Dozens of audios reveal high-ranking Brazilian officers pressured
Bolsonaro to stage a coup
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[November 26, 2024]
By MAURICIO SAVARESE
SAO PAULO (AP) — A trove of leaked audio recordings from late 2022
reveal high-ranking members of Brazil 's army discussing efforts to
pressure then-President Jair Bolsonaro to carry out a coup and remain in
power.
The 53 audios, obtained by the Federal Police and accessed by The
Associated Press on Monday, provide a rare chance to hear military
members expressing in their own voices their desire to keep leftist Luiz
Inácio Lula da Silva from taking office.
Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who oversees the police's
sprawling investigation, quoted some of those audios in his ruling last
week ordering the arrest of five people for plotting the assassination
of then-President-elect Lula in 2022 and then attempting to oust him
from power on Jan. 8, 2023, when Bolsonaro supporters destroyed
government buildings in capital Brasilia.
Audios from one former army officer — who was not among those de Moraes
ordered arrested last week — are particularly supportive of a coup, and
weren't referenced in de Moraes' order.
Col. Roberto Raimundo Criscuoli, a former subcommander of the army's
special forces, told retired Brig. Gen. Mario Fernandes, who was then
second in command at the general secretary of the presidency, that the
far-right leader had a clear choice after Lula won his third,
non-consecutive term.
“It will be either a civil war now or civil war later. We have a
justification now for civil war; people are on the streets, we have
massive support,” Criscuoli said in one of the audios. “Let's do this
now. Speak to 01.”
01 is a common reference to Brazil's president.
Neither the former president nor his ministers are heard speaking in the
recordings. The audios are not directly related to the Nov. 21 formal
accusation by Brazil's police that Bolsonaro and 36 others attempted to
stage a coup.
The Brazilian army did not respond to a request for comment about the
Federal Police investigation.
Bolsonaro frequently cast doubt on the election results without
providing any evidence and never conceded. He left for the United States
days before Lula’s inauguration on Jan. 1, 2023 and stayed there for
months, keeping a low profile. The top electoral court has ruled
Bolsonaro ineligible to run for president until 2030 for abuse of power,
and he is also the target of several investigations for a slew of
potential crimes.
Other audios are less explicit in their wording about the urgent need
for a coup. In a voice message to Gen. Fernandes, Col. Reginaldo Vieira
de Abreu used an expression frequently repeated by Bolsonaro to argue
the country's constitution should be ignored.
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Former President Jair Bolsonaro speaks to the press after being
formally charged by the federal police with attempted coup, at the
airport in Brasilia, Brazil, Monday, Nov. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Eraldo
Peres)
"We are at war, they are winning. It is almost over and they haven’t
fired a single shot. It is because of our incompetence,” he said.
In an audio from Dec. 8, Bolsonaro’s aide-de-camp, Lt. Col. Mauro
Cid, is heard telling Gen. Fernandes that time was running out to
keep his boss in office.
“On the 12th... It would have to be before the 12th, right?” Cid
said, referencing the day that the electoral court would certify
Lula's victory. “I will speak to the president. The thing is his
personality sometimes. He waits, waits, waits, waits to see where it
is going. To see who supports him. But sometimes time is short,
right? We can't wait much longer.”
De Moraes' arrest order last week makes reference to Cid's comment,
but it did not include his full statement.
Cid was already under house arrest, after having signed a plea
bargain deal with authorities last year. His testimony has helped
authorities collect evidence in different cases targeting Bolsonaro
and some of his key aides, including Walter Braga Netto, Bolsonaro's
chief of staff and running mate for reelection.
In the audios, Gen. Fernandes, who was among those de Moraes ordered
arrested last week, repeatedly claimed Brazil’s presidential
election had been rigged for Lula and insisted the military high
command should be pressured to aid Bolsonaro's cause before his
leftist rival assumed power.
“Any solution, you know, will not happen without breaking eggs," he
said. "We have to go for it. We have popular support.”
Thousands of Bolsonaro followers camped outside army facilities to
pressure military leaders to side with the then-president. Media
reports at the time said there was not enough support in the high
command for a coup. Bolsonaro supporters only returned home after
the Jan. 8 riot, upon orders from the newly installed army
commander.
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