US State Department cables from places I have served plus items from my time as a UN peacekeeper. To increase public awareness of how diplomacy and peacekeeping are (were) actually done. All cables cleared by USG FOIA procedure. Cables are mostly those sent under my name from my posts but also others in which I was directly involved. UN documents and other items will also include occasional notes and background. Most recent in series on top with cables under the new series of UN documents.
Tuesday, January 23, 2018
Tuesday, January 16, 2018
Thursday, January 11, 2018
Tuesday, January 9, 2018
Wednesday, January 3, 2018
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
Friday, December 15, 2017
99 Brasilia 02679: BRAZNAV Major Equipment Expenditures*
*Note: Thought this cable was unclassified on sending, because it touched DOD/USN equities, the FOIA office needed to check with other agencies before releasing, thus a delay in passing to me. This cable would fit right after http://realdiplomacy.blogspot.com/2016/07/99-brasilia-02658-amazon-research.html.
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
Thursday, December 7, 2017
November 1999: A Riff on Eating at a Churrascaria
It is a mid-November Saturday afternoon.
Given that the sun is directly overhead, it should be rather warm.
But with the clouds and rain, the sun hardly gets through and the
temperature is cool and the air clean. I offer the following riff on
my just completed lunch at Las Pampas. If I wait any longer to put
this down, I'll be asleep.
After putting in a few hours in the office, I was feeling a bit
hungry. Not so hungry as to be starving, but enough so that with
facing many hours to the Marine Ball tonight, I thought I'd try a new
churrasco. O churrasco (the barbecue) that I chose was Las Pampas.
(In Spanish since putting it thus might be supposed to have
snob appeal. Some heathens still believe that the Argentines do
barbecued meat better than the Brazilians. Silly notion because both
countries have gauchos (cowboys), lots of cows and the tradition of
cutting them up into chunks, roasting the chunks over charcoal fires
and then eating great gobs of the resulting carne. I admit,
however, having eaten in Buenos Aires, that Argentine beef may be the
best in the world. But I digress.).
The Las Pampas next to the Carrefoure hypermarket in Brasilia,
should not, in any case, be expected to be of the highest class, and
thus, perhaps, the appeal to Spanish. Indeed, it proved to be very
much a place for the povao (pronounced poe- voun --
oun pronounced like in the English word noun and
meaning "the common people"). The management noticed right
away that I was a person of taste and class (i.e. someone for whom
the local currency was no object). All during my subsequent meal
they kept asking if I needed anything. With that prompting, I had
three very cold beers and lots of meat. A churrasco works this way:
you take your plate and go up to the salad bar and fill your plate
with all sorts of greens, roasted, raw and pickled vegetables, cold
cuts, cheeses and some things -- like quail eggs -- that I wouldn't
eat anywhere. (In this case, I bravely plunged into the live greens
since the only way to really know a restaurant is to see if you get
sick after eating the local greens.) While you are making your way
through this portion of the meal, rotating waiters begin bringing to
your table various and sundry cuts of beef, pork, chicken, sausage,
goat, etc (including -- ugh -- chicken livers). Some people allow
the waiter to carve off slices of sizzling flesh at this point. The
tourists gobble down the greens in order to feel better about the
subsequent feast of cholesterol. (I tried on this occasion to push
off the waiters but I tired of giving such offense and accepted a few
morsels.) After the salad, you go back to the food bar and load up
on the starches that will accompany the meats. These include French
fries, fried manioc (yucca), rice, beans and various types of
farofa. (Farofa is ground and roasted manioc. One of my
favorites.) When you get this back to your table, you order another
beer and really start pilling up the meat. Each person gets his/her
own pincers to grab the meat as it comes off the spit. It goes onto
a small sort of "holding-plate" until you take a piece
onto the main plate for actually cutting and eating.
On this particular afternoon, my holding-plate soon became the ground
floor for quite a pile. At one point the manager came up to my table
with a look of alarm, asking if he could take it away since clearly
the meat on the bottom of the pile had been there for a few minutes.
This is an important point. The cuts of beef are so loaded with
"juices" -- i.e. liquid cholesterol -- that if allowed to
cool, they became a bit tough with congealed, well you know. Eaten
right off the spit, they are divine.
But none of this was the high point of the meal. That was rather the
ambiance, starting with the music. This was provided by a one-man
orchestra who also sang. The mainstay of his repertoire were what I
remember as my very favorite music to "slow-dance" with
girls during my early high school days. He sang in English too.
However incongruous this may seem, it seemed to help my appetite.
His range went from a deep bass Louie Armstrong -- doing "Moon
River" -- to the falsetto of Maurice Gibbs (of the BeeGees). My
favorite --though I almost choked to death with uncontrollable
laughter -- was a Beatles melody. Needless to say that this
tremendous range came as the result of a total lack of skill and
shame. But it was fun.
During the lull in the band, I looked for other diversions. There
was the guy who left with his wife and looked normal from the waste
down but otherwise like some mad builder and added a White House full
of extensions to the upper torso. He caused quite a stir in his wake
as even the Brazilians -- normally very polite -- guffawed with mirth
after he had passed through. Then the three guys next to me,
obviously from a local TV crew from the size of the video camera they
had with them, paid the check and left. Although they had brought
the camera in with them to safe guard it from being stolen from their
vehicle, they had had such a good time that they just left it in its
chair. The waiter had to chase them to bring this to their
attention.
I eventually noticed that there were mirrors placed along the ceiling
in such a way that you could see reflected images of the middle of
other people's tables, providing a unique view of plates, glasses and
the occasional hand with knife and fork. This proved mildly
diverting but I decided it was improper to stare at people's dining
behavior. Some things should be left private. However, I did
notice that most folk's dishes seemed to be missing the big pile of
meat that was on mine. Either this cost me my appetite or I had had
enough. Lunch soon ended after two coffees and a trip to the dessert
bar, where they had a sinful number of gooey, custardy things with
coconut in or on them. This is always cause for temptation, but that
is another story.
Tuesday, December 5, 2017
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