Brazil fears Trump's war on gangs might end with US troops in Rio
Nothing says "friendly bilateral relations" quite like unilaterally designating your neighbor's local cartel bosses as official global terrorists, leaving their government sweating over potential airstrikes.
The State Department just designated two of Brazil's largest prison gangs, the PCC and Comando Vermelho, as Foreign Terrorist Organizations. In Brazil, these guys are treated as heavy-duty organized crime. But in Washington, the word "terrorist" triggers a completely different, much scarier legal toolkit.
Brazil's foreign minister, Mauro Vieira, is understandably losing sleep over this. He sent a formal note to Congress warning that the US designation creates concrete risks to national sovereignty. The US counterterrorism laws are so broad that they theoretically allow unilateral military force abroad to neutralize perceived threats, completely bypassing local authorities.
Meanwhile, the Treasury Department is already freezing assets, accusing gang affiliates of laundering millions through US cities using cryptocurrency. Brazil notes they didn't even get a polite heads-up from Washington before the news dropped.
It turns out the only thing more stressful than having giant drug cartels run the streets is having the world's largest military decide it wants to help clean them up.
Source: UPI
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