Washington Has Reestablished Financial and Political Control Over Brazil
Washingtonâs opportunity came when the corrupt Brazilian elite illegally removed the elected president from office in order to stop government investigations of their illegal activities. Washington approved the coup with the provision that Washingtonâs Wall Street allies would control Brazilâs financial offices.
The BRICS are now reduced to the RICS, and Washington also has targeted the I (India) and the S (South Africa). Russia and China should expect disinformation from Washington designed to cause mutual suspicion and to erode their alliance.
Guest Column by Professor Michel Chossudovsky
Wall Street Behind Brazil Coup dâEtat
By Prof Michel Chossudovsky
Url of this article:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/wall-street-behind-brazil-coup-d-etat/5526715
Control over monetary policy and macro-economic reform was the ultimate objective of the Coup dâEtat. The key appointments from Wall Streetâs standpoint are the Central Bank, which dominates monetary policy as well as foreign exchange transactions,  the Ministry of Finance and the Bank of Brazil (Banco do Brasil).Â
On behalf of Wall Street and the âWashington consensusâ, the interim post coup âgovernmentâ of Michel Temer has appointed a former Wall Street CEO (with U.SÂ citizenship) to head the Ministry of Finance.Â
Henrique de Campos Meirelles, a former President of FleetBoston Financialâs Global Banking (1999-2002) and former head of the Central Bank under Lulaâs presidency was appointed minister of finance on May 12.
Ilan Goldfajn [Goldfein] appointed to head the Central Bank, was chief economist of ItaÃē, Brazilâs largest private bank. Goldfajn [Goldfein] has close ties to both the IMF and the World Bank. He is a financial crony of Meirelles. Â
Historical BackgroundÂ
Brazilâs currency system under the Real is heavily dollarised. Internal debt operations are conducive to a rising external debt. Wall Street is intent upon maintaining Brazil in a monetary straightjacket.
Since the government of Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Wall Street has exerted control over key economic appointments  including the Ministry of Finance, the Bank of Brazil and the Central Bank. Under the governments of Fernando Henrique Cardoso and Luis Ignacio da Silva (Lula), the appointment of the governor of the Central Bank was approved by Wall Street.
Arminio Fraga: president of the Central Bank (4 March 1999 â 1 January 2003) hedge fund manager and associate of George Soros, Quantum Fund, New York, Dual Citizenship Brazil-US.
Henrique de Campos Meirelles, President of Central Bank, ( January 1, 2003 â January 1, 2011). Dual Citizenship Brazil-US.
President and COO of Bank Boston (1996-99) and President of FleetBoston Financialâs Global Banking (1999-2002). In 20o4, FleetBoston merged with Bank America. Prior to the merger with Bank America, FleetBoston was the Seventh largest Bank in the US. Bank America is currently the second largest bank in the US.
After having been dismissed by Dilma in 2010, Meirelles made a come back. He was appointed Minister of Finance by the âinterim Presidentâ Michel Temer.
Ilan Goldfajn, chief economist of ItaÃē, Brazilâs largest private bank. Goldfajn [Goldfein] was appointed by Michel Temer interim âgovernmentâ to head the Central Bank. (May 16, 2016). Dual Citizenship Israel-Brazil.
Goldfajn had previously worked at the Central Bank under Arminio Fraga as well as under Henrique Mereilles. He has close personal ties to Prof. Stanley Fischer, currently Vice-Chair of the US Federal Reserve. Needless to say Golfajnâs appointment to the Central Bank was approved by the IMF, the US Treasury, Wall Street and the US Federal Reserve.
It is worth noting that Stanley Fischer had previously held the position of of Deputy Managing Director of the IMF and Governor of the Central Bank of Israel. Both Fischer and Goldfajn are Israeli citizens, with ties to the pro-Israel lobby.
Historical Background
In early 1999, in the immediate wake of the speculative onslaught against Brazilâs national currency (Real), the president of the Central Bank Professor Francisco Lopez (who had been appointed on January 13th Black Wednesday 1999) was sacked shortly thereafter and replaced by Arminio Fraga, a US citizen and employee of George Sorosâ Quantum Fund in New York.
âThe fox had been appointed to guard the chicken coopâ.
More concretely Wall Street speculators were in charge of Brazilâs monetary policy.
Under Lula, Henrique Campos de Meirelles was appointed President of the Central Bank of Brazil. He had acted previously as president and CEO within  one of Wall Streetâs largest financial institutions. FleetBoston was the second largest creditor of Brazil, after Citigroup. To say the least, he was in conflict of interest. His appointment was agreed upon prior to Lulaâs accession to the presidency.
Henrique Meirelles was a staunch supporter of Argentinaâs controversial Plan Cavallo in the 1990s: a Wall Street âstabilization planâ which wreaked economic and social havoc. Â The essential structure of Argentinaâs Cavallo Plan was replicated in Brazil under the Real Plan, Â namely the enforcement of a dollarised convertible national currency (Real). What this scheme implies is that the internal debt is transformed into a dollar denominated external debt.
Upon Dilmaâs accession to the presidency in 2011, Meirielles was not renewed as president of the Central Bank.
Sovereignty in Monetary Policy
Finance Minister Mereilles under the interim âgovernmentâ supports the so-called âindependence of the Central Bankâ. The application of this fake concept implies that the government should not intervene in Central Bank decisions. But there are no restrictions  on âWall Street Foxesâ.
The issue of sovereignty in monetary policy is crucial. The objective of the coup dâEtat was to deny Brazilâs sovereignty in the formulation of macro-economic policy.
Wall Street Fox
Under Dilma, the âtraditionâ of selecting a âWall Street foxâ had been abandoned with the appointment of Alexandre Antônio Tombini, a career government official, who headed the Central Bank of Brazil from 2011 to May 2016.
Upon Michel Temerâs accession as âinterim presidentâ, Henrique Campos de Meirelles was appointed to head the Ministry of Finance. In turn, Meirelles appointed his own cronies to head the Central Bank and the Banco do Brasil. Meirelles was described by the US media as âmarket friendlyâ.
Michel Temerâs Economic appointments:
Henrique de Campos Meirelles, Minister of Finance,
Ilan Golfajn, President of the Central Bank of Brazil, crony appointed by Meirelles
Paulo Caffarelli, Bank of Brazil, crony appointed by Meirelles
Concluding Remarks:
What is at stake through various mechanismsâincluding intelligence ops, financial manipulation, media propagandaâis the outright destabilization of Brazilâs state structure and national economy, not to mention the mass impoverishment of the Brazilian people.
The US does not want to deal or negotiate with a sovereign reformist nationalist government. What it wants is a compliant US proxy state.
Lula was âacceptableâ because he followed the instructions of Wall Street and the IMF.
While the neoliberal policy agenda prevailed under Rousseff, a reformist-populist agenda was also implemented which departed from the Wall Street sponsored macroeconomic mainstay during the Lula presidency. According to IMFâs Managing Director Heinrich Koeller (2003) Lula was âOur best presidentâ:
âI am enthusiastic [with Lula’s administration]; but it is better to say I am deeply impressed by President Lulaâ (IMF Press Conference, 2003).
Under Lula, there was not need for âregime changeâ. Luis Ignacio da Silva had endorsed the âWashington Consensusâ.
The temporary demise of Henrique de Campos Meirelles following the election of Dilma Rousseff was crucial. Wall Street had not approved Dilmaâs appointments to the Central Bank and the Ministry of Finance.
If Dilma had chosen to retain Henrique de Campos Meirelles, the Coup dâEtat would most probably not have taken place.
The US Proxy Regime in Brasilia
A former CEO/president of one of Americaâs largest financial institutions (and a US citizen) controls Brazilâs key financial institutions and sets the macroeconomic and monetary agenda for a country of more than 200 Million people.Â
It is called a Coup dâEtatâĻ by Wall Street.Â
Copyright Š Prof Michel Chossudovsky, Global Research, 2016