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Brazil's Military Leaders Told Police Bolsonaro Had Election-Reversal Plot


FILE - Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro stands in front of his house before testifying to the federal police in Brasilia, Feb. 22, 2024. Judicial papers released March 15 say Bolsonaro presented military leaders with a plan to reverse the 2022 election if he lost.
FILE - Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro stands in front of his house before testifying to the federal police in Brasilia, Feb. 22, 2024. Judicial papers released March 15 say Bolsonaro presented military leaders with a plan to reverse the 2022 election if he lost.

Top Brazilian military leaders declared to police that former President Jair Bolsonaro presented them a plan to reverse the results of the 2022 election he lost, but they refused and warned him they would arrest him if he tried it, according to judicial documents released Friday.

The testimonies of Bolsonaro's former army and air force commanders to police, and released by the Supreme Court, include the first direct mentions of the right-wing leader as actively participating in a conspiracy to ignore the results of the October 2022 election won by his rival, current President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

The statements by military commanders during Bolsonaro's term add to his legal woes as prosecutors seek to find links between the far-right leader and the Jan. 8, 2023, riots that trashed government buildings in the capital, Brasilia, one week after Lula's inauguration.

A federal police report said former army commander Marco Antonio Freire Gomes testified that he and other top military leaders attended several last-minute and unscheduled meetings at the presidential palace after the second round of the elections "in which then-President Jair Bolsonaro offered possibilities of using legal tools ... regarding the electoral process."

General Freire Gomes told federal police that in one of the gatherings, Bolsonaro told the three commanders of his military and his then-Defense Secretary Paulo Sergio Nogueira he wanted to create a commission to "investigate the confirmation and the legality of the electoral process." He added that other tools could be used, such as issuing a decree to declare a state of siege.

Gomes said he rejected the idea from the start and told Bolsonaro that such a move "could end in the legal responsibility of the then-president," according to the federal police document.

The general also declared to police he "always made it clear to the then-president that, under the conditions at the time, there was no possibility of reversing the result of the elections from a military standpoint."

Former air force commander Brigadier Carlos de Almeida Baptista Jr. also told federal police he rejected Bolsonaro's electoral moves. He added that he believes that Gomes' rebuke was key to stopping Bolsonaro from seeking to reverse the elections result.

"If the commander [Freire Gomes] had agreed, possibly, a coup d'etat attempt would have taken place," the federal police document quotes Baptista as saying.

"Gen. Freire Gomes said that if such move was attempted, he would have to arrest the president," the police document reads.

Baptista also told the federal police that Almir Garnier, the former commander of Brazil's navy, "said he would put his troops at Jair Bolsonaro's disposal," according to the document.

Bolsonaro has denied that he and his supporters attempted a coup when rioters assaulted government buildings a year ago.

"What is a coup? It is tanks on the streets, weapons, conspiracy. None of that happened in Brazil," he said during a demonstration last month.

Bolsonaro's lawyer, Fabio Wajngarten, called Gomes' testimony "folkloric" on X, formerly Twitter, Thursday.

Bolsonaro started raising unfounded questions about Brazil's electronic voting process years before the vote, and those efforts to sow doubts accelerated in the lead-up to the election.

But top figures in the military giving lengthy testimonies to federal police is an ominous omen for Bolsonaro.

"It's one of the first big signs that Bolsonaro is going to stand alone and lose much of the military support he had," said Sergio Praca, a political scientist from the Rio de Janeiro-based Getulio Vargas Foundation, a think tank and university.

The testimonies are unlikely to have a significant impact on public opinion, said Manoel Galdino, a political scientist at the University of Sao Paulo.

Bolsonaro loyalists will not be swayed by new evidence, while many others are already convinced that the former president was involved in plotting a coup.

"There has been no major new revelation to the point of changing Bolsonaro's status or the role he will play in the October municipal elections, for example," said Galdino.

Bolsonaro is barred from running for office until 2030 due to two convictions of abuse of power, but he remains active in Brazilian politics as the main adversary for left-of-center Lula. As this year's mayoral elections loom, candidates have split between the two leaders.

According to Brazil's Penal Code, attempting a coup carries a sentence of a minimum of four years and a maximum of 12.

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