
Why is Trump lashing out at Brazil?
In a letter Wednesday to counterpart Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Trump insisted that Bolsonaro's trial -- for allegedly plotting a coup to hold on to power after 2022 elections he lost -- "should not be taking place."
Trump has historically reserved his tariff ire for countries with which the United States runs a negative trade balance. Brazil is not one.
Analysts say ideological considerations, not economics, are behind the US president's actions in defense of Bolsonaro, dubbed the "Trump of the Tropics."
Firm friends
"Brazil came up on Trump's radar now because Bolsonaro's trial is advancing and there are Republican lawmakers who brought the issue to the White House," Leonardo Paz, a political scientist at Brazil's Getulio Vargas Foundation, told AFP.
Eduardo Bolsonaro, the former president's son and a Brazilian congressman, recently moved to the United States where he lobbies for pressure on Brasilia and the judges presiding over his father's coup trial.
Lula blames Bolsonaro's son for troubling the bilateral waters, and Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes has ordered an investigation into whether the US-based campaign constitutes obstruction of justice.
Moraes is an arch foe of Bolsonaro, who has labeled the justice a "dictator."
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke in May of a "great possibility" of sanctions against Moraes, who has clashed repeatedly with rightwingers and former Trump ally Elon Musk in a quest to stamp out online disinformation.
Bolsonaro calls Trump a "friend" and says they are both victims of "persecution."
'Non-economic reasons'
In his missive to Lula, Trump complained of "a very unfair trade relationship" with Brazil.
But official Brazilian figures show a near two-decade sustained surplus in favor of the United States. Last year, it was almost $284 million.
The United States is Brazil's third-largest trading partner after China and the European Union.
It imports mainly crude oil and semi-finished iron and steel products from the South American powerhouse.
Brazil in turn primarily imports non-electric engines and machines, and fuel from up north.
In a sign of Brazilian business jitters, the Sao Paulo Federation of Industries called Thursday for a "calm" response to the "non-economic reasons" for Trump's tariffs.
Lula has said Brazil would be willing to reciprocate, in spite of Trump's warning of further escalation if it did so.
Free speech tussle
Trump also complained of Brazilian "attacks" on free speech and "hundreds of SECRET and UNLAWFUL censorship orders to US media platforms" issued by Brazil's Supreme Court.
Last month, the court toughened social media regulation, upping the accountability of platforms for user content in a groundbreaking case for Latin America on the spread of fake news and hate speech.
Last year, Moraes blocked Musk's X platform for 40 days for failing to comply with a series of court orders against online disinformation.
He had also ordered the suspension in Brazil of Rumble, a video-sharing platform popular with conservative and far-right voices -- including Trump's son Don Jr. -- over its refusal to block a user accused of spreading disinformation.
Detractors accuse the judge of running a campaign to stifle free speech.
BRICS brawl
"It didn't help that the BRICS summit was held in Brazil at a time a narrative exists in the United States portraying the bloc as anti-Western," said Paz.
Meeting in Rio de Janeiro, the group on Sunday spoke out against Trump's "indiscriminate" tariff hikes, prompting the president to threaten further trade penalties.
Members China, Russia and India refrained from hitting back, but Lula took it upon himself to defend the "sovereign" nature of BRICS governments, insisting: "We don't want an emperor."
Behind the scenes, Brasilia has been negotiating with Washington for months to try and avoid the worst of Trump's tariff war.
A member of Lula's entourage told AFP that Trump's attack on Brazil was partly inspired by "discomfort caused by the strength of the BRICS," whose members account for about half the world's population and 40 percent of global economic output.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Jordan Times
an hour ago
- Jordan Times
Russia cautious on Armenia-Azerbaijan deal, Iran reject border corridor
MOSCOW — Russia cautiously welcomed a US-brokered draft deal between Armenia and Azerbaijan on Saturday, but Moscow's regional ally Iran rejected the idea of a new border corridor backed by President Donald Trump. The two former Soviet republics signed a peace deal in Washington on Friday to end a decades-long conflict, though the fine print and binding nature of the deal remained unclear. The US-brokered agreement includes establishing a transit corridor through Armenia to connect Azerbaijan to its exclave of Nakhchivan, a longstanding demand of Baku. The United States would have development rights for the corridor -- dubbed the "Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity" -- in the strategic and resource-rich region. But Russia's ally and the warring parties' southern neighbour Tehran said it would not allow the creation of a such a corridor running along the Iranian border. "With the implementation of this plot, the security of the South Caucasus will be endangered," Akbar Velayati, an advisor to supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told the Tasnim news agency. The planned corridor was "an impossible notion and will not happen", while the area would become "a graveyard for Trump's mercenaries", he added. In a similar tone, Moscow said it would "further analyze" the corridor clause, noting there were trilateral agreements in place between Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, from which no one had yet withdrawn. "It should not be ignored that Armenia's border with Iran is guarded by Russian border guards," said Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova. Moscow, previously a key backer of Armenia, still has a military base there. Embroiled in its Ukraine operation, launched in 2022, it did not intervene in the latest conflict. This has strained the historically warm ties between Yerevan and Moscow, home to a large and influential Armenian diaspora, triggering Armenia's drift towards the West. Waning influence Christian-majority Armenia and Muslim-majority Azerbaijan went to war twice over their border and the status of ethnic enclaves within each other's territories. Moscow, once the main power broker in the Caucasus, is now bogged down in its more than three-year offensive in Ukraine, diverting political and military resources into the grinding conflict of attrition. Both Armenia and Azerbaijan praised the US efforts in settling the conflict. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev even said he would back President Donald Trump's nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize. The US-led NATO alliance welcomed the deal as a "significant step forward". But in Moscow, Zakharova refrained from even calling it a deal, referring to it merely as "the meeting of the leaders of the South Caucasus republics in Washington" -- adding, however, that it still deserved "a positive assessment". Repackaging for Trump? Analysts also sounded a note of caution, with the International Crisis Group pointing out that the deal left "a lot of questions unanswered". The two countries went to war twice over the disputed Karabakh region, which Azerbaijan recaptured from Armenian forces in a lightning 2023 offensive, sparking the exodus of more than 100,000 ethnic Armenians. Azerbaijan and Armenia agreed on the text of a comprehensive peace deal in March. Much of the White House agreement was a "repackaging" of that, which helped both countries get on Trump's good side "by giving him a role," the Crisis Group's senior South Caucasus analyst Joshua Kucera said. Azerbaijan later added a host of demands to that March deal, including amendments to Armenia's constitution to drop territorial claims for Karabakh, before signing the document. Pashinyan has announced plans for a constitutional referendum in 2027, but the issue remains deeply divisive among Armenians, with Kucera warning that this could yet derail the process. Kucera called the corridor "one potentially significant development" from the White House meeting, but added that missing key details could prove "serious stumbling blocks". The US-brokered deal was "definitely a testament to the fact that Russia has been losing its influence" as its Ukraine operation had "diverted its attention and resources from some other areas of its traditional interest", Olesya Vardanyan, an independent analyst on the South Caucasus, told AFP. Nevertheless, she added, even if many details were still missing and nothing was guaranteed, the deal still gave Armenians "a promise of a better life and then maybe even more peace in the region".


Roya News
3 hours ago
- Roya News
Iran will not allow Trump-backed corridor linking Azerbaijan to exclave: Khamenei aide
Iran will not allow the creation under a US-brokered peace deal of a corridor near the Iranian border linking Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan exclave, an adviser to supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Saturday. "With the implementation of this plot, the security of the South Caucasus will be endangered," Ali Akbar Velayati told the Tasnim news agency, adding that the planned "Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity" was "an impossible notion and will not happen".


Jordan News
6 hours ago
- Jordan News
Zelensky: Ukraine Will Not Cede Its Territory as Trump and Putin Announce Upcoming Meeting - Jordan News
Zelensky: Ukraine Will Not Cede Its Territory as Trump and Putin Announce Upcoming Meeting U.S. President Donald Trump announced on Friday that he will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin on August 15 in Alaska to negotiate an end to the war in Ukraine. Trump suggested on social media that the parties involved, including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, are close to a ceasefire agreement that could end the three-and-a-half-year conflict — an agreement that might require Ukraine to give up large areas of territory. اضافة اعلان At a White House briefing, Trump hinted that the deal would involve a territorial exchange 'in the interest of both parties.' However, Zelensky firmly stated on Saturday that Ukraine cannot violate its constitution regarding territorial issues, emphasizing that 'Ukrainians will not gift their land to the occupiers.' The Kremlin confirmed the upcoming summit, with Putin's aide Yuri Ushakov saying the focus will be on 'options for achieving a long-term peaceful settlement to the Ukrainian crisis.' He acknowledged the difficulty of the process but stressed ongoing 'active and vigorous' efforts. In a televised address on his Telegram channel, Zelensky said any decisions made without Ukraine's involvement would be 'decisions against peace,' 'stillborn,' and unenforceable. He stressed the need for a genuine and effective peace. Putin demands control over four Ukrainian regions — Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson — as well as Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014, although Russian forces do not fully control all these areas. Reports by Bloomberg suggested U.S.-Russian efforts to reach an agreement that would cement Moscow's control over the territory seized since the invasion, but the White House dismissed these reports as speculation, and the Kremlin made no comment. While Ukraine had previously indicated some flexibility toward ending the war, ceding nearly 20% of its territory would be politically painful and difficult for Zelensky and his government. Former U.S. State Department official Tyson Barker said that Ukrainians would immediately reject the Bloomberg-proposed deal and called on Kyiv to stick to its positions while maintaining gratitude for U.S. support. Leaks indicated that the potential agreement would halt Russian attacks in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia along current front lines. The upcoming meeting follows steps taken by Trump in his second term to improve relations with Russia and end the war, despite his mixed statements praising and criticizing Russia. Frustrated with the ongoing Russian offensive, he threatened new sanctions against Moscow and countries importing its exports if Putin did not stop the war — the deadliest in Europe since World War II. His administration also recently imposed a 25% tariff on goods from India due to its imports of Russian oil, marking the first financial penalty on Russia during his second term. Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff held a three-hour 'constructive' meeting with Putin in Moscow on Wednesday. Meanwhile, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, a close ally of Ukraine, said a temporary ceasefire might be imminent. He described Zelensky as 'cautious but optimistic' and eager for Poland and other European countries to play a role in planning the ceasefire and a subsequent peaceful settlement. — Reuters