Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09UNESCOPARISFR1666
2009-12-09 11:10:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Mission UNESCO
Cable title:  

U.S. OPPORTUNITIES AT UNESCO

Tags:  PREL SCUL SOCI TPHY UNESCO 
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DE RUEHFR #1666/01 3431110
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R 091110Z DEC 09
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UNCLAS UNESCO PARIS FR 001666 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL SCUL SOCI TPHY UNESCO
SUBJECT: U.S. OPPORTUNITIES AT UNESCO

UNCLAS UNESCO PARIS FR 001666

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL SCUL SOCI TPHY UNESCO
SUBJECT: U.S. OPPORTUNITIES AT UNESCO


1. (SBU) Summary: A window of opportunity has opened for the
United States at UNESCO. With the election of Irina Bokova, the
U.S. has a favorably disposed Director-General who is looking for
new ideas. Rather than being on the defensive, the U.S. should be
making programmatic proposals to help set the Organization's agenda.
While maintaining our long-standing support for literacy and
management reform, the U.S. should broaden its efforts to other
areas. Gender parity is one. UNESCO could do more to promote girls
education, adult female literacy, the inclusion of women in
scientific and engineering work, and action to protect women in
conflict zones. Youth is another field for possible U.S. action.
We could encourage UNESCO to broaden its existing partnerships with
U.S. high tech firms to make greater use of social networking. We
could also encourage UNESCO to promote the U.S. community college
model and more practical post-secondary education focused on
job-related skills. Inter-cultural understanding is another area of
possible U.S. focus, one which could include existing U.S. efforts
to work with UNESCO to foster Holocaust Education. Finally, in the
field of culture, the U.S. might wish to consider an initiative to
provide developing countries with capacity building training and
help them preserve World Heritage sites.


2. (SBU) Summary Continued. All of this will take money. UNESCO
will almost surely need contributions of U.S. extra-budgetary funds
to accomplish these things, but it will need staff even more than
money. The U.S. will thus need to consider innovative ways of
providing personnel, whether through secondment, interns, or
UNESCO's associate expert program. End Summary.


3. (SBU) The U.S. now has a unique opportunity to affect UNESCO's
future course. Our successful efforts to influence the outcome of
the Director-General selection at last September's Executive Board
have demonstrated to other member states that the U.S. is a power to
be reckoned with in this Organization, and in the person of new
Director-General Irina Bokova, we have someone who is well disposed
to the U.S. and who is clearly aware of how much she owes us. As of
now Bokova is proceeding cautiously and consulting us frequently.

She is focused on assembling her management team and has said
relatively little about her programmatic priorities for the
Organization other than that she would like to do more on science
and on inter-cultural dialogue. This is, therefore, the moment for
the U.S. to make clear to Bokova and to member states what we would
like UNESCO to do.

Gender Across the Board


4. (SBU) Gender equality should be one of our key themes at UNESCO.
UNESCO's Medium-Strategy already makes it a priority for the
Organization which should be reflected in all its programs, and
UNESCO already has a small office that focuses on this subject. We
feel, however, that UNESCO could do much more in this area than it
has been. Director-General Bokova is clearly interested. One of
her very first appearances as Director-General-elect was at our
roundtable with Ambassador Verveer.


5. (SBU) There are many ways in which UNESCO could intensify action
on gender issues and give them a higher profile. As UNESCO's first
female Director-General, Ms. Bokova will enjoy an excellent bully
pulpit to push the issue. We might consider encouraging her to
appoint a gender advisory panel, conceivably with a seat set aside
for Ambassador Verveer. Depending on program funds, we might take
the example of the UNESCO-L'Oreal science prizes for women
researchers and explore establishing a smaller prize for women
entrepreneurs, particularly in the developing South. UNESCO's
Creative Industries division attempts to bring craftswomen's work to
a larger audience; we could encourage U.S. companies to promote this
initiative. We might also suggest that NGOs such as Vital Voices or
Hunt Alternatives formalize partnerships with UNESCO.


6. (SBU) UNESCO's Education Sector could give greater attention to
gender parity. We should press UNESCO to focus more on girls
education and adult female literacy. We might seek passage of a
draft decision at an Executive Board to this effect and work to
include this issue more explicitly in the Organization's next
program and budget. Some of our remaining UN Literacy Decade Funds
could immediately be devoted to a program focused on literacy among
adult women. We have already solicited a proposal from the
International Institute for Educational Planning (IIEP) that would
concentrate on girls education in Afghanistan and Pakistan.


7. (SBU) Girls and science/engineering is another area on which
UNESCO already does work that needs to be expanded. The L'Oreal
prize for women in science has been a great success, but it needs
follow up and expansion to other areas. Even in the United States,
we suffer from a dearth of women in the sciences and engineering.
UNESCO could seek to enlist other partnerships like L'Oreal which
could create further initiatives aimed at popularizing women in
these fields.


8. (SBU) Domestic violence and violence against women in conflict
zones are other areas of possible UNESCO action. We understand that
the Government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo is seeking
support in the African region for creation of a Category 2 institute
that would focus on the problems of women in regions of conflict.
After proper due diligence, this is an initiative we might wish to
support.

Youth


9. (SBU) Youth is another issue on which UNESCO could put more
effort. Member states are interested. A senior Secretariat
official told us recently that many governments have asked for help
in this area. The June 2008 anti-radicalization conference (Youth
at the Crossroads) in Bahrain which the U.S. funded was a success.
Gulf Governments were interested in the issue as soon as they were
reassured that we were not trying to criticize Islam. With a
relatively small amount of unspent funds from the Bahrain
Conference, UNESCO was able to fund another conference on this
subject in Indonesia with Indonesian youth. Significantly, the
Indonesian Government committed some of its own funds in support of
the effort. With relatively small amounts of extra-budgetary funds,
the U.S. could encourage other national or regional conferences on
the topic. These meetings could be useful not only in focusing
attention on the issue but also in helping to form a network among
the NGO's working in this field. In our discussions with employees
of these NGO's, we have learned that they are keen to exchange ideas
on best practices and what works.

Community Colleges: Economic Access, Adult Education


10. (SBU) As part of our focus on youth, we could also encourage
UNESCO to promote the community college model. Member states,
particularly in Africa, are pressing UNESCO to do more about
tertiary education. In addition to traditional four-year academic
institutions, these countries need a flexible model for low-cost,
post-secondary education that focuses wholeheartedly on equipping
young and older adults with job-related skills. Our advocacy of
further work in open educational resources (OERs) aligns with
promoting the community college model, as well as in the larger
realms of literacy and access to information.

Private-Public Partnerships


11. (SBU) One of the most intriguing areas for future UNESCO work
is social networking. The Organization has been slow to make use of
the full possibilities of the internet. It is waking up to them,
however, and in Bokova we have a Director-General who is a
generation younger and more interested in technology than her
predecessor. UNESCO already has formed partnerships with many of
the large technology firms (Microsoft, Apple, Hewlett-Packard, and
Intel). Recently, UNESCO has launched content agreements with
Google and its You Tube subsidiary; we will want to further
institutionalize such partnerships with American companies as they
both improve UNESCO's organizational capacity as well as raise its
profile with our domestic public.

Social-Networking


12. (SBU) One particular area in which U.S. technology firms might
be helpful is in the area of social networking. They might, for
example, consider working with UNESCO to intelligently harness
emerging social networking trends to create youth discussion fora,
online intercultural dialogue sites or other networks.

Science


13. (SBU) The President in his Cairo speech suggested that science
could be a bridge between the U.S. and the Islamic world. UNESCO
could be an incubator for such cooperation. It already supports one
project with such goals, the "Sesame" project which provides for
regional cooperation (including Israel) on a synchrotron to be built
in Jordan. Others could be devised, particularly, in the area of
fresh water engineering. UNESCO has a robust program in this area
and a network of Category 2 institutes (including one in the United
States) which work in this area. We might also take advantage of
the new Science Envoys program to engage with UNESCO field offices
in key countries, as well as at headquarters.

Inter-Cultural Dialogue


14. (SBU) Bokova has made clear that she would like UNESCO to do
more to improve cross-cultural understanding. Supporting this
effort would be consistent with our efforts on behalf of women and
youth and our work in science. In doing so, however, we will want
to steer UNESCO away from hosting large conferences in which
representatives (often clerics) from different religions debate each
other while doing little to diminish the suspicions and fears that
divide the world's publics. This is another area in which social
networking techniques may provide a fresh approach. UNESCO's
ASP-net which links schools across the globe might be helpful in
this effort if it is given more resources.


15. (SBU) Another area in which the U.S. should press for action is
on Holocaust Education. In 2007, the U.S. took the lead in pressing
for adoption of a resolution tasking UNESCO with work in this area.
Since then, UNESCO has produced some materials but has stopped due
to resource constraints. We need to assist them to find resources
to breathe new life into this effort. A good Holocaust Education
program would be a useful component in a larger push for greater
cross-cultural understanding.

World Heritage


16. (SBU) Many UNESCO member states place great importance on the
Organization's cultural activities. The U.S. should not seem
disinterested in this aspect of UNESCO's work. World Heritage is
one area within Culture where the U.S. may wish to work. Developing
states, particularly in Africa, raise the need for more training and
capacity-building for their nationals at every World Heritage
meeting. The U.S. - particularly the National Park Service -- has
extensive expertise in this area. We should develop a
capacity-building initiative for developing countries. If
significant funding can be located, the U.S. might even wish to
launch a category 2 institute aimed providing conservation training
to those countries in need of it.

Personnel


17. (SBU) As we move forward with those of these ideas that
Washington may approve, we will need to keep in mind that UNESCO
often lacks sufficient, trained personnel to implement the projects
it wants to undertake. Its personnel shortages are even more acute
than its financial limitations. If we want important projects done
quickly and according to our wishes, we will in many instances have
to help provide UNESCO the manpower to do them. We will thus need
to consider concluding an agreement with UNESCO to provide Associate
Experts, who can be compensated out of our extra-budgetary funds.
(Italy, UNESCO's largest donor of extra-budgetary funds, for
example, makes extensive use of this mechanism to place Italians in
positions of strategic importance to Italy.) We will also wish to
make use of existing mechanisms to second staff to the Secretariat
and to place Fullbright fellows or interns in offices involved in
implementing our programs.

Management Reform


18. Finally, while we work creatively on the program side, we will
also need to continue our longstanding efforts for management
reform. Well thought out management improvements would improve
UNESCO's ability to deliver programs. As a former ambassador to
UNESCO, Bokova is well aware of the desire of most member states for
improved management. We will thus also be pushing on an open door
in this area.

KILLION