Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07BUCHAREST115
2007-02-02 18:33:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Bucharest
Cable title:  

FOREIGN MINISTER UNGUREANU RESIGNS OVER DETENTION

Tags:  PGOV PREL RO 
pdf how-to read a cable
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TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 5935
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BUCHAREST 000115 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EUR/NCE AARON JENSON; NSC FOR ADAM STERLING

E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/02/2017
TAGS: PGOV PREL RO
SUBJECT: FOREIGN MINISTER UNGUREANU RESIGNS OVER DETENTION
OF ROMANIAN CONTRACTORS IN IRAQ

REF: A. BUCHAREST 0103


B. BUCHAREST 0065

Classified By: DCM Mark A. Taplin for Reasons 1.4(b) and (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BUCHAREST 000115

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EUR/NCE AARON JENSON; NSC FOR ADAM STERLING

E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/02/2017
TAGS: PGOV PREL RO
SUBJECT: FOREIGN MINISTER UNGUREANU RESIGNS OVER DETENTION
OF ROMANIAN CONTRACTORS IN IRAQ

REF: A. BUCHAREST 0103


B. BUCHAREST 0065

Classified By: DCM Mark A. Taplin for Reasons 1.4(b) and (d).


1. (SBU) At Prime Minister Tariceanu's request, Foreign
Minister Ungureanu resigned on February 2, following
revelations that Ungureanu had not informed the Prime
Minister about the arrest last October of two Romanian
contractors in Iraq (ref. a). After President Basescu on
February 1 corrected an earlier statement and acknowledged he
had been informed about the arrest of the contractors last
November, the National Liberal Party (PNL) spokesman called
for Ungureanu's resignation for not having briefed the Prime
Minister, the Romanian head of government. Tariceanu, peeved
that he was cut out of the loop, had a convenient pretext for
removing Ungureanu, whom many Liberals felt was too closely
associated with Basescu and his foreign policy priorities.
Ungureanu's refusal in June 2005 to support the PNL position
in favor of withdrawing Romania's troops from Iraq -- hurt
Ungureanu's standing among the Liberal Party radicals who had
felt the Prime Minister would benefit from breaking with
President Basescu's Iraq policy. It also probably cost him a
Party vice-president position at the recent PNL convention
(reported ref b).


2. (C) Immediately following the resignation, two names were
floated in press reports and comments by Liberal Party
leaders as potential candidates to be the next foreign
minister: former PNL Senator and ex foreign minister Teodor
Melescanu and the current vice president of the NATO
Parliamentary Assembly Mihail Lupoi. However, the Prime
Minister's chief of staff, Mihnea Constantinescu, told DCM
that he had recommended to the PM this evening that the Prime
Minister not make a precipitous decision about a new Foreign
Minister. He urged the PM to avoid choosing either Melescanu
or Lupoi -- both Tariceanu loyalists but not widely admired.
Melescanu, for instance, was Foreign Minister in the
mid-nineties during the earlier Iliescu presidency, before
Romania had set a firm course towards NATO and EU membership.
Constantinescu volunteered that the list of eligible names
of a good caliber within Liberal ranks is not a long one.


3. (C) Insiders offered varying accounts of the
resignation, although they agreed tonight that the Minister's
tenure was indeed over. Constantinescu claimed that the PM
had not initially planned to seek Ungureanu's resignation.
When the two spoke by phone earlier today (the Foreign
Minister was in Vienna with his wife and newborn baby),
Tariceanu complained about the Foreign Ministry's poor
handling of the Iraq contractor case, and Ungureanu
apparently offered his resignation. The Prime Minister,
under pressure from his anti-Basescu Liberal Party political
advisors to fire the Foreign Minister outright, settled on
the middle course of having the Council of Ministers Press
Service issue a statement saying that Tariceanu has asked for
Ungureanu's resignation, and that the FM had accepted.
Ungureanu's communications director Corina Vintan defended
the Ministry's handling of the detained contractors. She
said that she had been in the process of preparing a press
statement explaining the Ministry's actions when the
government's own press release was issued. When asked
whether it was the final word, Vintan said "yes," reporting
that when the Foreign Minister had hesitated during his
conversation with Tariceanu, the Prime Minister made it clear
that he would withdrawal all political support from Ungureanu
if he did not step down. Vintan also reported that the
Foreign Minister would return to Romania tomorrow and give a
press conference.


3. (C) Comment: Ungureanu has become the latest victim of
the ongoing war between Basescu and Tariceanu. The Romanian
contractors detained three months ago by MNF-I, and
ironically freed the same day as Ungureanu's resignation,
merely provided a convenient excuse for the Prime Minister's
increasingly ruthless group of political handlers to move
against someone they have long seen as disloyal and outside
of their control. It is yet another case of a popular, up
and coming political figure in Liberal ranks being shown the
door -- after other top Liberals like former PM Stolojan and
former Culture Minister Musca. For the moment, Ungureanu's
departure looks like a net loss for our diplomatic
engagement, particularly if the Prime Minister decides to
name a new Foreign Minister based mostly on political
loyalty; especially someone who turns out to be less
supportive than Ungureanu of Romania's Euro-Atlantic goals or
Romania's substantial commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The next salvo will likely be from President Basescu's side

BUCHAREST 00000115 002 OF 002


of the barricade. End comment.
TAUBMAN