ANALYZING THE WORLD FROM A RUSSOCENTRIC VIEW. This site will be attractive and a motivational experience to those who want to learn the real image of Russia, from its history, millenary culture and its identity discourse. It is relevant that we are in the Southern Cone, where our perceptions are similar to the whole Global South, so far from the Western capitals. MARCELO MONTES
Monday, November 24, 2014
EL JUEZ QUE LUCHA CONTRA LA CORRUPCION EN PORTUGAL
Carlos Alexandre, el superjuez supersilencioso
Entre sus casos, un ex primer ministro, varios ministros y jefe de Espírito Santo
JAVIER MARTÍN Lisboa DIARIO EL PAIS, 23 NOV 2014 - 14:06 CET
El hijo de cartero no se asustó porque alguien hubiera asaltado su casa y colocado una pistola delante del retrato de sus hijos. Le pusieron un par de guardaespaldas y se fue a trabajar. Como siempre.
Carlos Alexandre, el juez que se ha quedado sin otro fin de semana libre por culpa de la corrupción, es el juez justiciero, el superjuez o el Baltasar Garzón portugués, como se le apoda para resaltar que, para bien o para mal, no es un togado cualquiera. Él juez y el fiscal Rosário Teixeira son la mayor amenaza a la estabilidad del país
A Alexandre le había tocado de todo: desde escándalos del fútbol a quiebras bancarias, pero nunca había tenido en su despacho a un ex primer ministro, Y eso que la semana pasada también había sido movida: mandó a prisión a una decena de personas, entre ellas altos funcionarios, implicados en la Operación Laberinto, una red fraudulenta para dar visados a extracomunitarios. El caso se ha llevado por delante al ministro de Interior, amigo y socio de varios encarcelados.
Nacido hace 53 años en Macao, Alexandre estudió el bachillerato en la Telescuela y se licenció en Derecho por la Universidad de Lisboa. Antes de llegar al Tribunal Central de Instrucción Criminal en 2006, pasó por la Policía Judicial Militar y juzgados de Sintra.
En verano lidió con el mismísimo jefe del clan Espírito Santo, Ricardo Salgado, a quien sacó de la cama y llevó custodiado por la policía hasta su despacho; de allí salió muchas horas después con una fianza de tres millones de euros, la más alta en la historia de Portugal.
De su vida frugal poco se conoce, más allá de su afición por el club de fútbol Sporting de Lisboa, de su catolicismo y de su amor por losforcados y el rejoneo. También le gusta comer bien, pero a menudo come mal, en el despacho, pues los interrogatorios apenas los interrumpe hasta que llega la noche.
El caso de Sócrates, la Operación Laberinto y la trama del Espírito Santo relacionada con la Operación Monte Branco son solo algunas de las últimas aventuras en las que se ha metido Alexandre. Antes se ocupó de la Operación Furacão (otra red de blanqueo), de Portucale (presunto delito ambiental por corte de encinas para construir), de Apito Dourado (relacionado con la compra de partidos de fútbol) y de Face Oculta (red de comisiones por la que fue condenado el ministro de Sócrates, Armando Vara). Tampoco se libró de la quiebra del banco BPN (prisión preventiva para sus dirigentes Oliveira y Costa), de la Mafia da Noite (clubes nocturnos), o de Remédio Sarto (fraude en la recetas médicas), aunque no siempre, pese a los esfuerzos de Alexandre, los acusados acaban por ser condenados.

Nunca pierde la calma, y detesta que le mientan. No se le conocen declaraciones a los medios, ni apenas intervenciones públicas. Se cuenta de él algo tan bonito que debe ser leyenda: se le acercó un letrado y le espetó: "Cuando el dinero habla, la verdad calla", y Carlos Alexandre, con valentía, le contestó. “La verdad habla más alto”.
Sunday, November 23, 2014
THE END OF THE COLD WAR: ABSOLUTE IMPROVISATION?
The history of the Cold War as it has never been told
The Triumph of Improvisation analyzes the end of the Cold War and the demise of the Soviet Union by revisiting the strategic legacy of the Reagan-Gorbachev era.
One of the more questionable judgments of the so-called “dean” of Cold War historians, John Lewis Gaddis, is that the 40th President of the United States, Ronald Wilson Reagan, was one of America’s “sharpest grand strategists ever.”
Gaddis’s thesis, which he has promoted extensively over the course of a four-decade long career, that a specific and identifiable American grand strategy “won” the Cold War, is still ascendant in Washington policy circles and in the popular media.
This triumphalist narrative has had serious consequences for American policy, in particular towards post-Soviet Russia, in the decades following the Soviet Union’s dissolution in December 1991. Attempts at formulating an alternative and, more to the point, accurate narrative with which to describe the end of the Cold War have not, alas, done all that much to derail the Gaddis juggernaut. Perhaps, that is, until now.
With The Triumph of Improvisation: Gorbachev’s Adaptability, Reagan’s Engagement, and the End of the Cold War, an estimable young State Department historian, James Graham Wilson, has crisply countered the triumphalist narrative by offering a cogent, parsimonious, and well-written account of the final decade of the Cold War.
His thesis is straightforward: Four men - Milkhail Gorbachev, Ronald Reagan, George Shultz, and George H.W. Bush - acted not according to some pre-agreed upon grand plan, but rather as human beings actually behave when faced with new and amorphous situations.
And, for the most part, these men in positions of great power acted wisely, though of course not without a fair share of missteps and false starts. In Wilson’s telling, it wasn’t so much the policy that counted, it was the personnel.
In no presidential administration was this truer than in Ronald Reagan’s, which went through six National Security Advisors over the course of eight years. Wilson’s depiction of the first two years of the Reagan presidency makes for alarming reading.
Reagan, as readers of his published diaries are all too familiar, had a somewhat troubling preoccupation with the Book of Revelations, taking it not as a biblical story, but rather as one would treat a car manual or blueprint.
His Millenarianism manifested itself in musings like, “I swear I believe Armageddon is near” and, during a period of heightened Israeli-Syrian tensions, “Armageddon in the prophecies begins with the gates of Damascus being assailed.”
Worse, Reagan seemed to believe some of the more outlandish rumors with regard to the Soviet Union, believing it possessed a “laser beam capable of blasting our missiles from the sky” and that it had deployed a “hunter-killer” satellite in outer space. Reagan’s third National Security Advisor, Robert MacFarlane, was once moved to note: “He knows so little and accomplishes so much.”
Some of his advisors, who, unlike the president they served, were highly educated men, were all too eager to play to Reagan’s naiveté in order to advance their hawkish agenda. Thankfully a lot of that (though, as witness the Iran-Contra scandal, not nearly enough of it) ended with George Shultz’s appointment as Reagan’s second Secretary of State in July 1983.
Shultz cut an impressive figure. A veteran of the Pacific campaign in World War II, he went on to earn a doctorate in industrial economics from MIT before holding three cabinet-level positions in the Nixon administration.
Henry Kissinger, who, probably because he couldn’t help himself, spent the 1980s ridiculing Shultz as a rank amateur behind his back, had previously written that, “There was no position in government for which George Shultz would not be my first choice. No other public figure has held so many positions of trust.”
About Gorbachev, Wilson is unequivocal: He was “the indispensable agent of change.” Yet, he presents a balanced view of the man. Like his American counterpart, he was not averse to vacant sloganeering, often speaking of “spiritualization,” “a common European home,” and “a revolution in consciousness.” Yet, unlike Reagan, he knew how to manage (and oftentimes jettison) underlings who were working at cross-purposes.
As Wilson’s account comes to a close with an examination of the foreign policy of George H.W. Bush, James Baker and Brent Scowcroft, the dramatic import of the 1992 U.S. Presidential election becomes painfully clear. A foreign policy helmed by men of experience and wisdom was replaced by a policy of men who, for the most part, had neither; and thus, the ensuing debacle of America’s post-Cold War foreign policy began in earnest.
Wilson’s account has many virtues, not least of which is that it quite successfully challenges some of Washington’s most treasured myths, like Robert Gates’ reputation and the neoconservative myth of Reagan the hardliner. Here’s to hoping his book is accorded the reception and recognition it richly deserves.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)