Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04QUITO3103
2004-11-26 20:24:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Quito
Cable title:  

ARTICLE 98 BACK IN HEADLINES, POST PRESSES CASE

Tags:  MASS PREL PGOV EC KICC 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 QUITO 003103 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/25/2014
TAGS: MASS PREL PGOV EC KICC
SUBJECT: ARTICLE 98 BACK IN HEADLINES, POST PRESSES CASE

REF: QUITO 3028

Classified By: Ambassador Kristie A. Kenney, Reasons 1.4 (b),(d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 QUITO 003103

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/25/2014
TAGS: MASS PREL PGOV EC KICC
SUBJECT: ARTICLE 98 BACK IN HEADLINES, POST PRESSES CASE

REF: QUITO 3028

Classified By: Ambassador Kristie A. Kenney, Reasons 1.4 (b),(d)


1. (C) SUMMARY: Recent public comments from high-level USG
visitors and the Ambassador have put Article 98 back in play
in Ecuador. Major newspapers and radio/TV outlets have
highlighted our efforts, as well as GoE Foreign Minister
Patricio Zuquilanda's November 23 claim that the MFA
continues to analyze the USG's petitions. To re-start
moribund Article 98 negotiations, the Embassy is crafting its
own game plan, heavy on personal diplomacy and media
education. Additionally, we are revisiting the idea of "Plan
Ecuador," a mostly PR effort to recast existing USG
assistance efforts as political "payback" for Article 98.
END SUMMARY.

-------------- ---
VIPs Re-Introduce USG Desires for ICC Protection
-------------- ---


2. U) Reftel reports visiting Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld's November 16 bilat with Ecuador President Lucio
Gutierrez, in which Article 98 featured high. New Southcom
commander General Bantz J. Craddock raised the same slate of
points during his November 19 calls on Ecuador's joint
commander and service chiefs. Seeking to further pressure
the GoE to restart good faith talks, the Ambassador, in
public remarks November 20, described the serious threats
Ecuador faced from neighboring Colombia's conflict. A flow
of U.S. military assistance would continue to bolster
Ecuador's defenses, but was far smaller than what Ecuador
might have received, had the GoE signed Article 98.


3. (U) Curiosity over USG security engagement in the Andean
region was high, owing to Secretary Rumsfeld's travel to
Quito and President Bush's recent stopover in Colombia. As
such, the Ambassador's Article 98 comments made the front
pages. The Foreign Ministry responded swiftly and
surprisingly. Rather than state unequivocally that Ecuador
was "not interested," as predecessor Nina Pacari had done, FM
Zuquilanda claimed that Ministry experts "were studying the
theme meticulously." Reporters again raised Article 98
November 25, during the Ambassador's Thanksgiving Day trip to

the Manta Cooperative Security Location (Septel). Mostly
neutral before, media coverage turned negative November 26,
with Quito daily Hoy demanding Ecuador reject the "Empire's"
push for blanket immunities.

--------------
And Post's Working Group Brainstorms
--------------


4. (C) The press and public's renewed interest in Article 98
made us believe the time was ripe to re-engage immediately,
rather than wait for expected December Cabinet changes and
January turnover of Congressional leadership (Reftel). Post
convened its issue-specific working group November 24 and
hashed out a near-term Article 98 action plan. Up first is
an Ambassador-President Gutierrez sit-down, which we hope to
organize the week of November 29. In his earlier meeting
with SecDef, Gutierrez again declared support for the Article
98 concept, but noted it was a hard sell, especially with the
left-leaning legislature. He would need serious quid pro quo
to go forward. At her upcoming meeting with the GoE
president, the Ambassador will emphasize the futility of
putting the cart before the horse -- it is nonsense to
discuss "rewards" while the MFA continues to avoid
negotiations.


5. (C) Bypassing the grandstanding and mercurial FM
Zuquilanda, the DCM will target Vice Foreign Minister Edwin
Johnson. One of the MFA's few thoughtful interlocutors,
Johnson also owes us one, as the USG supported his candidacy
for a UN human rights-related position. In their meeting,
the DCM will push the need for a serious MFA Article 98
coordinator, to replace the do-nothing we currently endure.


6. (C) Public Diplomacy too plays a role in restarting
negotiations. PAS, Milgroup, and POL staff soon will host a
series of roundtables with interested journalists, hoping to
correct Article 98 misperceptions. Those same Embassy
personnel are weighing a possible International Visitor (IV)
program for Ecuadorian think-tankers and talking heads, whose
support will be vital come ratification time (and who are
bashing us now). In both fora, we will raise Ecuador's
recent assignment of troops to the UN's Haiti peacekeeping
operations, as the contingent could, barring specific
protections, come under the ICC's microscope.


7. (C) Longer-term, we are revisiting plans for a "Plan
Ecuador." In early 2004, Department of State U/S John Bolton
heard President Gutierrez lobby for an uptick in USG security
and social assistance, reimbursement for heavy political
costs that signing an Article 98 agreement allegedly would
entail. Believing our aid package already robust but seeing
utility in providing deliverables, we deliberated in-house
how best to recast and repackage existing programs for
maximum political benefit. The MFA's continuing refusal to
talk text led us to shelve "Plan Ecuador" plans, but we are
prepared for a re-look should circumstances warrant.

9. (C) COMMENT: Just a fortnight ago, we worried that word
of serious Article 98 negotiations could torpedo the
teetering Lucio Gutierrez administration. The following two
weeks have seen the president's political fortunes soar,
however. After dodging impeachment proceedings November 9,
Gutierrez and newfound Congressional allies exacted political
revenge November 25, and the now-minority opposition is in
retreat (Septel). Fortified, he just might weather the
"torment" that serious Article 98 negotiations could unleash.
We intend to find out. END COMMENT.
KENNEY