Perhaps you remember that,  in November 2005, we were part of a small group of people who were invited to  brief former Secretary Tom Shannon, about the political situation in our  respective countries. I do remember, very vividly, your warnings about Lula  during that particular meeting. With the passing of time, I must say how  pleasantly surprised I am with the turn of perception vis-a-vis Hugo Chavez.  Mind, in November 2005, the DoS still harbored the notion that he was a  democrat, purportedly just like Lula. However, recent developments in  Honduras show that Lula is as keen on  interfering in other countries internal affairs, as his Venezuelan counterpart.  Yet one would be hard pressed to conclude, by way of how mass media portrays the  Brazilian president, that such is in fact the case. For this reason, taking into  account that you are Brazilian and that you have been following your country's  politics for longer than most reporters are aware of Lula's very own existence,  I would like to ask you a few things about him, starting with: why do you think  the media is given him such benign treatment? Most analysts and media types  believe that Lula is a moderate, a democrat. How do you reconcile that with, for  instance, the foundation by Lula, at Fidel Castro's personal request, of the  Foro de Sao Paulo (FSP)?
There is  nothing there to be properly reconciled. The image and the reality, in  that case, are in complete contradiction to each other. The legend of Lula as a  democrat and a moderate only holds up thanks to the suppression of the most  important fact of his political biography, the foundation of the São Paulo  Forum. This suppression, in some cases, is fruit of genuine ignorance; but in  others, it is a premeditated cover-up. Council on Foreign Relations’ expert on  Brazilian issues, Kenneth Maxwell, even got to the point of openly denying the  mere existence of the Forum, being confirmed in this by another expert on the  subject, Luiz Felipe de Alencastro, also at a conference at the CFR. I do not  need to emphasize the weight that CFR’s authority carry with opinion-makers in  the United  States. When such an institution denies the  most proven and documented facts of Latin American history of the last decades,  few journalists will have the courage of taking the side of facts against the  argument of authority. Thus, the São Paulo Forum, which is the vastest and most  powerful political body that has ever existed in Latin America, goes on unknown  to the American and, by the way, also worldwide public opinion. This fact being  suppressed, the image of Lula as a democrat and a moderate does indeed acquire  some verisimilitude. Note that it was not only in the United States  that the media has covered up the existence and the activities of the Forum. In  Brazil, even though I  published the complete minutes of the assemblies of that entity and frequently  quoted them in my column in the prestigious newspaper O Globo, from Rio de Janeiro, the rest  of the national media en masse either kept silent, or ostensibly contradicted  me, accusing me of being a radical and a paranoid. When at last President Lula  himself let the cat out of the bag and confessed to everything, his speech,  published on the president’s official website, was not even mentioned in any  newspaper or TV news show. Shortly afterwards, however, the name “São Paulo  Forum” was incorporated into video advertisements of the ruling party, becoming  thus impossible to go on denying the obvious. Then, they moved on to the tactic  of harm management, proclaiming, against all evidence, that the São Paulo Forum  was only a debate club, with no decisional power at all. The minutes of the  assemblies denied it in the most vehement manner, showing that discussions ended  up becoming resolutions unanimously signed by the members present. Debate clubs  do not pass resolutions. What’s more, the same presidential speech I have just  mentioned also disclosed the decisive role that the Forum played in the sense of  putting and keeping Mr. Hugo Chávez in power in Venezuela. Nowadays, in  Brazil, nobody ignores that I told  the truth about the São Paulo Forum and the rest of the media  lied. 
On the other hand, it is  clear that Lula and his party, being the founders and the strategic center of  the Forum, had to keep a low profile, leaving to more peripheral members, like  Hugo Chávez and Evo Morales, the flashiest or most scandalous part of the job.  Hence the false impression that there are “two lefts” in Latin America, one democratic and moderate and the other  radical and authoritarian. There are two lefts, indeed, but they are rather the  one that commands and the other that follows the first’s orders and thereby  risks its own reputation. All that the Latin American left has done in the last  nineteen years was previously discussed and decided in the Forum’s assemblies,  which Lula presided over, either directly until 2002, or through his deputy,  Marco Aurélio Garcia, afterwards. The strategic command of the Communist  revolution in Latin America is neither in Venezuela, nor in Bolivia, nor even in Cuba. It is in  Brazil. 
Once the fact of the  existence of the São Paulo Forum was suppressed, what has given even more  artificial credibility to the legend of the “two lefts” was that the Lula  administration, very cunningly, concentrated its subversive efforts upon the  field of education, culture, and moral rules, which only affect the local  population, prudently keeping, at the same time, an “orthodox” economic policy  that calmed down foreign investors and projected a good image of the country to  international banks (a double-faced strategy inspired, by the way, in Lenin  himself). Thus, both the subversion of the Brazilian society and the  revolutionary undertakings of the São Paulo Forum managed, under a thick layer  of praise for President Lula, to pass unnoticed by the international public  opinion. Nothing can illustrate better the duplicity of conduct to which I refer  than the fact that, in the same week, Lula was celebrated both at the World  Economic Forum in Davos for his conversion to Capitalism and at the São Paulo  Forum for his faithfulness to Communism. It is quite evident, then, that there  is one Lula in the local reality and another Lula for international  consumption. 
—Could you expand a bit on the sort of  organization the FSP is, and the democratic credentials of some of its  members? 
The São Paulo Forum was  created by Lula and discussed with Fidel Castro by the end of 1989, being  founded in the following year under the presidency of Lula, who remained in the  leadership of that institution for twelve years, nominally relinquishing it in  order to take office as president of Brazil in 2003. The organization’s  goal was to rebuild the Communist movement, shaken by the fall of the URSS. “To  reconquer in Latin America all that we lost in  the European East” was the goal proclaimed at the institution’s fourth annual  assembly. The means to achieve it consisted in promoting the union and  integration of all Communist and pro-Communist parties and movements of  Latin America and in developing new strategies,  more flexible and better camouflaged, for the conquest of power. Practically,  since the middle of the 1990’s, there has been no left-wing party or entity that  has not been affiliated with the São Paulo Forum, signing and following its  resolutions and participating in the intense activity of the “work groups” that  hold meetings almost every month in many capital cities of Latin America. The  Forum has its own review, America  Libre (Free America), a publishing house, as well as an extensive network of  websites prudently coordinated from Spain. It also exercises unofficial  control over an infinity of printed and electronic publications. The speed and  efficacy with which its decisions are transmitted to the whole continent can be  measured by its ongoing success in covering up its own existence over at least  sixteen years. Brazil’s journalistic class is  massively leftist, and even the professionals who are not involved in any form  of militancy would feel reluctant to oppose the instructions that the majority  receives. 
The Forum’s body of members  is composed of both lawful parties, as the Brazilian Worker’s Party itself, and  criminal organizations of kidnappers and drug traffickers, as the Chilean MIR  (Movimiento de la Izquierda  Revolucionaria) and the FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias  de Colombia). The first is responsible for an infinity of kidnappings, including  those of two famous Brazilian businessmen; the latter is practically the  exclusive controller of the cocaine market in Latin  America nowadays. All of these organizations take part in the Forum  on equal conditions, which makes it possible that, when agents of a criminal  organization are arrested in a country, lawful entities can immediately mobilize  themselves to succor them, promoting demonstrations and launching petition  campaigns calling for their liberation. Sometimes the protection that lawful  organizations give to their criminal partners goes even further, as it happened,  for example, when the governor of the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Olívio Dutra,  an important member of the Workers’ Party, hosted a FARC commander as a guest of  state, or when the Lula administration granted political asylum to the agent of  connection between the FARC and the Workers’ Party, Olivério Medina, and a  public office to his wife. Sometime before, Medina had confessed to having brought an  illegal contribution of $5 million for Lula’s presidential  campaign. 
The rosy picture of  Brazil that has been painted abroad  is in stark contrast with the fact that from 40,000 to 50,000 Brazilians are  murdered each year, according to the UN’s own findings. Most of those crimes are  connected with drug trafficking. Federal Court Judge Odilon de Oliveira has  found out conclusive proofs that the FARC provides weaponry, technical support,  and money for the biggest local criminal organizations, as, for instance, the  PCC (Primeiro Comando da Capital), which rules over entire cities and keeps  their population subjected to a terror regime. Just as I foretold after the  first election of Lula to the presidency in 2002, the federal administration,  since then, has done nothing to stop this murderous violence, for any initiative  on the government’s part in that sense would go against the FARC’s interest and  would turn, in a split second, the whole São Paulo Forum against the Brazilian  government. In face of the slaughter of Brazilians, which is more or less  equivalent to the death toll of one Iraq war per year, Lula has kept  strictly faithful to the commitment of support and solidarity he made to the  FARC as president of the São Paulo Forum in 2001. 
—Why do you think worldwide  media didn't pick up on the fact that Lula's presidential campaign was illegally  funded, to the tune of $3 million, by Fidel Castro, as exposed by  Veja? 
In face of facts like  these, it is always recommendable to take into account the concentration of the  ownership of the means of world communication, which has happened over the last  decades, as it has been described by reporter Daniel Estulin in his book about  the Bilderberg group. Even the more distracted readers have not failed to notice  how the opinion of the dominant world media has become uniform in the last  decades, being nowadays difficult to perceive any difference between, say, Le Figaro and L’Humanité concerning essential issues,  as, for example, “global warming,” or the advancement of new leaderships aligned  with the project for a world government, as, for example, Lula or Obama. Never  as today has it been so easy and so fast to create an impression of spontaneous  unanimity. And since the CFR proclaims that the São Paulo Forum does not exist,  nothing could be more logical than to expect that the São Paulo Forum disappears  from the news. 
—Other analysts have made the  preposterous argument that foreign intervention, Imperialism by any other word,  has never characterized Itamaraty's policy. In light of "union leader" Lula's  direct intervention in helping Chavez overcome the strike in 2002-03 by  Venezuelan oil workers, by sending tankers with gasoline, how would you explain  such blatant ignorance? 
Itamaraty’s traditions,  however praised they were in the past, no longer mean anything at all. Today,  the Brazilian diplomatic body is nothing but the tuxedoed militancy of the  Worker’s Party. At the same time, the intellectual level of our diplomats, which  had been a reason of pride since the times of the great baron of Rio Branco, has  formidably declined, to the point that nowadays the intellectual leadership of  the class is held by geniuses of ineptitude, such as Samuel Pinheiro Guimarães.  No wonder then that everywhere now our ambassadors are simple agents the São  Paulo Forum. In cannot be said that this properly expresses Brazilian  imperialism, for our Ministry of Foreign Relations does not hesitate to  sacrifice the most obvious national interests before the altar of a more sublime  value, which is the solidary union of the Latin American left. There is no  Brazilian imperialism, but rather São Paulo Forum’s  imperialism.
—Do you think Marco Aurelio  Garcia is behind Zelaya's return to Honduras, as has been alleged? If  yes, it is evident that is a matter of a FSP member coming to the rescue of a  fallen comrade, but what's in it for Brazil? 
The Brazilian government  denies having something to do with that, but Zelaya himself confessed that his  return to Honduras had been previously arranged  with Lula and his right hand, Marco Aurélio Garcia. The most evident thing in  the world is that this grotesque installation of Zelaya in the Brazilian embassy  is an operation of the São Paulo Forum. 
—Given that Tom Shannon is  now US Ambassador to Brazil, would you reiterate what you  told him about Lula, and his partners in crime, in November 2005, or would you  advise differently? 
Tom Shannon did not pay due  attention to us in 2005 and this was, no doubt, one of the causes of the  aggravation of the Latin American situation since then. It is likely that he  read Maxwell’s and Alencastro’s speeches at the CFR and thought that such a  prestigious institution deserved more credibility than a handful of obscure  Latin American scholars with no public office or political party. Unfortunately,  we, not the CFR, were the ones who were right. 
—Finally, as in the case of  Chavez, has Lula done enough institutional damage to remain in power, or will he  hand over power democratically? 
The alternation in  presidential power no longer has any great meaning, for the two dominant  parties, the Workers’ Party and the Brazilian Social Democrat Party, act in  concert with each other and, despite minor differences in the administrative  economic field, they are equally faithful to the overall strategy of the Latin  American left. Lula himself has celebrated as a big victory of democracy the  fact that there are only leftist candidates for the 2010 presidential elections,  as if the monopoly of the ideological control of society were a great democratic  ideal. On the other side, the most celebrated of the so-called “opposition”  leaders, former president Fernando Henrique Cardoso, has already acknowledged  that between his party and the Workers’ Party there is no substantive  ideological or strategic difference, but only a contest for offices. It matters  little who will win the next elections, for, in any event, the orientation of  the Brazilian government must remain the same: in the social and juridical  field, overpowering subversion; in the economic field, moderation to anesthetize  foreign investors. The only difference that may arise is in the field of  security, in the case that the candidate of the Brazilian Social Democrat Party,  José Serra, wins, for his party, despite being as much a left-wing party as the  Workers’ Party, does not formally belong to the São Paulo Forum, being therefore  free to do things against organized crime which Lula himself could never do. As  governor of the state of São  Paulo, Serra showed to be the only Brazilian political  leader who pays attention to the slaughter of his fellow-countrymen. It is still  early to know whether or not he will be able to do what he did in his state, but  it is certain that he would wish to do it.