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Brazil Draws A Line: Our Job Is Defending South America
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Celso Amorim, the president's senior foreign-policy adviser, put it bluntly this week: Brazil's first duty in the standoff touching Venezuela and the United States is to protect South America's stability.
The logic is geographic and practical. Brazil shares land borders with ten neighbors; what happens in the Caribbean and the eastern Pacific does not stay offshore-it reshapes trade routes, migration patterns, and security cooperation across the continent.
The immediate backdrop is grim. In recent weeks, U.S. forces have destroyed multiple small boats in Caribbean and Pacific waters, saying they were trafficking vessels linked to Venezuelan or allied networks.
The death toll from these actions runs into the dozens across separate incidents. Washington frames the operations as counternarcotics. Critics around the region say the killings risk bypassing legal process and eroding maritime norms.
That's where Brazi is trying to insert itself-not as a referee of ideology, but as a convener. President Lula travels to Colombia for the November 9–10 CELAC–EU gathering, where leaders will talk security, organized crime, and regional cooperation.
Brasília's pitch is simple: keep South America a zone of peace by shifting from episodic strikes to common rules, shared intelligence, and verifiable steps that reduce violence without handing the seas to criminal groups.
The story behind the story is about narratives that drive policy. A key U.S. claim is that Venezuelan power circles run a single, centralized trafficking machine often labeled“Cartel de los Soles.”
Many analysts in Latin America describe something looser-corruption networks within parts of the security forces rather than a command-and-control cartel.
That distinction matters. If the threat is a network, smarter policing and coordinated prosecutions may work better than high-risk firefights at sea.
The logic is geographic and practical. Brazil shares land borders with ten neighbors; what happens in the Caribbean and the eastern Pacific does not stay offshore-it reshapes trade routes, migration patterns, and security cooperation across the continent.
The immediate backdrop is grim. In recent weeks, U.S. forces have destroyed multiple small boats in Caribbean and Pacific waters, saying they were trafficking vessels linked to Venezuelan or allied networks.
The death toll from these actions runs into the dozens across separate incidents. Washington frames the operations as counternarcotics. Critics around the region say the killings risk bypassing legal process and eroding maritime norms.
That's where Brazi is trying to insert itself-not as a referee of ideology, but as a convener. President Lula travels to Colombia for the November 9–10 CELAC–EU gathering, where leaders will talk security, organized crime, and regional cooperation.
Brasília's pitch is simple: keep South America a zone of peace by shifting from episodic strikes to common rules, shared intelligence, and verifiable steps that reduce violence without handing the seas to criminal groups.
The story behind the story is about narratives that drive policy. A key U.S. claim is that Venezuelan power circles run a single, centralized trafficking machine often labeled“Cartel de los Soles.”
Many analysts in Latin America describe something looser-corruption networks within parts of the security forces rather than a command-and-control cartel.
That distinction matters. If the threat is a network, smarter policing and coordinated prosecutions may work better than high-risk firefights at sea.
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