Brazil Turns to Washington as Crime Politics Tighten Before Election
Brazil’s new anti-crime pact with the United States lands in an election season where weapons, drugs, tax intelligence, and sovereignty are colliding. It promises tougher enforcement, but also shows how organized crime now shapes diplomacy, border policy, and politics alike.
Security Moves to the Center of the Campaign
Brazil’s government last week announced a joint initiative with the United States to combat organized crime, built around integrating data from Brazil’s federal tax authority with U.S. Customs and Border Protection. On the surface, it is a technical agreement about intelligence and enforcement. In political terms, though, it is something more revealing. It shows how public security has become too urgent, too electorally dangerous, and too transnational to remain only a matter for police speeches and domestic posturing.
The timing is not subtle. President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is stepping up his focus on public security as he seeks a new term in October’s general election. In Latin America’s largest economy, crime has long been one of the few issues capable of cutting through ideological branding and forcing every government into the language of urgency. Lula knows that. So do his opponents. His lead in opinion polls has evaporated, and surveys now point to a runoff tie with right-wing Senator Flavio Bolsonaro.
That matters because security is one of the few terrains where the Brazilian right often believes it holds a natural advantage. Lula’s move, then, looks like an attempt to close that gap without surrendering the field entirely. By announcing a joint initiative with Washington, his government is trying to show seriousness, coordination, and reach. It is saying that organized crime is not only being denounced. It is being tracked across borders and through state institutions powerful enough to follow money, cargo, and hidden routes.
That shift in emphasis is important. In Brazil, organized crime is no longer described only as an armed street problem or a prison system problem. The notes make clear that the federal tax authority has played a central role since last year in major operations exposing money laundering schemes tied to criminal organizations in the fuel sector, including multiple operations abroad. That tells you something crucial about the current Brazilian understanding of crime. It is not only territorial. It is financial, commercial, and international. It moves through legal-looking channels and across customs lines.
This is why the agreement matters politically. It lets Lula frame himself not merely as a leader reacting to violence, but as one modernizing the state’s response. The message is that public security now requires intelligence, tax data, and international coordination. In another moment, that might sound dry. In an election year, it becomes campaign material.

The Tax Office Enters the Front Line
One of the most striking elements in the notes is the role of Brazil’s tax authority. That detail changes the texture of the whole story. It suggests that crime in Brazil today is not simply about gangs with guns or narcotics on the move. It is also about laundering, shell structures, illicit trade, and the misuse of formal sectors that appear respectable until investigators start lifting the floorboards.
The fuel sector stands out here. Brazil’s tax authority has been central to operations, uncovering laundering schemes linked to criminal organizations in that industry. Lula has publicly called on Donald Trump to arrest the owner of Refit, one of the main companies involved in the scheme, who resides in the United States. That is a remarkable political image. A Brazilian president effectively asks the U.S. president to act on a crime case that spills across borders and into one of Brazil’s most strategic economic sectors.
It says something larger about the nature of power and illegality in the region. Organized crime in Latin America has long relied on its ability to camouflage itself within ordinary commerce. What these notes describe is a Brazilian state increasingly aware that the real battlefield is not only the favela or the highway checkpoint, but the paperwork, the customs gate, the tax trail, and the foreign haven.
Brazil’s tax revenue secretary, Robinson Barreirinhas, underscored the scale of the issue by saying that more than 1,100 weapons arriving from the United States had been seized over the past 12 months. He also said authorities confiscated more than 1.5 tons of drugs in the first quarter alone, mainly synthetic drugs and hashish. Those details matter because they disrupt an older one-way story about criminal flows in the Americas. The agreement is not just about Brazil exporting its insecurity northward. It is also about Brazil receiving weapons from the United States and absorbing the destabilizing effects.
That gives the partnership a harder edge. Brazil is not entering this arrangement from a posture of simple dependence. It is also signaling that part of the problem comes from the north. Weapons are arriving. Drugs are moving. Financial networks are international. The pact with CBP, therefore, has a dual logic. It is cooperative, yes, but it also reflects Brazil’s insistence that transnational crime cannot be discussed honestly unless the United States is treated as part of the route, not merely the authority overseeing it.
This is what makes the initiative more than bureaucratic. It places Brazil’s customs, tax, and financial intelligence apparatus at the center of the election’s main public security story. That is a significant change in tone. The state is being presented less as a reactive force and more as an investigative machine that can trace crime through the legal economy.

Cooperation Comes with Limits
Still, the agreement does not erase the tensions between Brasília and Washington. The notes are explicit on that point. Last year, U.S. officials asked Brazil to label major gangs as terrorist organizations. Brazil refused. That refusal matters because it shows the limits of alignment, even at a moment of visible cooperation.
Brazil wants help, coordination, and shared intelligence, but not at the price of fully importing the U.S. political vocabulary around crime. That is a very Latin American distinction. Governments in the region often want access to resources, partnerships, and diplomatic leverage, while remaining wary of frameworks that might hand Washington too much influence over how local threats are defined and managed.
So the joint initiative sits in a delicate place. It is a sign of proximity, but also of managed distance. Finance Minister Dario Durigan said the agreement was made possible after talks between Lula and Trump gained momentum. The Brazilian government had hoped the announcement would coincide with an in-person meeting between the two leaders, originally expected in March. That meeting never happened, and now has no clear timeline after the outbreak of the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran.
Even that detail tells a story. Brazil’s security diplomacy is now entangled not only with U.S. politics, but with crises far outside the hemisphere. A meeting meant to showcase anti-crime cooperation can be displaced by war elsewhere. That is one of the realities Lula must navigate. He needs U.S. coordination badly enough to announce it, but the relationship remains vulnerable to Washington’s own shifting priorities and global distractions.
Which brings the whole issue back to October. Lula is trying to show voters that he can be pragmatic, tough, and internationally connected on security without looking subordinate. Flavio Bolsonaro, as the main right-wing rival, will almost certainly benefit from any perception that Lula has moved too late or too cautiously. That is the political squeeze. Move closer to Washington, and risk looking reactive. Keep too much distance, and risk looking weak on crime.
The new pact reveals, then, not just that Brazil and the United States can cooperate. It reveals how organized crime has become a force powerful enough to redraw the grammar of Brazilian politics itself. Security is no longer only a domestic fear. It is a customs issue, a tax issue, a campaign issue, and a diplomatic test. In that sense, Lula’s announcement is less a neat solution than a sign of the moment. Brazil is entering an election where the border, the ballot, and the criminal economy are no longer separate stories.
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