APAN Community
APAN Community
  • Site
  • User
  • Community  Chat Connect  Maps Translate  Support
  • Site
  • Search
  • User

Foreign Military Studies Office
  • Working Groups
  • TRADOC G-2 Operational Environment
  • Foreign Military Studies Office
  • Cancel
Foreign Military Studies Office
O E Watch Mobile Edition Brazil Has a Border Problem
  • Files
  • More
  • Cancel
  • New
  • +OE Watch Mobile Edition
  • OE Watch, Vol 08, Issue 06, Jun 2018 (Mobile Edition)
  • +OE Watch, Vol 08, Issue 05, May 2018 (Mobile Edition)
  • -OE Watch, Vol 08, Issue 04, Apr 2018 (Mobile Edition)
    • 13 Million Users of Domestic Messaging Apps in Iran
    • A Chinese Perspective on Pakistan-Russian Cooperation in Afghanistan
    • A Militarized Silicon Valley in Russia?
    • A Russian Approach to Interagency Cooperation
    • A Turkish View of the Wagner Group in Syria
    • Arresting Iranian Cyber Criminals
    • Azerbaijan and Georgia Increase Bilateral Security Cooperation
    • Beyond Bitcoin: Could China Embrace Blockchain for Defense and Security Applications?
    • Boko Haram Repeats Chibok Kidnapping, Now in Dapchi
    • Bombs Detonated on Ferry and Tourist Vessel in Mexico
    • Brazil Has a Border Problem
    • China Commits to Building Global Satellite Communication Network by 2023
    • China Seeks Extradition of Detained Uyghurs in Malaysia
    • China’s Focus on the Development of “High-Quality Weapons and Equipment” for the Navy
    • Colombian Forces Fight the ELN
    • Concern in Kazakhstan over Returning Foreign Fighters from Syria
    • Continuing Violence in Mexico Fuels Armored Car Business
    • Covert Supply Lines
    • Cracks in Bolivarian Military Morale
    • Cristina Fernández’s Legal Jeopardy
    • Elections in Colombia
    • Elections in Cuba
    • Elections in El Salvador
    • Escalation in Syria?
    • Fact or Psychological Warfare? China’s Development of the World’s Strongest Individual Firepower System
    • Impact of Odebrecht Scandal on Peruvian Economy
    • Interview with Russian Navy Commander Admiral Korolev
    • Iran Unveils New Anti-Armor Missile
    • Iran: Israel’s Missile Defense Can Be Overwhelmed
    • Iran: Muslims Supported by US, UK are Illegitimate
    • Iran: Supreme Leader Advisor Lauds Russian Strategic Ties
    • Iranian Environmentalists Arrested as Spies
    • Is China Practicing “Debt-Trap Diplomacy” in Africa?
    • Local Debate on AMISOM: Should It Stay or Should It Go?
    • New Russian Officer Code of Conduct
    • Nigeria’s Environmental Devastation Drives Conflict
    • “Holy Defense:” Hezbollah’s New First-Person Shooter Video Game
  • +OE Watch, Vol 08, Issue 03, Mar 2018 (Mobile Edition)
  • +Monographs, Papers and Special Essays (PDF To Text Conversion)

Brazil Has a Border Problem

OE Watch Commentary: On 5 March the Brazilian newspaper O Globo published the following statistic-filled article detailing the increased amount of contraband seized and criminals apprehended along Brazil’s long and relatively open border frontier. At first glance the numbers are dramatic and sobering. However, while the amount of illicit goods, including drugs and military grade weapons, crossing the border might be rising, it is difficult to assess to what degree. The revelation is Brazil’s growing effort to control its borders in recent years, and hence a better understanding of what they are seizing and what they might be missing. Realizing the country is awash in illegal and often very dangerous contraband, the federal government has rolled out a number of border security initiatives in the past decade, but the task is herculean for multiple reasons.

First, the Brazilian armed forces are still haunted by the years of military dictatorship in Brazil (1964-1985). Significant segments of the population still recall military rule and fear a resurgent military as a result. Laws have been enacted and politicians have been reticent to use the military in what might be considered standard law enforcement roles, including the government’s recent decision to have the military take over security in crime ridden
Rio de Janeiro. This is understandable but frustrating to many in the security side of the government who believe there are currently no other options to maintain security and control along the country’s vast border—and in its major cities.

The second difficulty is the actual border zone itself. Brazil has one of the longest and most lightly defended land borders in the world, in part because a good portion of it is located in the Amazon. Roads are non-existent. Rivers are highways and are navigable depending on the season. The face of the Brazilian state on the Amazon frontier are nearly 40 Special Border Platoons. Take the case of São Gabriel da Cachoeira in Brazil’s far northwest, a region typically known as “the Dog’s Head” for its distinct geographic border resembling a barking dog. It is the home of the 2nd Jungle Brigade. The entire brigade supports seven Special Border Platoons strung out from Maturacá near the Venezuelan border to Bela Vista on the border with Columbia. The platoons are resupplied by boat and occasionally small plane when the weather is cooperative. However, the platoon in Cucuí is cut off from its airstrip and so all supply and support takes place on the Rio Negro in a six to ten hour boat ride, depending on the season.

While the federal government can deploy all branches of law enforcement for any given operation, there are only a handful of permanently located Federal Police in São Gabriel. While they conduct their own investigations, they are totally dependent on the army for logistics and to carry out law enforcement operations—a task that the army only recently has been granted within a 90-kilometer deep border zone. Moreover, the Special Border Platoons were created to secure a variety of government agencies on the frontier. In reality, only the army has shown up, and as the article states, 30,000 soldiers have been deployed for the entire national frontier. Many in Brazil believe that this is not enough. End OE Watch Commentary (Billingsley)

 “The products with the greatest increase in seizures were medicines (381.47%), footwear (340.02%), videogames (174.00%) and non-recorded media (123.48%).”
 Source: Camporez, Patrik. “Prisões e apreensões batem recorde nas fronteiras brasileiras (Arrests and illegal goods seized on Brazil’s Border hits all-time record),” O Globo, 5 March 2018. https://oglobo.globo.com/rio/prisoes-apreensoes-batem-recorde-nas-fronteiras-brasileiras-22455470
Although there are still vast stretches of unprotected border, the institutions responsible for its enforcement have undertaken reinforcements to reduce vulnerability. In the first half of 2017, the Federal Revenue Office established the General Coordination to Combat Contraband and Descaminho (Corep), which carried out, by the end of last year, 3,181 surveillance and repression operations, in which it imposed fines of R$281 millions. The amount was 223.5% higher than in 2016, when the penalties reached R $86.8 million. The products with the greatest increase in seizures were medicines (381.47%), footwear (340.02%), videogames (174.00%) and non-recorded media (123.48%). Altogether, 221 million packets of smuggled cigarettes were seized, which represented an increase of 11.16% compared to 2016.
  • Share
  • History
  • More
  • Cancel
Related
Recommended
Language Selector
Click to hide this icon and message
Select Your Language
  • Support
  • /
  • Hotline: Help Desk 808-472-7855
  • /
  • Privacy
  • /
  • Terms
  • Powered by All Partners Access Network