BrazilianPatriot
Member
Let's analyze some facts:
The FBI will open an office in Ecuador;
Paraguay signed an agreement that provides for the free movement of American troops in its territory and special jurisdiction;
Colombia was openly threatened by the Trump administration;
Argentina survives thanks to agreements with the IMF (led by the US);
Venezuela suffered an attack and became a satellite state of the Americans;
Cuba suffers an unprecedented economic siege.
The so-called "Donroe Doctrine" continues at full steam. Faced with the imminence of "multipolarity" (which is already considered inevitable in sectors of Washington), the current US administration desperately seeks to curb this process through the most despicable imperial practices.
In contrast, we have Mercosur which, although it has closed a free trade agreement with the EU, has substantial differences between its leaders. The UNASUR project was barely born and is already dead.
The president of Brazil, a historically peaceful country and defender of institutions, is already openly talking about heavy investment in the military sector and seeking military partnerships with nations outside Latin America.
Dark times await us.
I invite anyone interested in the topic to join us for a discussion.
The FBI will open an office in Ecuador;
Paraguay signed an agreement that provides for the free movement of American troops in its territory and special jurisdiction;
Colombia was openly threatened by the Trump administration;
Argentina survives thanks to agreements with the IMF (led by the US);
Venezuela suffered an attack and became a satellite state of the Americans;
Cuba suffers an unprecedented economic siege.
The so-called "Donroe Doctrine" continues at full steam. Faced with the imminence of "multipolarity" (which is already considered inevitable in sectors of Washington), the current US administration desperately seeks to curb this process through the most despicable imperial practices.
In contrast, we have Mercosur which, although it has closed a free trade agreement with the EU, has substantial differences between its leaders. The UNASUR project was barely born and is already dead.
The president of Brazil, a historically peaceful country and defender of institutions, is already openly talking about heavy investment in the military sector and seeking military partnerships with nations outside Latin America.
Dark times await us.
I invite anyone interested in the topic to join us for a discussion.