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Haunted by riot, Brazil’s Lula reins in army

Nation’s military is full of supporters of former president

- By Mauricio Savarese and Carla Bridi

SAO PAULO — When rioters stormed Brazil’s top government buildings in January to dispute the outcome of the presidenti­al election, many soldiers stood by as far-right protesters broke windows, defecated in offices and destroyed valuable art.

The images from Brasilia that day still haunt the left-leaning government of President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. He has strived ever since to ensure that military leaders defend South America’s largest democracy and stay out of politics.

The threat isn’t just hypothetic­al. Brazil has lived through four military coups — the most recent one in 1964, followed by two decades of brutal dictatorsh­ip.

Lula’s task is fraught. The military is filled with supporters of ex-president Jair Bolsonaro, and its role in the new government is being diminished by the day.

Lula has already tapped more than 100 civilians to replace military officers Bolsonaro appointed to key positions, and he has moved oversight of the country’s intelligen­ce agency to his chief of staff’s office, among other changes.

“Lula needed to manage his relationsh­ip with the military to be able to govern, and will continue to do so,” said Carlos Melo, a political science professor at Insper University in Sao Paulo.

Melo said Brazil’s military has long believed that it has “some kind of guardiansh­ip of the country’s political process,” and Bolsonaro only fueled that belief.

Bolsonaro, a former army captain, appointed more than 6,000 military officers to jobs across his government and revived an annual commemorat­ion of the 1964 coup to stoke nostalgia for the days of military rule.

Although that era was marked by human rights abuses and the loss of civil liberties, Bolsonaro and many of his supporters remember it fondly as a time of strong nationalis­m, economic growth and conservati­ve values. They view Lula’s efforts to tame the military as heavyhande­d and misguided.

“Stop looking through the rearview mirror and govern for all Brazilians,” Bolsonaro’s former vice president, Gen. Hamilton Mourao, who is now a senator, said in an interview.

The most significan­t move Lula has made so far has been to elevate Gen. Tomas Paiva to be the army’s top commander.

Paiva, 62, has pledged to keep soldiers out of politics and to respect the results of October’s election, in which Lula beat Bolsonaro by a razor-thin margin.

Yet Paiva has also acknowledg­ed that most the military’s leaders voted for Bolsonaro, and he lamented Lula’s victory to subordinat­es just three days before the new president called to offer him the promotion — comments he later said were misinterpr­eted.

Lula has taken various other steps aimed inoculatin­g Brazil from the risk of another violent uprising with at least tacit support from some in the military:

■ He blocked the appointmen­t of a Bolsonaro loyalist to command the Goiania Battalion, based an uncomforta­bly close 124 miles from the capital.

■ He placed the country’s intelligen­ce agency — formerly overseen by members of the military — under the office of his chief of staff, which is led by civilians.

■ He took a symbolical­ly important trip to the U.S., which before the election had warned Brazilian military leaders to steer clear of politics if they wanted access to arms purchases and cooperatio­n from American armed forces.

For now, there is no evidence of another uprising being planned or of military leaders questionin­g Lula’s orders, according to a high-ranking official in the army and a person who works closely with the defense minister, both of whom spoke on condition of anonymity.

Lula enlisted the military’s cooperatio­n twice in February: as part of a massive operation to expel some 20,000 illegal miners from the Yanomami Indigenous area in Brazil’s Amazon, and to help rescue people after mudslides near Sao Paulo.

These represente­d early tests of the relationsh­ip between Lula and the military, and the results were very positive, said political consultant Thomas Traumann. Still, there’s no guarantee of long-term stability, he said.

It remains to be seen whether military retirees and active duty service members who either took part in the Jan. 8 riots or turned a blind eye to them will receive punishment. Some analysts believe that would be important to deter future action.

One video from Jan. 8 showed policemen at the presidenti­al palace in the rare position of barking orders at soldiers: “Lead your troops!” one officer shouted at members of the presidenti­al guard, which is part of the army.

Another video showed dozens of rioters surrounded by police in the palace, as a general attempts to free them. “Are you nuts?” a policeman asks. “They’re in custody!”

Hundreds of civilians who participat­ed in the riots have been jailed and dozens indicted. But service members have so far been spared. The military prosecutor­s’ office and the top military court have opened 17 investigat­ions, although neither has been transparen­t about the process.

The incoming Chief Justice of Brazil’s Superior Military Court, Joseli Camelo, said he was encouraged recently when the army canceled a plan to commemorat­e the upcoming anniversar­y of the 1964 military coup, the dictatorsh­ip-era tradition that Bolsonaro had revived.

“This is just another demonstrat­ion that the commander is aligned with all the powers towards our common challenge, which is to pacify Brazil and definitive­ly reinforce democracy in our country,” Camelo said.

Mourao, Bolsonaro’s former vice president, says the military should not spare any of its members who are proven guilty of taking part in the riots. “The armed forces are shaped to be rigorous in the investigat­ion of disciplina­ry errors and military crimes,” he said.

Even before taking office in January, Lula — who served as president from 2003 to 2010 — knew it was essential for him to bolster ties with the country’s rightleani­ng military.

In Lula’s first two presidenti­al terms, his relationsh­ip with the military was marked by conciliati­on rather than confrontat­ion, said Fabio Victor, a journalist who just published a bestsellin­g book on Brazil’s armed forces and politics. But Jan. 8 appears to have altered his calculus.

In contrast with Bolsonaro’s administra­tion, few members of the armed forces work at the presidenti­al palace, Victor said. With an eye toward the future, Lula’s allies in Congress are pushing for constituti­onal changes that would more clearly define the military’s powers and limits, and his ministers are looking at overhaulin­g military education.

“Lula today is very suspicious of the military,” Victor said.

 ?? ERALDO PERES/AP ?? Supporters of former President Jair Bolsonaro sit in front of police Jan. 8 inside the Planalto Palace in Brasilia, Brazil. While hundreds of civilians who took part in the riot have been jailed, service members have thus far been spared.
ERALDO PERES/AP Supporters of former President Jair Bolsonaro sit in front of police Jan. 8 inside the Planalto Palace in Brasilia, Brazil. While hundreds of civilians who took part in the riot have been jailed, service members have thus far been spared.

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