Brazil Lula and US Obama Engage in Soccer Diplomacy

Obama and Lula with Brazilian jersey Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and United States President Barack Obama took time out from their overloaded Thursday agendas to talk about the United States' defeat to Brazil in last month's Confederations Cup Final played in South Africa.

"We'll never let your players overturn a 2-0 lead again," Obama quipped after receiving a Brazilian national football team yellow jersey, with the number 5 and signed by the whole team, including star Kaka, at the start of their morning meeting at the G-8 summit in Italy.

During their banter, which reporters partly heard through a translator, Lula spoke animatedly of the June 28 match between the US and Brazilian national teams in the Confederations Cup series. The game was a crushing loss for the underdog US team, who led at the midway point, 2-0, only to lose 3-2.

Lula repeatedly said, "Yes we can," which was Obama's campaign catchphrase and apparently what the Brazilian president had in mind while his team trailed. Obama smiled gamely; if he felt Lula was rubbing it in a bit, he didn't let on.

"Hey, look at this," Obama said of the jersey, signed by the Brazilian team's players. "Beautiful. All right, wonderful. I like that."

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs later said Obama ended his 30-minute session with Lula by patting the Brazilian's back and vowing "we will not lose a two-point lead again".

Obama and Lula's meeting, either their fifth or sixth according to Gibbs, was a last minute add to the US President schedule after President Hu of China had to leave the summit to tend to protests in Western China.

Brazil was invited to the G8 meetings as part of the G8 plus G5, a group that includes South Africa, Brazil, India, China and Mexico. Lula also gave his G5 counterparts a Brazilian national team jersey.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

All the Americas in Brazil Drawing Plans for Bird Flu War

Luiz Carlos Guedes Pinto, the executive secretary at the Brazilian Ministry of Agriculture, says ...

39 Million or 20% of Brazilians Live on Government Charity

A report just released by Brazil’s government statistical bureau (IBGE), "Education and Access to Transfer ...

Brazil’s Lula Wants to Take Colleges to the Interior

Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva affirmed yesterday in his morning radio interview, ...

Venezuela’s Chances in Mercosur Dim After Chavez Called Quasi-Dictator in Brazil Senate

Chances of Venezuela ever joining the Mercosur received a full blow this week when ...

Cover of Brazilian magazine Época

With a Reality Like Ours Who Needs Yellow Journalism in Brazil?

Yellow journalism in Brazil is a waste of time because reality is already yellow. ...

Brazil’s Trade Balance Surplus Reaches Record High: US$ 46 Billion

Exports from Brazil reached US$ 12.661 billion in October, an 0.90% increase compared to ...

Brazil: Ex-Chief Justice Assails Lula

Recently retired from the presidency of Brazil’s Supreme Court, Maurício Corrêa is pulling no ...

Land Conflicts Up in Brazil

Last year, 39 people were murdered in land-related conflicts in all Brazilian territory. Although ...

FIT 0/16: Fashion for the Little Crowd, Brazilian Style

The São Paulo Fashion Week ends this Monday, January 21. But the southeastern Brazilian ...

The High Price of Fame in Brazil

A common enough fate had befallen Brazilian singer Carmen Miranda that had also been ...