MANAGING NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION: THE BRAZILIAN CASE

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
06827292
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RIPPUB
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U
Document Page Count: 
6
Document Creation Date: 
March 9, 2023
Document Release Date: 
September 18, 2020
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Case Number: 
F-2017-01987
Publication Date: 
February 16, 1977
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Approved for Release: 2020/09/11 C06827292 Secret International Issues ,,,..4�1AL. AND ANALYSIS tee-Fa 1 RP AII 77-002 16 February 1977 Approved for Release: 2020/09/11 C06827292 Approved for Release: 2020/09/11 C06827292 INTERNATIONAL ISSUES 16 February 1977 CONTENTS International Issues Division: Statement of Mission 1 LDC Demands at the IAEA . � 2 Human Rights Implications of India's Population Policy 5 8 Managing Nuclear Proliferation: The Brazilian Case 13 International Terrorism in 1976 INTERNATIONAL ISSUES is published and distributed the third week of each month. 17 This publication is prepared by the International Issues Division, Office of Regional and Political Analysis, with occasional contributions from other offices within the Directorate of Intelligence. The views presented are the best judgments of individual analysts who are aware that many of the issues they discuss are subject to alternative interpretation. Comments and queries are welcome. They should be directed to the authors of the individual articles. RP All 77-002 16 February 1977 Approved for Release: 2020/09/11 C06827292 Approved for Release: 2020/09/11 C06827292 NOTE; Page Page 13 of International Issues, Regional and TiTitical Analysis, 16 February 1977 was garbled. Please replace it with this corrected page. Managing Nuclear Proliferation: The Brazilian Case The challenge to US policy arising from the threat of additional nuclear proliferation is twofold: to slow or pre- vent the spread of nuclear weapons while, at the same time, coping with the consequences of additional proliferation that cannot be stopped. Pursuit of these objectives can sometimes conflict with other important foreign policy goals. In the short term, for example, the costs incurred by the US in attempting to prevent or delay the acquisition of a nu- clear weapons capability by a particular country may be quite high in terms of damage done to bilateral relations. The potential for bilateral strain arising from US nuclear policy is especially great since countries which seek a nuclear capability want it for what they perceive to be critical national security or prestige reasons. Short-term policies adopted to prevent or slow nuclear proliferation can also have adverse long-term consequences. For example, a major effort by the US or a consortium of nu- clear suppliers to hold back proliferation could actually increase the prestige that aspiring regional powers might attach to acquiring what the nuclear establishment is at- tempting to deny them. A further problem could arise if a state, which has been badly estranged by US efforts to hamper its nuclear effort, nonetheless succeeds in acquiring a weapons capability. The following article, which originally appeared as a memorandum prepared by the Latin America Division of ORPA, highlights some of these difficulties as they are developing in Brazil-US relations. It is republished here for the bene- fit of non - Latin American experts because of its broader implications for US nuclear proliferation policy. US criticism of the Brazil - West German nuclear accord has caused an extremely hostile reaction in Brazil's highest policy circles and could result in long-term damage to US- Brazilian relations. Within the past few weeks the "special relationship" proclaimed by Secretary Kissinger a year ago has dete- riorated to the point where military and government leaders RP All 77-002 16 February 1977 -13 - Approved for Release: 2020/09/11 C06827292 Approved for Release: 2020/09/11 C06827292 speak dramatically of an "undeclared war" and threaten a critical review of official relations with the US. Such rhetorical outbursts could be translated into strong retaliatory measures; they have already begun to strain the close diplomatic ties that made Brazil the strongest and most important ally of the US in Latin America for most of the 20th century. The rapid escalation of a difference in views over nuclear proliferation into a major diplomatic dispute is in large measure attributable to a basic conflict in aims and perceptions. It is clear that Brazil sees US efforts to halt the spread of nuclear weapons technology as a deliberate attempt to impede the country's economic and technological development. This reaction is not sim- ply a manifestation of nationalistic paranoia. Rather, Brazil sees atomic energy as a supplement to increasingly costly hydroelectric power during the 1980s and beyond, and as a means to eventually reduce dependence on imported fossil fuels. These fuels currently constitute the most serious drain on the nation's financial resources. Oil imports provide 40 percent of the country's energy requirements and last year cost approximately $3.5 billion in foreign exchange. Ambitions for world prestige also play a role. Brazilian military leaders firmly believe that a prereq- uisite for great power status is the ability to explode a nuclear device. Despite the fact that Brazil is one of the strongest and most moderate of the so-called less developed nations, it still seeks major concessions from the industrial powers This frequently leads its leaders to adopt aggressive and uncompromising positions. As one knowledgeable observer has noted, "The intense focus on rapid modernization tends to lead Brazilian policy makers to perceive almost all foreign policy conflicts as potentially threatening to Brazil's most basic interests." Brazil still looks to the US for military defense in the hemisphere and for economic investment, but its rapidly expanding economy has enabled it to establish close ties with other powerful nations, thus reducing RP All 77-002 16 February 1977 -14- sTcnET Approved for Release: 2020/09/11 C06827292 Approved for Release: 2020/09/11 C06827292 US leverage. Over the past decade the US has lost ground in trade as Brazil has expanded its exports and imports to all corners of the globe. The US still leads other foreign investors by a wide margin, but West Germany and Japan are moving up quickly. US investment there--which doubled between 1969-74--now is approximately $2.4 billion. West European investments already exceed those from the US and are growing at a more rapid rate. Moreover, Japanese holdings since 1969 have increased eightfold. Agreements signed during President Geisel's visit to Tokyo last summer will prob- ably add $700 million to the current $841 million value of Japan's direct investment over the next decade. Washington is clearly no longer as vital to Brazil as it once was, and its influence will probably decline further in the coming years. It is becoming increasingly obvious that Brazil is willing to take economic risks in its relations with the US on the nuclear issue. Brazilian intransigence is being reinforced by do- mestic political developments. President Geisel is clearly benefiting politically from his refusal to con- sider revisions in the Brazilian - West German nuclear accord or to delay its implementation. Under the agree- ment, West Germany will sell Brazil plans for uranium enrichment and spent-fuel reprocessing. The support Geisel is receiving from military leaders and politicians in both political parties is apparently stiffening his resolve to persist in his hard-line approach. Brazilians view US pressure on the nuclear issue as an insult and have rallied behind Geisel's decision. Pro-government sentiment is so strong that widely cir- culating reports that the administration will not permit direct elections for state governors in 1978, and that Geisel intends to reorganize the party structure next month--issues that normally would have produced strong outcries--have provoked little public comment. Both rumors, however, are causing extreme uneasiness among the political opposition. In the past, the Brazilian government has rarely used foreign policy issues to rally domestic support; it has preferred to tie diplomatic relations closely to RP All 77-002 16 February 1977 -15- Approved for Release: 2020/09/11 C06827292 Approved for Release: 2020/09/11 C06827292 national economic objectives. Brazil regards nuclear development, however, as essential to continued techno- logical and economic progress. For this reason it is increasing its pressure on Bonn to fulfill the terms of the agreement. Brasilia has strongly intimated that if the Germans renege on the provisions for reprocessing, it will look elsewhere to purchase the eight nuclear reactors--currently worth $4-5 billion--that will pro- vide 'lolls for thousands of West German technicians. RP All 77-002 16 February 1977 - 16- -5C-elTET Approved for Release: 2020/09/11 C06827292