domingo, 31 de janeiro de 2021

Reedição de “Cumprir Agora Portugal” do Comandante Virgílio de Carvalho

MCP cria campanha de crowdfunding para relançar o livro

imagem: Tornado

O Movimento Cumprir Portugal lançou uma campanha de crowdfunding para o financiamento da reedição da obra “Cumprir Agora Portugal”, do Comandante Virgílio de Carvalho.

O livro, originalmente publicado em 1987 e galardoado com o “Prémio Aboim Sande Lemos – Identidade Portuguesa”, da Sociedade Histórica da Independência de Portugal, propõe uma Grande Estratégia Nacional, ancorada na maritimidade e individualidade de Portugal.

A iniciativa enquadra-se no plano estratégico do Movimento que pretende contribuir para a formação de uma geração de portugueses conscientes da maritimidade de Portugal.

A campanha está ativa na plataforma PPL até 17/02/2021 (18:00) e só será financiada se angariar um mínimo de 650€, que corresponde ao custo de 50% de uma tiragem de 300 exemplares. Por cada 100€ adicionais, será feita uma triagem de mais 15 exemplares. Por cada 10€ de donativos, é enviado um livro (com portes incluídos).

Mais informações sobre a campanha.

domingo, 24 de janeiro de 2021

China versus Estados Unidos: o Desafio Geopolítico Principal do Nosso Tempo

O grande desafio estratégico, que condiciona tudo o resto (ou, para usarmos a linguagem do fundador do Partido Comunista Chinês, a "contradição principal" do nosso tempo e que "determina as contradições secundárias") é aqui apresentado e explicado numa magnífica cartografia da nossa amiga Laura Canali, da Rivista Italiana de Geopolitica, Limes.



quarta-feira, 20 de janeiro de 2021

Eleições e Potências Estrangeiras

Há 10 anos, o parlamento canadiano chamou o 'patrão' dos serviços secretos para que ele esclarecesse o escândalo provocado pela existência de "ministros e executivos municipais a soldo de potências estrangeiras", como na altura foi noticiado num jornal português.

Com estas presidenciais, Portugal entra num ciclo eleitoral com autárquicas no final deste ano e legislativas em 2023 (se não for antes).

Para António Costa seria avisado e prudente tomar, em tempo útil, medidas para evitar (ou, pelo menos, reduzir...) esta "séria ameaça à segurança nacional" à moda canadiana.





domingo, 17 de janeiro de 2021

Israel, a 8ª Potência Mundial

Como 8 milhões de almas, em pouco mais de 20 mil Km2, fazem a 8ª potência mundial?!

Não, não é milagre mas sim inteligência (económica e estratégica), resiliência, estratégia, vontade, rigor... Ou, então, sim, é milagre, se aceitarmos que a estratégia faz milagres e que a geopolítica escreve direito por linhas tortas.


Da Wikipedia, algumas informações:

"Since Israel's establishment, military expenditure constituted a significant portion of the country's gross domestic product, with peak of 30.3% of GDP spent on defense in 1975. In 2016, Israel ranked 6th in the world by defense spending as a percentage of GDP, with 5.7%, and 15th by total military expenditure, with $18 billion. Since 1974, the United States has been a particularly notable contributor of military aid to Israel. Under a memorandum of understanding signed in 2016, the U.S. is expected to provide the country with $3.8 billion per year, or around 20% of Israel's defense budget, from 2018 to 2028. Israel ranked 5th globally for arms exports in 2017. The majority of Israel's arms exports are unreported for security reasons. (...) As a result of its conscription program, the IDF maintains approximately 176,500 active troops and an additional 465,000 reservists, giving Israel one of the world's highest percentage of citizens with military training.

(...)

Israel has the second-largest number of startup companies in the world after the United States,[548] and the third-largest number of NASDAQ-listed companies after the U.S. and China.[549] Intel[550] and Microsoft[551] built their first overseas research and development facilities in Israel, and other high-tech multi-national corporations, such as IBM, Google, Apple, Hewlett-Packard, Cisco Systems, Facebook and Motorola have opened research and development centres in the country. 

(...)

Israel's development of cutting-edge technologies in software, communications and the life sciences have evoked comparisons with Silicon Valley. Israel ranks 5th in the 2019 Bloomberg Innovation Index, and is 1st in the world in expenditure on research and development as a percentage of GDP. Israel boasts 140 scientists, technicians, and engineers per 10,000 employees, the highest number in the world (in comparison, the same is 85 for the U.S.). Israel has produced six Nobel Prize-winning scientists since 2004 and has been frequently ranked as one of the countries with the highest ratios of scientific papers per capita in the world. Israel has led the world in stem-cell research papers per capita since 2000. Israeli universities are ranked among the top 50 world universities in computer science (Technion and Tel Aviv University), mathematics (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) and chemistry (Weizmann Institute of Science).

(...)

In 2012, Israel was ranked ninth in the world by the Futron's Space Competitiveness Index. The Israel Space Agency coordinates all Israeli space research programs with scientific and commercial goals, and have indigenously designed and built at least 13 commercial, research and spy satellites. Some of Israel's satellites are ranked among the world's most advanced space systems.

(...)

Despite limited natural resources, intensive development of the agricultural and industrial sectors over the past decades has made Israel largely self-sufficient in food production, apart from grains and beef.


Ler mais aqui: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israel


quarta-feira, 13 de janeiro de 2021

Da Geopolítica Russa

A Geopolítica Russa, ao contrário de muitos intelectuais ocidentais perdidos na bruma de esclerosadas narrativas ideológicas, tem memória e soube criar e desenvolver grelhas de leitura.

Atente-se, por exemplo, no logo da mais pesada e influente revista russa de geopolítica, cujo ícone principal é Alexandre Duguine. Está logo tudo no logo!

Sobre o seu conteúdo conceptual (acessível em várias línguas ocidentais) e as suas grelhas de leitura .....

https://www.geopolitica.ru/

Alexandre Duguine, o 'Papa' da geopolítica russa


terça-feira, 12 de janeiro de 2021

Os Dias Finais de Trump à Luz da Geopolítica

Peter Zeihan coloca o assalto ao Capitólio e estes dias finais de Trump numa grelha geopolítica e a leitura dos factos ganha outras dimensões...


“Geopolitics has two speeds. 

The first is glacial. The immutable features of land and ocean, mountain and plain, jungle and river, shape who we are, what we dream, what we can attain, what we must try, how we succeed and how we fail. But not necessarily today. The forces of geography and demography rarely play out in years. It is more often decades. We always live in the shadow of geopolitics, but we can and do and always will mold the short-term to our will. 

The second speed is lightning. We can live. We can build. We can fly. We can fight. We can rage against the dying of the light. But no matter who we are or what we believe, the forces of geography and demography will always win out in the end. Germany was destined by geopolitics to soar in a century-long rise, and then history sped up and Germany crashed in a six-year cataclysmic war. The Soviet Union was similarly destined to dominate, just as history was destined to speed up with the Soviet collapse. I'd argue we are approaching the end of China's time in the sun, and very soon history will speed up and plunge the Chinese into a long, horrible dark. 

The world is a messy, often violent place. Wars over this or that patch of land, or this or that resource, have dominated all of recorded history…until recently. After World War II the Americans crafted the world's first true global Order, wielding their unparalleled military in a manner that enabled all countries to participate in global trade without needing to protect their production, their citizens, or the ebb and flow of materials and goods shipments. We did it to purchase the loyalty of the allies to fight the Cold War, but the American rationale hardly prevented the strategy from transforming our world. 

This Order is all most of us know. It is responsible for everything from peace in Europe to mass immunizations to the device you are reading this series on. But make no mistake. Our world is new. Our world is fragile. But above all our world is artificial and it bears absolutely no resemblance to the rest of the six-thousand-year saga of human history. We are able to live in our world because the Americans have been holding back the glacier, preventing the world from reverting to its long norm. But for the Americans, the globalized world is little more than a side effect of a war that ended thirty years ago. And holding back the glacier is hard. 

Geopolitics always wins in the end. The glacier always lurches forward into lightning. The longer we hold back the glacier, the more furious the lightning – and the Americans have been holding back the glacier for seventy-five years.  (...) 

What I know for certain is that globalization is over. Politically, each president who took office after the Berlin Wall fell has demonstrated ever-less interest in holding it together. In that, Trump was no outlier, but simply the next step down the road. There is no globalization without the United States providing global safety, and the globalized world has grown to the point that the United States lacks the economic and military capacity to sustain the system. Culturally, in the aftermath of January 6, the Americans no longer have the cultural capacity to even try to hold the center.   (...)

What I know for certain is that Trump's fall from grace has changed us a nation. If there is one thing that both diehard Trumpists and Trump's staunchest opponents agree on, it is that the United States needs to change. The year 2021 will be the year we debate what must change, and maybe even how. This year will be about groping our way forward. About deciding what we want our political parties to be. About the role of technology in society. About law enforcement. About disease. About (in)equality. This is the year we debate both what America is and what it should be. That's a big plate of stuff to chew through. I have little confidence we'll finish it this year. Which means the United States is utterly incapable of dealing with the world in any meaningful way.

What I know for certain is that I'm going to try to keep my personal politics out of this series. I'm going to attempt to avoid dancing on graves or crying in corners. I'm going to attempt to avoid falling down rabbit holes on topics ranging from violence in society to the First Amendment to Congress to the American political system. I'll try to point out when analysis veers into opinion. I'm pretty sure I'm going to fail here and there. I will try to act like I'm not on Twitter. I'm pretty sure I won't bat a thousand on that either.

And that's because I know one more thing for certain:

We are not simply in a time of transition. From globalization to something newer (or older). From Trump to Biden. From calm to chaos. The glacier of history has broken free.

We are living in the lightning. “

https://zeihan.com/life-after-trump-part-i-living-in-the-lightning/

 


sábado, 9 de janeiro de 2021

Na hora de voltar a ler o “Clash Of Civilizations”

Abominado pelos neo-liberais e outros que tais, vilipendiado e muito silenciado, o ’’Clash Of Civilizations and the remaking of world order’’ de Samuel P. Huntington, está mais do que nunca na ordem do dia das leituras imprescindíveis.

E, ao mesmo tempo, fazer umas incursões pelo outro lado do espelho, pela “Geopolítica Russa” (ver aqui https://www.geopolitica.ru/fr ou aqui https://www.geopolitica.ru/en ) e também travar conhecimento com o conceito de Estado-Civilização” que, partindo do Oriente (tal como o Covid-19), ameaça disruptar e aniquilar a ordem mundial baseada nos Estados-Nação e enterrar os Estados-Nação e tudo o que estes representam, criando assim as condições para implantar vastos impérios continentalistas.






sábado, 2 de janeiro de 2021

Espionagem: George Friedman Equaciona “O Dilema da Inteligência”

A operação russa de ciber-espionagem nos USA, recentemente revelada, oferece a George Friedman a oportunidade de, com o olhar frio e a clareza de raciocínio habituais, esclarecer a imprescindível necessidade da “inteligência” (para qualquer governo responsável...) e os seus limites intrínsecos. É o que Friedman titula “o dilema da inteligência”.

The Intelligence Dilemma

George Friedman | Geopolitical Futures | December 22, 2020

The United States claims to have identified a massive Russian intelligence operation meant to gather secrets from corporations and the government. The line from Washington is that the operation was successful, but precisely what the Russians gathered has not been disclosed. That the operation was known makes it ineffective from Moscow’s point of view. So the Americans are scrambling to find out how much the Russians saw, and the Russians are scrambling to find out how long U.S. counterintelligence was aware of the operation.

George Friedman

The fact that it was announced recently doesn’t necessarily mean it was only recently detected, and that it was detected doesn’t necessarily mean the United States hasn’t been feeding Russia a trove of misinformation. It is therefore difficult to know who won and who lost. Espionage has always been a complex game, whether carried out by spies on the ground, or by hackers in a comfortable and secure office.

This is a timely reminder that not only do all nations engage in espionage but they are morally obligated to do so. Every government is responsible for national security. It is perhaps its highest obligation. In order to carry out the duty, it must know the capability and intentions of all governments, hostile or friendly. The saying that nations have no permanent friends or permanent enemies but only permanent interests means that leaders must be aware of what other leaders intend. It is essential that they dismiss the statements of the leaders of other nations, since those statements might be utterly sincere or profoundly deceptive. Any government must do all it can to determine the hidden intents and capabilities of others. And since friends can become enemies well before they issue a press release, intelligence is a practice of expecting the worst while hoping for the best. 

Moscow’s intelligence operations – now known as hacking – are thus a moral obligation of the Russian state. Moscow must know our intent and capabilities. Policies, the intent of foreign policy, rest in the White House. The capability to act frequently resides in American corporations. This operation by the Russians apparently went after both. The fact that the U.S. has not been caught undertaking an operation of such magnitude doesn’t mean it has not done so. The relative silence about any U.S. operations might be due to the fact that none have been detected. It might be due to the fact that the Russian government is hiding the intrusion in order to maintain domestic credibility. It may be that the Russians detected one and took control of the operations while pretending not to have noticed it. 

This much is unknown. What is certain is that the United States is as morally obligated to conduct espionage as the Russians and has prudently operated a vast and capable intelligence organization. The problem is that, as a citizen, I have no idea whether the U.S. intelligence establishment is capable of serving the national interest. I express confidence in that establishment based not on direct knowledge but rather on the assumption that at least some of the money allocated to the intelligence community has been put to good use. Even a fraction of the money spent should be enormously successful. And this is true for all nations, albeit with far more modest budgets. 

It is also true that all nations must be allowed to shroud their intelligence operations in secrecy and deception, a “bodyguard of lies” as it was once put. That we do not know how successful Russian hackers were, nor whether the exploit was penetrated months ago, is not the essential problem. All these operations fall in the realm of moral necessity, and I have no need to know. The problem arises from the assumption that the elected leaders of the country may not know how badly compromised the U.S. was by this action, or how badly the Russians were compromised. 

Thus is the moral dilemma of intelligence. We need an intelligence service to inform our leaders of the intent of other nations. And in any particular case, we can accept a bodyguard of lies. But U.S. intelligence is vast in terms of personnel and cost. It is also, by profession and law, required to act in secrecy. The entity that is charged with the most important thing this country has cannot readily be judged for competence by elected leaders, let alone by its citizens. 

A citizen needs to know that the U.S. is giving as good as it gets, and that China or Russia, each carrying out their duty to their nations, is feeling the righteous anger of the United States. I personally believe we are extremely good, but I don’t know for sure. I can’t know, nor can others, the degree to which our intelligence service is competent, acting within the laws that established it. Its missions are secret, yet that very secrecy forces us to be uncertain about all of these things. 

This is not unique to the United States nor to democracies. China has a vast intelligence service, and the Chinese Central Committee has only 200 members or so. They can’t know whether Chinese operatives are stealing technology for the use of the Chinese government, for the use of private Chinese corporations, or to sell to India. In theory, they are undoubtedly monitored, but there is a great deal of money that might be made in ignoring or manipulating them. The process of monitoring any intelligence agency in any country is the ancient Roman question: “Who will guard the guardians?” How can you prevent those monitoring secret operations from succumbing to greed, the most human of vices? 

In the United States, we confront this problem in two ways. One is to hold Congressional hearings in which the questioners have no idea what question to ask, nor any real idea whether the answers they get are in any way connected to the truth. The second is to create a new organization to monitor the operating service. Here, there are two choices. One is to appoint someone from outside the intelligence community, which replicates the Congressional dilemma. The other is to appoint an elder statesman from the community, who has invested his life in the service and who may be incapable of impartial and ruthless action. 

The most important question is effectiveness. All nations can ignore a measure of corruption if the national interest is served effectively. But how do we know whether the information provided to the president is accurate? In a world that is dangerous to Russia and the United States equally, the necessity of intelligence is obvious, as is the inability of the political leadership to oversee the vast expanse of intelligence operations. 

Stalin solved this problem by periodically killing members of his intelligence apparatus. It did not help him, and ultimately hurt him, but it made him feel better. Stalin, far more powerful than Putin, Xi or Trump, couldn’t be certain of his intelligence service. So dubious was he that he ignored their warning of a German invasion. Not trusting the intelligence service can be as calamitous as trusting it. 

Intelligence prior to the 20th century was important, but nothing like it is today. It now sprawls in all directions in all nations. The global nature of great power interests generates vast establishments that seem to multiply. We all face the same moral dilemma. We all want to protect our countries. We all reasonably distrust each other. We all build intelligence services generously. They must have a veil of trust, or they can’t work. But in each country, the question is asked: Are they actually competent, and do they tell us the truth? At some point, the solution will not sustain itself.

 https://geopoliticalfutures.com/the-intelligence-dilemma/


sexta-feira, 1 de janeiro de 2021

O primeiro mapa de um Estado, em toda a história mundial

Costuma ser referido como 'O mais antigo mapa de Portugal' mas é muito mais do que isso. É, em toda a história mundial, o primeiro mapa de um Estado. É uma enorme inovação geopolítica da cartografia portuguesa e é uma fortíssima contribuição para a construção e a imagem do Estado-Nação.  

O autor deste primeiro mapa de um Estado e 'mais antigo mapa de Portugal' é Fernando Álvares Seco (matemático e cartógrafo), em 1561. 

Este ano, a inovação, que se impôs a todo o mundo e acabou por 'retratar' todos os Estados-Nação, perfaz 460 anos.

Ver o mapa em pormenor aqui: https://www.wdl.org/pt/item/470/view/1/1/

"O mais antigo mapa de Portugal" e primeiro mapa de um Estado

Estudo de Amorim Girão e outros sobre "o mapa"

Nota: Sobre a cartografia portuguesa dos séculos XV e XVI, ver a excelente obra de Armando Cortesão.

Portugal: Falta de Estratégia e de Decisão

Lúcio Vicente Estamos a poucos dias de celebrar os 50 anos de Abril. Porém, Portugal é muito menos do que podia e devia ser. Os 123 mil milh...