Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Brazil rejoins the West
Brazil rejoins the West
May 2, 2026 6:11 AM

Since the 1960s, Brazilian foreign policy has an undistinguished history, and has gradually been reduced to the pursuit of ideological leftism. This was not always the case.

During the imperial regime (1824-1889), Brazilian diplomacy policy was known for the high-quality of its members, for their ability to read politics, for negotiating talent and, above all, for their fidelity to the interests of Brazil. Paulino José Soares de Sousa, the Viscount of Uruguay, Honório Hermeto Carneiro Leão, the Marquis of Parana, José Maria da Silva Paranhos Jr, the Baron of Rio Branco, Jose Osvaldo de Meira Penna, Osvaldo Aranha, Roberto Campos, Guimaraes Rosa and Rui Barbosa (whose achievements earned him the title of Eagle of The Hague), were not only diplomats. They were also statesmen, thinkers, renowned writers and people who thought of Brazil as a project of a nation that needed to be established and built.

Oddly, it was during the military dictatorship (1964-1985) – more precisely in the government of Ernesto Geisel from 1974 to 1979 – that the Brazilian diplomatic tradition began to shift towards leftism. According to the conservative thinker and former Brazilian diplomat Roberto Campos, it was Antonio Francisco Azeredo da Silveira, Geisel’s Minister of Foreign Relations, who introduced third-world internationalism into Brazilian foreign policy: a vision of world affairs according to which the third world countries should create a policy jointly and independently of the interests of the United States and the Soviet Union. In practice, however, this philosophy of international relations was a Trojan horse of munism. Brazil ended up adopting anti-American positions and even supported munist takeover of Angola in the 1970s.

The Workers’ Party government (2002-2016) accentuated this pattern but created a new fact. Together with Fidel Castro in 1991, Lula da Silva founded the so-called Sao Paulo Forum, an organization aimed at re-orientating the Latin American left after the disintegration of the Soviet Union.

When Lula da Silva became president of Brazil in 2002, Brazilian foreign policy adopted an automatic alignment with leftist movements throughout Latin America. Cuba, Venezuela, Brazil, Bolivia, and Argentina created a kind of Latin American axis of leftism with the goal of being bat American imperialism and advancing the Bolivarian revolution.

The president-elect of Brazil Jair Bolsonaro made foreign policy a priority of his campaign, something unusual in Brazilian politics. Bolsonaro promised a non-ideological foreign policy in favor of a more realistic view of international issues. Brazil, he believes, must seek to expand the number of mercial partners and no longer adopt an automatic alignment with the third world.

There are three areas in which he has made changes to Brazilian foreign policy clear. First, anti-Americanism is out of Brazil’s agenda. Second, he will pursue a rapprochement with Israel, not least by recognizing Jerusalem as its capital. Third, he has repudiated Venezuela’s munist experience.

Bolsonaro’s foreign policy, however, goes beyond this. Bolsonaro is a nationalist who believes that the nation-state is the political model whereby the elementary liberties achieved in the Western world may be secured. For Bolsonaro, it is the historical experience of the Brazilian people as part of the Judeo-Christian cultural civilization that best explains the country’s past and paves the way to his nation’s future. Therefore, we can place him side by side with other leaders that have repudiated globalist political project in favor of a world of nations.

Perhaps, the best way to understand the foreign policy that will be adopted by the government of the next Brazilian president is to look at the work of Ernesto Henrique Fraga Araujo, the recently appointed Minister of International Relations. A conservative nationalist and a former student of the Brazilian philosopher Olavo de Carvalho, Araujo explained his interpretation of the world in a paper called Trump and the West.

Trump and the West seeks to explain why the world is “upside-down” and outlines a possible alternative to the globalist agenda. Entirely different from anything that is taught in schools of international relations, this interpretation of international politics is at the same time holistic, seeking to deal with the problems of human political experience as a whole, and insightful, since it tries to answer the basic question of political modernity from an unusual perspective.

Through the pages of his essay, we see Araujo applying to the international relations concepts of Rene Guenon’s traditionalist philosophy, Thomas Molnar’s conservative Catholicism, Jose Ortega y Gasset’s vitalism, Carl Schmitt’s political science and Eric Voegelin’s philosophy of order. This eclectic group of thinkers, all distant from the university mainstream, is united by the interpretative framework created by Carvalho in his book The Garden of Afflictions (1996).

Araújo believes that the concept of the West exists beyond the geopolitical dimension. As a matter of fact, this word expresses a historical experience that unites different peoples under mon denominator, that of civilization. Civilization, then, has a spiritual meaning that conveys the existential character of a people or munity of people in alliance with a transcendent reality. History, music, dance, and literature, for example, are expressions of this relationship. They express by more visible means the difficult relationship between man and the divine. For Araujo, therefore, it is essential to understand not only the relation of men to the transcendent, as Voegelin did, but to follow the action of God himself in history. God is not, therefore, seen as a passive agent of human history, but as an active part of the human political reality.

The decadence of Western civilization is a recurring theme in the essay, but it is not central. Instead, the restoration of civilization is the main theme of Araujo’s essay. He believes that the modern liberal international order’s internal contradictions have already begun to break the dike created by globalists over the past decades. The rise of patriotic nationalism is the main sign of this change.

Patriotic nationalism does not seek territorial expansion nor military conflict. Instead, it focuses on the rebuilding of the international order into munity of independent and harmonious nations. President Donald Trump is the unlikely but leading representative of this new trend in international relations. For Araujo, Trump’s speech in Warsaw during his 2017 visit to Poland shows that Trump understood two things: 1) the need to see the world as civilizational blocks; and 2) the imperative of reversing the liberal experience that made Europe a “politically correct amusement park.”

Araújo seems to be the right man at the right moment of Brazilian politics. Bolsonaro made his political career through relentlessly attacking the hegemony which the left has exerted on the culture for so long and, consequently, on how people interpreted the world. By announcing Araujo as Brazil’s new minister of International Relations, Bolsonaro has begun to fulfill what he has promised: realignment of Brazil with a new international order that still needs to be built and which is based on a Christian worldview.

Homepage photo credit: Encontro do Assessor de Segurança Nacional dos EUA John Presidente Eleito do Brasil Jair Bolsonaro Presidente Eleito do Brasil Jair Bolsonaro recebe o embaixador John Bolton, assessor de segurança nacional dos EUA, no Rio de Janeiro. / President-elect Jair Bolsonaro receives Ambassador John Bolton, U.S. National Security Advisor, in Rio de Janeiro. (Photo: U.S. Consulate in Rio).Wiki Commons.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Money for Nothing, or So it Seems
These kinds of stories make me sick, and they are all mon. In today’s Washington Post, a lengthy article examines the Livestock Compensation Program, which ran from 2002-2003, and cost over $1.2 billion. In “No Drought Required For Federal Drought Aid,” Gilbert M. Gaul, Dan Morgan and Sarah Cohen report that over half of that money, “$635 million went to ranchers and dairy farmers in areas where there was moderate drought or none at all, according to an analysis of...
Debating the Ethics of Chimeras
My piece on the debate over chimera research and the relevance of your worldview to the debate appears today at BreakPoint, “A Monster Created in Man’s Image.” Drawing on the work of C.S. Lewis, and among the questions and conclusions included, I write, “Chimera research may indeed have some potential benefits, but we cannot ignore the question of potential costs. What toll does such research take on the dignity of human beings? Must we destroy the human person in order...
Protestants and Natural Law, Part 5
In Part 4, we saw that post-Enlightenment philosophical currents such as Humean empiricism, utilitarianism, and legal positivism are the real culprits in the demise of natural law and not theological criticism from within Reformation theology, as many today take for granted. If this is so, why is contemporary Protestant theology so critical of natural law? The mon reason why contemporary Protestants reject natural law is because they think it does not take sin seriously enough. And the second, which we...
Classical Liberalism, Foreign Policy, and Just War
One of the more lively and illuminating discussions at last week’s Advanced Studies in Freedom seminar revolved around the question whether and how classical liberalism is applicable to foreign policy, specifically with regard to questions of war. In the New York Times earlier this week, Robert Wright, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation, wrote a lengthy op-ed that bears on the relevant questions, “An American Foreign Policy That Both Realists and Idealists Should Fall in Love With.” Wright...
World Cups of Philosophy and Theology
For those of you who are going through World Cup withdrawal after the defeat of the French by the Azzurri have a fort. I give you the World Cups of Philosophy and Theology. ‘Nobby’ Hegel leads the Germans onto the pitch. The first is a two-part video of the Monty Python skit featuring German philosophers against the Greeks (text here). The German side touts Leibniz in goal with strikers Nietzsche and Heidegger. The Greeks have Plato in net, with Aristotle...
Nipsey Russell on Social Security
Nipsey Russell (1918-2005) I was flipping stations tonight and passed the Game Show Network, which was showing reruns of Match Game ’74. Nipsey Russell, the so-called “Poet Laureate of Television,” began the show with this poem for prosperity: To slow down this recession, and make this economy thrive, give us our social security now, we’ll go to work when we’re sixty-five. ...
How about making it a permanent internship?
Every morning I make a point checking out for unintentionally hilarious news about the workings of the EU bureaucracy. Yesterday there was this article about an internship program with a twist. Instead of ing to Brussels, this one is designed for 350 EU senior officials to spend time with small- and medium-sized businesses in member states. “We don’t need an ivory tower mented Mr Verheugen, suggesting that by acquiring such a “hands-on experience” in SMEs, mission’s administrators will understand their...
Government and the Decline of Urban Catholicism
Notre Dame law professor Richard Garnett wrote an outstanding piece for USA Today. He argues convincingly that the large-scale and widespread withdrawal of Catholic institutions from many of the nation’s cities has ramifications that extend beyond the interests of Catholics alone. He notes, too, that government has a role to play in facilitating the flourishing of religious institutions such as Catholic churches and hospitals—mainly by honoring a properly understood separation of church and state: Is there anything the government and...
Businesspeople are Evil!
A very, very interesting piece in WSJ this week detailing a study by the Business and Media Institute that looks at how businesspeople are portrayed on television: The study, titled “Bad Company,” looked at the top 12 TV dramas during May and November in 2005, ranging from crime shows like “CSI” to the goofy “Desperate Housewives.” Out of 39 episodes that featured business-related plots, the study found, 77% advanced a negative view of the world merce and its practitioners. On...
Politicizing Scripture
There’s some discussion at Mirror of Justice (here and here) of Martin Marty’s recent piece in The Christian Century, “Snookered,” which raises the issue of the validity of politicians invoking Scripture, using the example of Tom DeLay. The new progressive Christian approach seems to be to assert, rightly of course, that “God is not a Republican. Or a Democrat,” and is rather more nuanced and convincing than, say, “Jesus is a Liberal.” And since so much politics, aside from a...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved