Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09BUENOSAIRES657
2009-06-04 20:41:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Buenos Aires
Cable title:  

ARGENTINA: CFK PRAISES U.S. ROLE IN OAS RESOLUTION

Tags:  PREL PHUM ETRD OAS CU AR 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXYZ0000
OO RUEHWEB

DE RUEHBU #0657/01 1552041
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
O 042041Z JUN 09
FM AMEMBASSY BUENOS AIRES
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 3830
INFO RHEHAAA/NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUCNMER/MERCOSUR COLLECTIVE
RUEHUB/USINT HAVANA 0112
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA 0763
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 0299
C O N F I D E N T I A L BUENOS AIRES 000657 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/04/2029
TAGS: PREL PHUM ETRD OAS CU AR
SUBJECT: ARGENTINA: CFK PRAISES U.S. ROLE IN OAS RESOLUTION
ON CUBA

REF: BUENOS AIRES 0614

Classified By: DCM Tom Kelly for reasons 1.4 (b) & (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L BUENOS AIRES 000657

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/04/2029
TAGS: PREL PHUM ETRD OAS CU AR
SUBJECT: ARGENTINA: CFK PRAISES U.S. ROLE IN OAS RESOLUTION
ON CUBA

REF: BUENOS AIRES 0614

Classified By: DCM Tom Kelly for reasons 1.4 (b) & (d).


1. (C) Summary and introduction: President Cristina
Fernandez de Kirchner (CFK) praised the USG's role in the the
OAS decision to lift the ban on Cuba's participation, which
she called "historic" and a portent of "new winds" blowing in
the hemisphere. Foreign Minister Jorge Taiana took credit
for brokering the consensus that ended the "anachronism and
injustice" of excluding Cuba from OAS proceedings. Following
CFK's and Taiana's lead, the press focused mostly on the
lifting of the ban rather than the democratic conditions for
re-joining, and a columnist in largest-circulation daily
"Clarin" questioned whether the OAS decision would really
allow Cuba back into the fold. One NGO activist privately
told us he was disappointed that CFK's and Taiana's remarks
did not call on Cuba to undertake democratic reform, release
its political prisoners, or otherwise improve its observance
of human rights. We, however, are pleasantly surprised by
CFK's praise for the Obama Administration on this issue. End
summary.

CFK Praises the United States
--------------


2. (SBU) Barely two hours after the OAS General Assembly
moved to lift Cuba's exclusion from the OAS, President
Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner (CFK) called the OAS decision
"historic" and praised the USG's role in the effort.
Newspaper of record "La Nacion" claimed June 4 that CFK's
emphasis on giving credit to the United States was "part of
Casa Rosada's official strategy to achieve a change in
bilateral relations with Washington."


3. (SBU) In a June 3 appearance in suburban Buenos Aires, CFK
announced that "in the OAS, in the presence of Hillary
Clinton, the Secretary of State, and obviously on President
Obama's instructions and with the consensus and acclamation
of all the member states of that organization, it was decreed
to nullify the sanction that Cuba had for so many years."
Largest-circulation daily newspaper "Clarin" quoted CFK
saying the OAS decision "contributes to a new world with
different paradigms."


4. (SBU) CFK added that "this also reveals the perception of

our discourse at the Summit of the Americas that new winds
are blowing. The idea that we are facing a historic
opportunity is being heard by all those who in some way make
this continent's decision."

FM Taiana Sees the U.S. Going Multilateral
--------------


5. (SBU) According to "La Nacion" and "Clarin," FM Jorge
Taiana said it was "evident" that the Obama Administration
"has initiated a return to the values and principles of
multilateralism." Taiana said "we have finished with an
anachronism and an injustice. After much effort, and when
many believed that there was no possibility for success, we
continued working in the search for consensus."


6. (C) An Argentine MFA official was similarly elated when
she spoke with polcouns June 3. Recalling that Argentina was
one of a handful of OAS member states that had abstained in
1962 on the expulsion of Cuba from the OAS, she claimed that
Argentine officialdom had over the years been uncomfortable
with the double standard that had been applied to Cuba but
not to regimes such as Somoza's in Nicaragua or Stroessner's
in Paraguay. Several center-left congressional deputies told
the media they hoped the OAS opening was an omen that the
United States would lift its embargo on trade with Cuba.

Media Coverage Mostly Positive
--------------


7. (SBU) Silvia Pisani, "La Nacion" correspondent in
Washington, wrote that President Obama's "new era of
diplomacy made its first and thunderous burst onto the scene
in Latin America." Pisani noted that WHA A/S Shannon made
clear at a press backgrounder that the OAS decision was
completely in line with White House's insistence that Cuba's
return to the OAS be predicated on respect for democracy and
human rights, and that Cuba's "hypothetical" return to the
OAS was "far from automatic." According to the article, NSC
Director Dan Restrepo said at the joint press briefing with
Shannon that if Cuba asks to join, what follows is the second
part of the resolution which establishes that the

re-admission will be the result of a process of dialogue
between the island and the inter-American system preserving
the values of democracy and respect for human rights.


8. (SBU) Argentine media coverage largely dwelled on the
historic import of lifting the ban on Cuba's participation in
the OAS. There was some skepticism. Under the headline "The
end of an anachronism and a political embarrassment,"
"Clarin" columnist Oscar Raul Cardoso wrote that "the devil
is in the details and the fine print" and opined that "it
will take at least a year to see how truly historic is this
instrument," noting that a committee needs to be formed to
study Cuba's readmission. He noted it was the United States
that had insisted that Cuba must ask to re-join the OAS and
adhere fully to the Inter-American Democratic Charter.

Human Rights Activist Criticizes GOA
--------------


9. (C) A leader of CADAL (the Center for the Opening and
Development of Latin America),an Argentine NGO that has
actively promoted human rights in Cuba, told polcouns he was
disappointed that media coverage fed the impression that the
OAS had re-admitted Cuba and downplayed the pending
requirement that the OAS must still decide when Cuba's
participation meets the organization's purposes of promoting
democracy and human rights. He expressed disappointment that
CFK's and Taiana's remarks did not call on Cuba to undertake
democratic reform, release its political prisoners, or
otherwise improve its observance of human rights. He noted
that Taiana focused on the "anachronism and injustice" of
keeping Cuba out of the OAS but said nothing about the "much
greater injustice" of atrocities and human rights violations
committed by the Castro regime.

Comment
--------------


10. (C) From their public statements, we can see that CFK,
Taiana, and other Argentines are pleased by what they see as
USG responsiveness to their clamor for a change in policy
toward Cuba, which they consider a litmus test of American
commitment to reappraise and change hemispheric relations.
CFK's quick and effusive praise of the U.S. role in this
"historic" change is particularly noteworthy and welcome. It
is disappointing but not surprising that neither CFK nor
Taiana used this opportunity to urge democratic reform in
Cuba; as we reported reftel, they are loathe to voice any
criticism of Cuba.

WAYNE