means that Brazilian embassy staff were, as a
matter of diplomatic protocol, involved in arranging the meetings. This
does not imply any consent by the Rousseff administration, nor change
the political message that the meeting with Shannon sends to the
opposition in Brazil.
All of this is of course consistent with Washington’s strategy in
response to the left governments that have governed most of the region
in the 21st century. They have rarely missed an opportunity to undermine
or get rid of any of them, and their desire to replace the governing
Workers’ Party in Brazil with a more compliant, right-wing government is
fairly obvious.
Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C., and the president of Just Foreign Policy. He is also the author of the new book “Failed: What the ‘Experts’ Got Wrong About the Global Economy“ (2015, Oxford University Press).
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