Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04BRASILIA623
2004-03-16 12:22:00
SECRET
Embassy Brasilia
Cable title:  

BRAZIL: CJCS MEETING WITH INSTITUTIONAL SECURITY

Tags:  BR MARR MCAP MOPS PINR PREL PTER SNAR POL MIL 
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S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 02 BRASILIA 000623 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/15/2014
TAGS: BR MARR MCAP MOPS PINR PREL PTER SNAR POL MIL
SUBJECT: BRAZIL: CJCS MEETING WITH INSTITUTIONAL SECURITY
MINISTER FELIX, 10 MARCH 2004

Classified By: DENNIS HEARNE, POLITICAL COUNSELOR. REASONS: 1.5
(B)(D)

S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 02 BRASILIA 000623

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/15/2014
TAGS: BR MARR MCAP MOPS PINR PREL PTER SNAR POL MIL
SUBJECT: BRAZIL: CJCS MEETING WITH INSTITUTIONAL SECURITY
MINISTER FELIX, 10 MARCH 2004

Classified By: DENNIS HEARNE, POLITICAL COUNSELOR. REASONS: 1.5
(B)(D)


1. (C) SUMMARY. Brazil's senior security and intelligence
official, Institutional Security Minister Jorge Felix, told
visiting CJCS Myers on 10 March in Brasilia that
narcotrafficking poses a grave threat to Brazilian national
security. The threat is manifest in international
arms-for-drugs trafficking involving Brazilian organized
crime gangs, in the spread of corruption in Brazilian
institutions, and in widespread violence against the public.
Felix expressed concern that narcotraffickers might place
innocent civilians on their aircraft, for use as human
shields against lethal force interdictions, and said such
issues made the decision to implement the shootdown law a
difficult one that the President must make. Nonetheless, he
reiterated the position that the GOB considers
narcotrafficking to be a threat to national security. On
terrorism, Felix said Brazilian authorities have found "no
evidence" of operational terrorist activities in Brazil, but
said that the potential "bears watching." End summary.


2. (U) CJCS General Richard Myers, accompanied by Charge, ORA
Chief, DATT and JCS staff met with Minister Felix and senior
officials of the Institutional Security Cabinet (Portuguese
acronym GSI) at the Planalto Palace (Presidential offices) on
10 March 2004. The GSI is an interagency organization within
the Presidency that functions, in roughly equivalent USG
terms, as a combination NSC, ONDCP, DCI and general crisis
management center. A cabinet-level officer and general in
the Brazilian army, Felix is in charge of the GSI and serves
as the President's senior security and intelligence advisor.

SHOOTDOWN


3. (S) General Myers asked Minister Felix whether
narcotrafficking represents a grave threat to Brazil's
national security. Felix responded that narcotrafficking
does pose a major threat to Brazilian national security on
both a "wholesale" and "retail" level. Elaborating, Felix
said that the "wholesale" threat is seen in the growth of
international drugs for weapons trafficking between Brazilian
criminal organizations and Colombian groups, and also in the
spread of narcotics-related corruption through Brazilian
institutions. On the "retail" level, the dramatic level of
hard drug use within Brazil is harming the population, in
terms of health and exposure to increased criminal violence.


4. (S) General Myers then asked Felix whether he was
comfortable that implementing a shootdown law in Brazil would
be a positive development. Felix replied that he has some
concerns that narcotraffickers "will not play by the same
rules as we do," and may react to shootdown measures by
placing innocent women and children on narcotrafficking
aircraft, for use as human shields against the use of lethal
force in interdiction operations. Such concerns make the
GOB's decision to implement a difficult one that, Felix said,
will have to be made by President Lula da Silva. However,
Felix reiterated the position that narcotrafficking
constitutes a grave threat to Brazilian national and public
security.

TERRORISM


5. (C) Turning to the issue of terrorism, Felix said that in
the years before the September 11 attacks the GOB had
routinely declared that Brazil was free of terrorist
activities. Now, he said the GOB's position is that it has
so far "found no evidence" of operational terrorist
activities in Brazil. He clearly stressed the concept of
"evidence" -- as opposed to saying no such activity exists --
asking his interpreter to repeat this phrase with emphasis to
the USG interlocutors. The potential for increased terrorist
activity in Brazil "bears watching," Felix added.


6. (S) Felix affirmed that operational cooperation between
GOB and USG intelligence and security agencies is excellent.
The tri-border area of Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay is a
"complex area" where various types of money laundering,
counterfeiting and other clandestine activities overlap one
another, Felix said. There is clearly potential for Islamic
terrorist fund-raising within this shadowy mix, Felix said,
but the GOB also must be careful to not tarnish unfairly the
image of the more than eight million law-abiding Brazilians
of Arab descent.


7. (U) General Myers did not have the opportunity to clear
this message.

HRINAK