Page 282 - Argentina - Carter, Regan, and Bush VP
P. 282

No Objection To Declassification in Full 2013/02/04 : NLC-24-68-6-6-8
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                   CONFIDENTIAL—                            -3-
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                   El Salvador

                   The Secretary General was very pleased with Ids success in getting the
                   President of El Salvador to sign the mediation agreement with Honduras.
                   The border has been closed since 1969, and the economies of both countries
                   have suffered greatly as a result. He is hopeful that the appointment of
                   a Moderator will lead to a more lasting peace between the two countries.
                   lasting
                   OAS


                   Orfila was very frank in his assessment of the almost hopelessness of the
                   present OAS . He said he had tried to bring the staff level down to a mange-
                   able one, but that he couldn't fire anyone. When he tried, everybody
                   ganged up on him, and the U.S . remained silent. The Permanent Council
                   of Ambassadors to the OAS was also, in his opinion, a hopeless body. In
                   fact, he called it "a joke."


                   "I need your help to change this place," Orfila sai4> Orfila would like
                   to see the OAS concentrate on peacekeeping, lyiman rights, and political
                   issues. He thinkB it would be desirable for the OAS to get out of the
                   economic and social field. He blamed the United States for the massive
                   structure that had been built up since the early years of the Alliance.
                   In 1961, there were only 300 staff people in the OAS; there are presently
                   1,500. He would like to cut the staff down to only the Secretariat, and
                   deal only with those issues which it could do well. He would like to do
                   away with the Permanent Council, and only have Latin American Ambassadors
                   to the U.S . attend occasional meetings. (Scheman later called me and
                   said that the Assistant Secretary of State would be the appropriate U.S.
                   delegate to these occasional sessions, rather than a Special Ambassador
                   to the OAS .)


                   Orfila expressed his frustration at trying to do these kinds of reforms
                   without any support. If only the United States gave him support, he said,
                   he could assure us a majority of the delegates and fundamental reforms
                  in staffing, in the organization of the OAS, and in the issues that it
                   addresses could then be taken. A good example he used was the designation
                  of Grenada as the site of the June General Assembly meeting. The Grenadan
                  Ambassador to the OAS forced the issue at the last “OAS meeting in Santiago,
                   and no one raised any objections. The Peruvians seconded the motion,
                   and that was it. Grenada was the site.



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