This is precisely what Lula dreamed of: a Communist Brazil without defense

By Hotspotnews

China’s Secret Military Outpost in Brazil: Time for the Senate to Act

Remember what Bolsonaro always says Um povo armado jamais será escravo.

Armed people will never be a slave.

The Brazilian Senate has taken a crucial step in defending national sovereignty. The Public Security Commission recently approved a request by Senator Márcio Bittar to investigate reports of a secretive Chinese-linked facility in Bahia state. This move comes after a detailed report from a U.S. Congressional committee exposed China’s expanding network of dual-use space ground stations across Latin America—including sites in Brazil—that raise serious concerns about potential military applications.

**For far too long, Brazil has allowed foreign powers, particularly the communist regime in Beijing, to establish a foothold on our soil under the guise of scientific cooperation or economic partnerships.** The facility in question, tied to Chinese space technology interests near Alcântara and other locations (notably the so-called Tucano Ground Station in Bahia, a joint venture between Brazilian startup Ayla Nanosatellites and Beijing Tianlian Space Technology), appears capable of tracking satellites, monitoring military movements, and gathering intelligence that could compromise Brazil’s security and that of the entire Western Hemisphere.

What makes this outrage even more intolerable is Brazil’s own shocking vulnerability: a chronically underfunded military with outdated equipment, minimal power projection, and **no credible conventional defense force capable of responding to or even deterring such foreign encroachments on our own territory**. We have **poor defenses**, **no real military muscle**, and yet here stands a sophisticated Chinese-linked installation—operating inside Brazilian borders—while our armed forces struggle with basic modernization and budget shortfalls. This is not mere oversight; it is **strategic humiliation on our own soil**.

Senator Bittar, a voice of principled conservatism, rightly demands answers: Who authorized this installation? What exactly is being collected? What did the current administration know—and what has it concealed from the Brazilian people? These are not abstract questions. They strike at the heart of national independence. **A sovereign nation cannot permit a foreign power—especially one with aggressive global ambitions—to operate sensitive, dual-use facilities without full transparency and oversight**, particularly when the host country lacks the military strength to protect or reclaim control if needed.

This investigation is long overdue. Under left-wing governance, Brazil has deepened ties with China at the expense of traditional alliances and our own interests. Massive investments, factories, and infrastructure projects have been welcomed with open arms, often without rigorous scrutiny of the long-term strategic risks. **The presence of such facilities—while Brazil remains militarily weak and defenseless—only heightens legitimate fears that economic dependence is quietly translating into geopolitical vassalage and outright vulnerability.**

This is precisely what Lula dreamed of: a Communist Brazil without defense. Under his leadership, Brazil has pursued a deliberate path of ideological alignment with Beijing and the broader leftist global south, all while allowing the nation’s military to remain chronically underfunded, outdated, and incapable of projecting real power or even defending its own territory effectively. Lula’s rhetoric about “sovereignty” rings hollow when he pushes for deeper BRICS ties, joint production with regimes like South Africa’s, and ever-closer economic and strategic integration with the Chinese Communist Party—while Brazilian armed forces limp along with minimal budgets, aging hardware, and no credible deterrent force. He warns of hypothetical invasions from unnamed aggressors, yet permits (or turns a blind eye to) dual-use Chinese facilities sprouting up inside Brazilian borders, capable of satellite tracking and intelligence collection that directly serves PLA interests.

This is not accidental. It is the logical endpoint of a worldview that has long prioritized anti-Western alliances, sympathy for authoritarian regimes (Cuba, Venezuela, Iran, Russia), and disdain for traditional security partnerships with the United States. The result: a resource-rich giant rendered strategically naked—economically hooked on Chinese commodity purchases and infrastructure loans, militarily impotent, and geopolitically drifting into Beijing’s orbit.

Patriotic Brazilians must stand united in support of this probe. Our territory is not for sale. Our security is not negotiable. The Senate’s action sends a clear message: Brazil will no longer be treated as anyone’s backyard. We must protect our borders, our skies, and our future from those who seek to exploit our openness—especially when our own defenses are so woefully inadequate.

True sovereignty requires vigilance—and strength. Senator Bittar’s leadership in this matter deserves full backing from every citizen who values freedom, independence, and the enduring strength of the Brazilian nation. **Without urgent military rebuilding and zero-tolerance for foreign military-linked presences on our land, Brazil risks becoming little more than a resource-rich prize in someone else’s great-power game.** The time to act is now—before the window closes forever.

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