Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Lula Says Bolsonaro's Jail Will Not Shake Trump Ties, But War Fears Grow


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva insists Jair Bolsonaro's arrest will not damage his relationship with Donald Trump.

At the same time, he says he is deeply worried about a fast-growing United States military build-up in the Caribbean. It is a calm message in public that sits awkwardly beside what Washington is actually doing.

Speaking after the G20 summit in Johannesburg, Lula framed Bolsonaro's fate as an internal matter for Brazil's Supreme Court.

He said the former president faced more than two years of investigations and trials, with full defence rights, and will now serve the sentence handed down by the courts.

Bolsonaro is serving 27 years in prison for trying to cling to power after losing the 2022 election. He was moved from house arrest to a federal police cell after Justice Alexandre de Moraes said he had damaged his electronic ankle monitor with a soldering iron.



The judge cited risk of escape and threats to public order, especially after supporters called a night-time vigil outside Bolsonaro 's gated community, a short drive from the United States Embassy in Brasília.

But the reaction from Washington has undercut Lula's notion that this is a contained, domestic matter. Trump has called the conviction a“shame”, sanctioned Moraes under human-rights laws and imposed tariffs of up to 50 percent on a wide range of Brazilian exports.
U.S. Rebuke Sparks Diplomacy Clash
The U.S. Embassy in Brasília went further in a recent note, harshly criticising Moraes and accusing him of blatantly politicising the case against Bolsonaro – a statement Brazil's foreign ministry treated as a deliberate diplomatic provocation.

Lula argues that the greater danger lies to Brazil's north. He wants a direct conversation with Trump about the deployment of a U.S. carrier strike group, a nuclear submarine and F-35 jets near Venezuela, officially under an anti-drug mission.

American forces have already destroyed multiple boats and killed dozens of suspected traffickers in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific. For many Brazilians, the picture is stark. A powerful judge, a jailed ex-president and a combative

White House are now locked in open confrontation while warships patrol just beyond the continent. Lula's belief that he can soothe Trump, defend the court and keep the region calm at the same time may be more wishful thinking than strategy.

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The Rio Times

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