POLITICAL, MILITARY, AND ECONOMIC TRENDS IN BRAZIL

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79-00927A004100100004-4
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
9
Document Creation Date: 
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 28, 2006
Sequence Number: 
4
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 16, 1963
Content Type: 
REPORT
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PDF icon CIA-RDP79-00927A004100100004-4.pdf530.68 KB
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M ; &i-/1 A fIIZN~ ease 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04100100004-4 %NO 1400 16 August 1963 OCI No. 0293/63C Copy No.- 71 SPECIAL REPORT POLITICAL, MILITARY, AND ECONOMIC TRENDS IN BRAZIL CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY OFFICE OF CURRENT INTELLIGENCE ?Y10 al/CDF Pages 1, 3-5, and SECRET GROUP I Excluded from automatic downgrading and declassification Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-0 Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04100100004-4 Q Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04100100004-4 Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-00927A004100100004-4 SECRET 16 August 1963 POLITICAL,MILITARY,AND ECONOMIC TRENDS IN BRAZIL Brazilian President Goulart is continuing his efforts to increase his personal power, and appears to be maintaining his alliance with the extreme left. He is tightening government control over news media, and is actively seeking to undermine Carlos Lacerda, Brazil's leading anti-Communist and governor of Guana- bara State (the city of Rio de Janeiro). Goulart's measures to neutralize the army's capacity to monitor his government's political orientation appear also to have had significant effect. In the economic sphere, the tight foreign exchange situation--which has prompted Brazilian efforts to secure extensive US aid in recent years--remains critical. Goulart's Campaign Against the Press The Goulart government's new effort to control news media apparently is an attempt to restrict the maneuverability of opposition elements and to swing public opinion in favor of the government's proposed "basic reforms." Goulart is also interested in indirectly warning his opposition against any antigovernment moves. His administration is using existing machinery to exert its new pressures. It has announced a policy of set- ing aside one half-hour per week for radio discussion of "basic reforms" by high-level offi- cials. This program is under the supervision of the govern- ment's national communications agency, headed by Josue Gui- maraes, who is not known to be a Communist although he has frequent contacts with the So- viet Embassy. The government has also requisitioned consider- able additional time to put its SECRET point of view before the public in response to a recent antigov- ernment attack by Lacerda. In addition, financial con- trol is exerted over the press in several ways. Goulart threat- ened to demand immediate pay- ment of a large loan to the Bank of Brazil by one magazine if it did not print an article by his anti-US brother-in-law, Congress- man Leonel Brizola. A latent threat of which publishers are aware is that government sub- sidization of the newsprint in- dustry puts the distribution of newsprint under Goulart's con- trol. The government is also exerting pressure by insisting on the collection of arrears on social security payments from newspapers. A prime target of this effort is Rio de Janeiro's Tribuna da Imprensa, which is connected witti-M-cerda. The Brazilian military's arrest of a leading newspaperman for pub- lishing a secret military cable has contributed to the press intimidation campaign. Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-OP927A004100100004-4 Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-00927A00 00100004-4 SECRET Goulart as Champion of "Basic Ref oriig~ The antipress campaign has been complemented by the govern- ment's return, after a period of relative quiet,tb a tech- nique of appealing for mass sup- port for "basic reforms." The most pertinent example of this appeal is the appearance of Goulart and his entire cabinet on 29 and 30 July in Recife, capital of pro-Communist Governor Arraes' state of Pernambuco. Goulart and Arraes both seized the opportunity to make dema- gogic appeals which were designed to give the impression that the federal and state authorities are doing everything possible to institute agrarian reform, and leaving the clear implica- tion that Congress now is a bot- tleneck to effective action on this front. Arraes made a thinly veiled public attack on the Al- liance for Progress, charging that the large landholders, backed by the resources of im- perialism, are engaged in a campaign of bribery and lies with the object of justifying foreign loans direct to munici- palities. In contrast, Governor Aluisio Alves--who has a single- minded drive toward economic development of his state of Rio Grande do Norte--appears to be calling the bluff of the extreme leftists with respect to the Alliance for Progress. At a meeting in Recife of the Northeast Development Agency (Sudene), Alves presented Gou- lart with a memorandum signed. by almost all northeast govern- ors except Arraes. The memo- randum asked the federal gov- ernment to define its position toward the Alliance for Prog- ress, either by declaring it desirable and beneficial and cooperating with it fully in the interest of development, or branding it as an instru- ment of imperialism and re- jecting it entirely. SECRET Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-O 927AO04100100004-4 Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-00927A004100100004-4 I SECRET Goulart apparently chose Pernambuco as the scene of his performance because of the rel- ative ease with which a large crowd sympathetic to the ex- treme left can be mobilized. there. Goulart visited. Bahia in early August and again pub- licly emphasized that reforms were the alternative to violent revolution, mentioning Presi- dent Kennedy's recent state- ments on the same theme. Gou- lart is reportedly planning an excursion to his home state of Rio Grande do Sul in the near future, in what will apparently be a further effort to present himself as the sincere reformer combating reaction. Pressures on Goulart The tactics of the extreme leftists and the leftist ultra- nationalists suggest that they believe they can force Goulart to make major concessions to their points of view. Extrem- ist elements of Goulart's Bra- zilian Labor Party (PTB) have thus far blocked PTB efforts to come to an agreement with the centrist Social Democrats on an agrarian reform bill. Extreme leftists are also threat- ening that their recently formed Popular Mobilization Front will break with Goulart. This threat may prove effective. Relatively conservative groups, such as congressmen from the two major centrist parties, are exerting less vo- cal and possibly less effec- tive pressure. The sharpest form of pressure in this sector continues to be the defiant re- sistance and counterattack by Lacerda. Lacerda's leadership has had the effect of stiffening the center and right opposition to Goulart. Despite Lacerda's opposi- tion, Goulart seems clearly to be making significantly more concessions to the left. Re- cent army promotions and key command assignments, for ex- ample, have strengthened the leftist ultranationalist net- work in the army, despite the retirement in July of extreme leftist First Army Commander Osvino Alves. The extreme left is likely to be benefited, more- over, by the federal government's efforts to federalize at least some of Governor Lacerda's militarized police in Guanabara State. The Brazilian Senate's ap- proval on 7 August of the nomina- tion to the Supreme Court of extreme leftist Foreign Minister Evandro Lins e Silva is a further step toward giving President Gou- lart a sympathetic court majority. The increase,of extreme leftist influence in the court is likely to assist Goulart's apparent am- bition to intervene in Guanabara and. depose Lacerda. The Military Goulart has made consider- able progress in neutralizing the military as a check on his political actions. Possibly remembering the military's in- sistence that he be dismissed as labor minister in 1954 when SECRET Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-0 Approved Foelease 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-009ii kAO04100100004-4 BRAZIL rBr. -tl Guiana o Paulo?` Jr '""'din de Janeiro 2 Territorial army number Territorial army boundary 2 Military region number meemm Military region boundary Army headquarters (ANCORA) and commanding General CLASSIFIED MATERIAL ON REVERSE OF PAGE Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04100100004-4 Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-00927A00441100100004-4 ifto; SECRET he had advocated raising the wage for common laborers above that for enlisted men, Goulart has moved cautiously, although steadily,, to build support among key officers. His first minister of war, for example, was Nelson de Melo --anti-Communist and allied with moderate ex-President Kubitschek rather than with Goulart. De Melo was followed by General Amaury Kruel, who is also an anti-Communist but who had strong loyalty to Goulart because of their common origin in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil's Texas. Most recently, Goulart has appointed to the post Jair Dantas Ribeiro, who apparently believes that it is the duty of an army officer to carry out the directives of elected officials without re- gard to the political implica- tions. Under General Ribeiro, the four key army commands have been changed. The Brazilian Army does not have four strongly pro- Goulart generals of appropriate rank for these posts. General Peri Bevilaqua, who was allowed to retain his command of the Second Army in Sao Paulo, is widely considered to be extremely erratic, and possibly close to insane. Officers recognized as wekk in bharabter were given the important First Army (Gen- eral Armando Ancora) and Third Army (General Benjamin Galhardo) commands in Rio de Janeiro and Porto Alegre. The small Fourth Army in Recife--remote from Bra- zil's center of power--was given to a relatively able anti-Com- munist, General Alves Bastos, who is considered more pro-Gou- lart than his predecessor. This army has been used by Goulart as a depository for able anti- Communists who might give him trouble if more strategically located. Goulart appears to be using his power over promo- tions to improve the position of his supporters and to in- hibit other officers in their expressions of opposition to him. Of 16 officers promoted to the rank of brigadier gen- eral or higher on 26 July, eight have leftist ultrana- tionalist connections while the others are known as "legal- ists," like War Minister Ri- beiro.; Goulart's promotion policy is strengthening pro- Communist influence in the army since the officers with Com- munist sympathies are usually pro-Goulart. Among the of- ficers promoted on 26 July is Argemiro de Assis Brasil, an extreme leftist who is de- scribed by the US army attache as probably controlled by the Communist Party. Assis Brasil was far down the list of of- ficers eligible for promotion, a fact which suggests his promo- tion resulted from Goulart's intervention. Among the sweeping changes made in key posts on 6 August was the assignment of pro-Gou- lart General Bandeira de Moraes as commander of the important second military region (Sao SECRET Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-OP927A004100100004-4 Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04100100004-4 SECRET Paulo). He replaces General Mourao Filho, long an active leader of the anti-Goulart forces in the military. The government has also announced the transfer of additional troops to reinforce the garrison in Brasilia and more troops are due to follow. The US army attachd believes that the build-up of forces in the capital may be aimed at bringing pressure on the con- gress to pass Goulart's con- troversial agrarian reform program. foreign exchange position counts on export revenues close to $600 million--a 15-percent increase over early projections--to elim- inate that part of its deficit for whica it foresees no fi- nancing. There appears to be no objective justification for such a projected export increase. The cost-of-living rise --which President Goulart in- dicated in June had been brought under control--came to 30.8 percent for the first six months of the year. The new conservative finance minister, Carvalho Pinto, hopes to keep the rise for 1963 to 60 per- cent. The chronically critical foreign exchange situation has not improved. While no figures on':the balance-of-pay- ments results from the first half of 1963 are yet available, the indirect evidence of the movement of various compensa- tory financing items suggests that Brazil in fact financed a deficit of 250 to 300 mil- lion dollars during the period January-June 1963. A deficit of similar proportions is in sight for the second half of the year. The Brazilian Government's estimate of its July-December General business condi- tions, however, appear to have improved considerably after a downturn last March. The improvement was espe- cially noted in retail and wholesale trade across the country, with improvement in both hard and soft consumer lines. Production in Bra- zil's automobile industry has been slower to recover than in most other lines. Even in this industry, however, there seems to be a degree of buoy- ancy, as indicated by recent price increases, which ap- arentl are to be continue SECRET Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-0 Approved F Release 2006/ P79-00 7AO04100100004-4 PoRk SECRET Approved For Release 2006/09/28: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04100100004-4