Page 292 - Argentina - Carter, Regan, and Bush VP
P. 292

No Objection To Declassification in Full 2013/02/04 : NLC-24-67-9-3-9



                     Critical Observation and Recommendation          (Pastor)
                                                                        »
                     Public Diplomacy

                     To an extent that few people would ever believe, the U.S . has been
                     conducting its diplomacy publicly. There is relatively little that
                     an astute reader of the best newspapers in the U.S . does not know —
                     that I do — about the current state of negotiations on Panama and Cuba,
                     for example. And the rest will probably be in the newspapers in a
                     matter of days or weeks .

                     I personally think that this new development is a good one and clearly
                     in line with President Carter's objective of greater openness (though
                     not in line with his objective of restricted confidentiality on some
                     issues) . But I do not believe that we have thought through the
                     implications of public diplomacy or its difficulties . For example,
                     on those relatively difficult negotiations like Panama and Cuba
                     where you are dealing with two constituencies who are headed in
                     diametrically opposite directions, a public statement in one's own
                     country may set back negotiations with the other. 1 am not sure there
                     is any easy way to cope with this problem. Certainly, I do not
                     believe that an attempt to keep better controltf secrets will work,
                     but the entire question of how public diplomacy relates to private
                     negotiations, and whether secrecy is irrelevant is something which
                     should be explored at greater depth.


                     Human Rights

                     The new Administration has succeeded in credibly projecting a concern
                     for human rights abroad which is at least as sturdy as that of Congress.             ^
                     There is no question that the American people feel better about U.S.
                     foreign policy than in any recent period.

                     Therefore, the time has come to begin a second phase in our human
                     rights policy — this one focused on alleviating the repression abroad.
                     We must begin, of course, by realising that the U.S . cannot determine
                     events in less developed countries, but we can influence the debate
                     between moderates and hard-liners in different governments. The
                     question is: how? And I have been tasking the bureaucracy on this
                     question with no success .
                                                                       f
                     Part of the reason for the lack of success is the difficulty of the question.
                     Another part may be that I am very skeptical when the bureaucracy says
                     we cannot do anything. The first step, I believe in getting good answers
                     to the question is in choosing new Ambassadors who share our objectives.
                     But in the meantime, we should re-focus our approach to this issue from
                     projecting our own interest to weighting the debate in foreign governments.




                               No Objection To Declassification in Full 2013/02/04 : NLC-24-67-9-3-9
   287   288   289   290   291   292   293   294   295   296   297