Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05SANSALVADOR3567
2005-12-23 20:15:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy San Salvador
Cable title:  

CODEL BLUNT URGES PRESIDENT SACA TO RESOLVE

Tags:  OREP PREL ETRD ECON ES CAFTA 
pdf how-to read a cable
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SAN SALVADOR 003567 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: OREP PREL ETRD ECON ES CAFTA
SUBJECT: CODEL BLUNT URGES PRESIDENT SACA TO RESOLVE
REMAINING CAFTA-DR IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES


UNCLAS SAN SALVADOR 003567

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: OREP PREL ETRD ECON ES CAFTA
SUBJECT: CODEL BLUNT URGES PRESIDENT SACA TO RESOLVE
REMAINING CAFTA-DR IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES



1. Summary: In a positive December 20 meeting with
President Saca, a congressional delegation headed by Acting
Majority Leader Roy Blunt (R-MO) acknowledged the efforts of
the Salvadoran government in getting ready for CAFTA-DR
implementation by January 1, and urged the President to
resolve outstanding issues in the next few days so that
CAFTA could enter into force with El Salvador and the United
States on that date. The delegation also met with board
members of the American Chamber of Commerce to hear opinions
of the business community on CAFTA-DR. End summary.


2. A congressional delegation headed by Acting Majority
Leader Roy Blunt (R-MO) and including Solomon Ortiz (D-TX),
Mark Foley (R-FL),Ruben Hinojosa (D-TX),Gregory Meeks (D-
NY),Dennis Moore (R-KS),and Mike Conaway (R-TX) arrived in
El Salvador for a five-hour visit on December 20 to discuss
CAFTA-DR with government and business leaders. Ambassador
Barclay and a core Embassy country team briefed the
delegation upon arrival.


3. The delegation lunched with several members of the
American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) board to discuss CAFTA-
DR. The AmCham representatives said that CAFTA-DR was a
terrific opportunity for business and that it had already
improved economic conditions for some companies, even though
the free trade agreement had not yet come into force. They
emphasized the importance of Central America as a market of
40 million people, not just an internal market of 6 million
in El Salvador. In addition AmCham said the benefits of
trade capacity building programs would help all companies in
international markets, citing exporters of specialty foods
as an example of the type of small company that can benefit
from free trade.


4. The delegation emphasized that American companies in
Central America are a bridge to the U.S., and need to
promote social responsibility in the countries where they
are located. Several members said that U.S. companies
provide benefits to those who work for them, but this does
not come across back in the U.S.: instead, companies are
bashed as exploitative of foreign labor. By increasing
their profile in community development programs, U.S.
investors would be able to preempt these arguments, and make
promotion of U.S. companies doing business overseas easier
for U.S. lawmakers.


5. The delegation met for 30 minutes with President Elias
Antonio Saca, Foreign Minister Francisco Lainez, Minister of
Economy Yolanda Mayora de Gavidia and Technical Secretary of
the Presidency Eduardo Zablah. The tone was warm and
supportive. President Saca opened by saying CAFTA-DR should
enter into force on January 1, and that El Salvador is
ready. He said economic signals about the agreement are
positive, and the best migration policy is to create growth
and jobs in El Salvador so Salvadorans remain home.


6. Mr. Blunt thanked President Saca for his personal
leadership role in a tough legislative battle over CAFTA-DR.
He asked Saca to maintain his leadership moving toward
implementation, and highlighted El Salvador's potential to
be the first country to take advantage of CAFTA. The
delegation expressed support for a January 1 entry into
force date but urged the GOES to use the pressure of the
impending deadline to resolve remaining issues that could
hold up entry into force with El Salvador.


7. President Saca insisted that remaining issues had been
addressed, and he stressed the importance of a January 1,
2006 start date and its influence in setting a pace for
other countries to follow. Minister Gavidia explained that
all necessary legal reforms had been completed December 15,
and summarized the Salvadoran efforts to resolve remaining
issues.


8. Due to time constraints there was no opportunity for
any press events; the only coverage came from photos
released by the President's office of the meeting with the
delegation.


9. This cable was not cleared by the Codel.

Barclay