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Viewing cable 07USUNNEWYORK1209, 62ND UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY: EAST ASIAN AND PACIFIC

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07USUNNEWYORK1209 2007-12-26 16:13 2011-08-30 01:44 CONFIDENTIAL USUN New York
VZCZCXRO9591
RR RUEHAP RUEHMJ
DE RUCNDT #1209/01 3601613
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
R 261613Z DEC 07
FM USMISSION USUN NEW YORK
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 3417
INFO RUEHAP/AMEMBASSY APIA 0069
RUEHGB/AMEMBASSY BAGHDAD 0653
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 1029
RUEHBY/AMEMBASSY CANBERRA 1778
RUEHJA/AMEMBASSY JAKARTA 1645
RUEHKR/AMEMBASSY KOROR 0107
RUEHKL/AMEMBASSY KUALA LUMPUR 0676
RUEHMJ/AMEMBASSY MAJURO 0068
RUEHML/AMEMBASSY MANILA 0254
RUEHPF/AMEMBASSY PHNOM PENH 0127
RUEHPY/AMEMBASSY PORT MORESBY 0112
RUEHGO/AMEMBASSY RANGOON 0226
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 0881
RUEHGP/AMEMBASSY SINGAPORE 1933
RUEHSV/AMEMBASSY SUVA 0395
RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO 8406
RUEHUM/AMEMBASSY ULAANBAATAR 0494
RUEHVN/AMEMBASSY VIENTIANE 0076
RUEHWL/AMEMBASSY WELLINGTON 2795
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA 2990
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 10 USUN NEW YORK 001209 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
 
EAP FOR A/S HILL AND PDAS STEPHENS, IO FOR A/S SILVERBERG 
AND PDAS WARLICK, EAP/RSP FOR HALL FROM AMBASSADOR 
PLAISTED; DRL/MLGA FOR JULIETA NOYES 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/26/2013 
TAGS: BP BX CB CH ECON FJ FM ID JA KR KS LA MG
MY, NH, NR, NZ, PHUM, PP, PREL, PS, RM, RP, SN, TH, TN, TV, 
UNGA, VM, WS, XB 
SUBJECT: 62ND UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY: EAST ASIAN AND PACIFIC 
ISLANDS' PERFORMANCE 
 
Classified By: POLITICAL MINISTER COUNSELOR JEFF DELAURENTIS FOR REASON 
S 1.4 (B & D) 
 
SUMMARY AND INTRODUCTION: 
 
1. (U) This cable was prepared by Ambassador Joan Plaisted, 
who served as Senior Area Adviser for East Asia and the 
Pacific to the 62nd United Nations General Assembly. 
 
2. (U) Support from East Asian and Pacific Island (EAP) 
countries was essential for achieving U.S. objectives in this 
62nd UN General Assembly (UNGA) session.  The major theme of 
this General Assembly was climate change, an issue of top 
importance to EAP countries, and particularly the Pacific 
Islands. US themes, in addition to climate change, were free 
trade and economic development, financing for development, 
democracy and human rights, and UN reform. 
 
3. (U) EAP votes were especially helpful on three Middle East 
resolutions the United States identified as top priorities. 
Although these still passed by overwhelming margins, the 
Pacific Islanders accounted for the majority of the "no" 
votes with the United States and for many of the abstentions. 
 Voting "no" with the United States and Israel, along with 
Canada, were Australia, the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, 
Nauru, and Palau. 
 
4. (SBU) EAP votes helped defeat all three no action motions 
in the Third Committee and one in the Plenary and helped pass 
all four human rights resolutions in the Plenary: on Iran 
(the top U.S. priority), Burma, the DPRK (the third UNGA 
resolution on the DPRK), and Belarus.  EAP countries - 
including many Pacific Islands, the ROK which cast a welcomed 
"no" vote for the second year, and Mongolia, whose Permrep 
agreed to go against her instructions to abstain and vote 
"no" if the vote were close - helped prevent the Iran no 
action motion from passing in the Third Committee where the 
difference in two votes would have meant no Iran human rights 
resolution this year.  The Burmese military regime's brutal 
crackdown in September ensured defeat for this no action 
motion and upped the "yes"  votes and reduced the "no" votes 
both in the Third Committee and the Plenary for the Burma 
human rights resolution.  Two ASEAN countries - Brunei and 
Indonesia - switched from "no" votes to abstentions and 
Cambodia switched from a "no" vote to being absent. 
 
5. (U) The United States, supported by thirteen EAP 
co-sponsors that helped contribute to the successful outcome, 
finally managed to achieve consensus on our resolution on 
"Eliminating rape and other forms of sexual violence in all 
their manifestations, including in conflict and related 
situations."  The resolution calls on the Secretary General 
to report on the resolution's implementation in the 63rd UNGA 
- a report that may well mention Sudan and Burma.  The U.S. 
biennial elections resolution also passed by consensus. 
 
6. (U) With the help of intense lobbying in capitals, 
Washington, and New York, the U.S. candidate, David Walker, 
won for the Independent Audit Advisory Board. Twenty-one of 
the 30 EAP countries indicated support.  This board is an 
important part of our UN reform efforts.  Another success was 
the re-election of the U.S. nominee to the Committee Against 
Torture Felice Gaer.  Efforts to date to promote the U.S. 
candidate, Pierre-Richard Prosper, for the Committee for the 
Elimination of Racial Discrimination have proven positive. 
 
USUN NEW Y 00001209  002 OF 010 
 
 
This election occurs in January. 
 
 
7. (U) Regarding EAP issues in the General Assembly and the 
Security Council (SC), the UNGA adopted a resolution on 
"Peace, security and reunification on the Korean peninsula", 
jointly sponsored by the ROK and the DPRK.  The resolution 
encourages the two parties to implement the Declaration on 
the Advancement of North-South Korean Relations, Peace and 
Prosperity adopted on October 4, 2007 and invites member 
states to continue to assist "the process of inter-Korean 
dialogue, reconciliation and reunification so that it may 
contribute to peace and security not only on the Korean 
peninsula but also in north-east Asia and the world as a 
whole."  Regarding Burma, the SC issued its first-ever 
Presidential Statement on October 11 noting the SC "strongly 
deplores" the use of violence against peaceful demonstrations 
in Myanmar.  Indonesia is serving on the Council for 
2007-2008. 
 
8. (C)  Looking ahead, Vietnam will replace Qatar on the SC 
in 2008-2009.  Iran and Japan are the two candidates running 
for a non-permanent SC seat for 2009-2010.  Japan, a late 
entrant after Mongolia stepped down, has served on the SC 
nine times, most recently in 2005-2006, and is already 
campaigning hard. Iran has served once in 1955-1956 and will 
use that point in its efforts to secure a seat in the coming 
months.  (In its favor, Japan is a responsible UN member, 
heads the Peacebuilding Commission, and is the second largest 
contributor to the UN budget.  Iran, which may garner OIC 
support, has resolutions directed against it in both the 
Security Council and the General Assembly (the human rights 
resolution).  We will need to develop our approach to this 
election taking place in October 2008.) 
 
--------------- 
General Debate 
--------------- 
 
9. (U) Both Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and General 
Assembly President Srdjan Kerim sought to focus the General 
Assembly on climate change in order to provide impetus to the 
December negotiations in Bali. As would be expected, many of 
the leaders of EAP countries, particularly the Pacific 
Islands, emphasized climate change in their speeches during 
the General Debate when almost all of the 192 member states 
addressed the General Assembly.  Other common themes were 
management and Security Council reform, counterterrorism, the 
environment, Millennium Development Goals, financing for 
development, trade and debt reform, disarmament, and human 
rights.  Japan and the DPRK exercised their right of reply in 
both the General Debate and the Third Committee discussions 
on the advancement of women, engaging in vituperative 
exchanges over the abductee issue and war legacies.  When the 
Solomon Islands Foreign Minister in his General Debate speech 
referred to the "occupation" of his country by Australian and 
New Zealand visiting contingents, both countries were quick 
to respond to defend the presence of the Regional Assistance 
Mission in the Solomon Islands (RAMSI).  Most of the other 
EAP speeches were not so colorful. 
 
------------------ 
Middle East Issues 
------------------ 
 
 
USUN NEW Y 00001209  003 OF 010 
 
 
10.  (U) EAP votes were especially helpful on three priority 
resolutions opposed by the United States that extend the 
mandates of anti-Israeli UN programs established more than a 
generation ago.  These programs contribute neither to the 
achievement of peace in the region nor to the goal of UN 
reform. The State Department, under PL 106-113 (Section 721) 
is required to report by January 15 each year on steps taken 
to abolish certain UN groups, including these three programs. 
 In an unsuccessful attempt to end the mandate of the Special 
Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices, the Plenary vote 
was 93-8 (U.S.) -74.  Last year the vote was 90-9(U.S.)-81. 
Voting "no" with the U.S. and Israel were Australia, Canada, 
the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, and Palau.  Tuvalu, 
which had voted "no" for the last two years, switched to an 
abstention.  The Philippines and Thailand again broke ranks 
with ASEAN to abstain.  (The Philippines switched from "yes" 
to "abstain" in 2004).  The islanders who could not join us 
in voting "no" made a special effort to turn out for the vote 
to cast their abstentions.  These included three - Fiji, 
Papua New Guinea, and Tonga - who were absent during the 
Fourth Committee vote.  Other EAP countries adding to the 
abstentions were Japan, Mongolia, New Zealand, ROK, Samoa, 
Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu.  The Solomon Islands had 
switched from abstaining in 2006 to a "yes" vote in this 
year's Fourth Committee - the only Pacific Island to vote 
"yes" - but then abstained in the 2007 Plenary. 
Timor-Leste's Permrep made a special point to be absent for 
all three resolutions. Kiribati was also absent for all 
three. 
 
11. (U) An attempt to end the Division for Palestinian Rights 
of the Secretariat failed by a vote of 110-8(U.S.)-54.  Last 
year the vote was 101-7(U.S.)-62.  Canada again joined the 
U.S., Israel, Australia, and our traditional island friends - 
the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and Palau - in voting "no". 
 Nauru added the extra "no" vote, having abstained last year 
when an intern cast this vote by accident.  (Their Permrep 
later noted for the record that Nauru had intended to vote 
"no".)  Two Pacific Islands we convinced to abstain three 
years ago, to be counted, rather than to be absent, again 
helpfully abstained:  Solomon Islands and Vanuatu. Tonga was 
able to abstain for the second year.  The ROK and Thailand 
helpfully maintained their abstentions.  (In 2003 they both 
shifted to abstaining from voting "yes".) Also abstaining 
were Japan, New Zealand, and Samoa. Kiribati, Mongolia, Papua 
New Guinea, Timor-Leste, and Tuvalu were absent. Papua New 
Guinea had abstained from 2004 to 2006.  Fiji switched from 
an abstention in 2006 to an unhelpful "yes" vote. 
 
12. (U) We also sought unsuccessfully (109-8(U.S.)-55) to 
discontinue the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable 
Rights of the Palestinian People.  Last year the vote was 
101-7(U.S.)-62.  Nauru again cast the extra "no" vote, having 
abstained last year by accident.  Also voting "no" with the 
U.S. were Australia, Canada, Israel, the Marshall Islands, 
Micronesia, and Palau.  Tonga, absent in 2005, again 
abstained.  Two additional Pacific Islands abstained, rather 
than to be absent as they were in 2003: Solomon Islands and 
Vanuatu.  Again the ROK and Thailand helpfully maintained 
their abstentions, rather than voting "yes" as they had done 
in 2002.  Also abstaining were Japan, New Zealand, and Samoa. 
 Timor-Leste, which had voted "yes" in 2003, again agreed to 
be absent, Kiribati, Mongolia, and Tuvalu were also absent, 
along with Papua New Guinea that had abstained from 2004 to 
2006.  Fiji switched from an abstention in 2006 to an 
 
USUN NEW Y 00001209  004 OF 010 
 
 
unhelpful "yes" vote. 
 
13. (SBU) Next year EAP should focus on obtaining more "no" 
votes from the islanders, including from Samoa and Tuvalu, 
once its new government is in place.  The high cost of 
maintaining these mandates - $5.5 million for FY 2006-2007 
for the Division for Palestinian Rights of the Secretariat - 
is a good point to emphasize. 
 
14. (U) The Israeli's put forward a resolution on 
"Agricultural Technology for Development" that passed in the 
Second Committee by a vote of 118(U.S.)-0-29 (mostly Arab 
countries) and in the Plenary by 147(U.S.)-0-30.  This was 
Israel's first resolution since the 60th UNGA adopted 
Israel's Holocaust Remembrance resolution by consensus. 
Their  agricultural resolution, with strong U.S. lobbying, 
garnered 75 co-sponsors, including many EAP countries: 
Australia, Fiji, Japan, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, 
Palau, Philippines, ROK, Solomon Islands, Thailand, and 
Tonga. 
 
------------------------ 
Human Rights Resolutions 
------------------------ 
 
15. (SBU) No action motions (motions to adjourn debate which 
end all discussion of an issue) were tabled this UNGA on the 
draft human rights resolutions on Iran, Belarus, and Burma in 
the Third Committee and on Iran in the Plenary.   The good 
news this session was that all no action motions were 
defeated.  (Last year we lost the no-action motion on 
Uzbekistan, in 2005 we lost on Sudan).  The no-action motion 
on Iran failed to pass in the Plenary by a vote of 
80-84(U.S.)-19. Our intensive lobbying helped to widen the 
margin from the Third Committee vote of 78-79(U.S.)-24.  Last 
year's votes on the Iran no-action motion were 75-77(U.S.)-24 
in the Third Committee and 75-81(U.S.)-24 in the Plenary. 
This year's Third Committee vote on no action motion on Burma 
was 54-88(U.S.)-34 and on Belarus, 65-79(U.S.)-31. The 
no-action motion on Burma gained 11 more "no" votes over the 
Third Committee vote of last year of 64-77(U.S.)-30), likely 
reflecting the regime's brutal crackdown in September on 
peaceful demonstrators.  ASEAN countries have traditionally 
voted in favor of all country specific no-action motions, 
with the exception of the Philippines that abstained on Burma 
last year.  This year Indonesia switched to a "no" vote and 
both the Philippines and Singapore abstained - a sign of 
growing impatience with Burma's military regime. 
 
16. (SBU) EAP countries helped save the day on the Iran 
no-action motion in the Plenary.  Kiribati got its proxy to 
New Zealand just in time to add a "no" vote.  Papua New 
Guinea switched from abstaining in 2006 to a good "no" vote. 
Nauru's Permrep held her "no" vote, after recommending an 
abstention to her capital.  Mongolia's Permrep continued her 
good "no" vote, after the Senior Advisor convinced her to 
switch to a "no" vote in the Third Committee if the vote was 
close, when her instructions were to abstain.  The ROK, for 
the second year, voted "no".  On the disappointing side, both 
the Solomon Islands and Tuvalu, which had abstained in the 
Third Committee, voted "yes" in the Plenary.  The Solomon 
Islands had voted "yes" in the Plenary in 2006, but Tuvalu 
had voted "no".  EAP countries voting consistently "no" with 
the U.S. on all the no-action motions were Australia, Japan, 
ROK, the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Mongolia, New Zealand, 
 
USUN NEW Y 00001209  005 OF 010 
 
 
Palau, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Timor-Leste, Tonga, and 
Vanuatu.  Voting consistently "yes" were Brunei, Cambodia, 
China, DPRK, Laos, Malaysia, Burma (Myanmar), Thailand, and 
Vietnam. 
 
17. (SBU) The U.S. lobbied very hard on the Iran human rights 
resolution, a Canadian draft which we co-sponsored.  The 
resolution carried in the Plenary by a vote of 
73(U.S.)-53-55.  Last year's Plenary vote was 72(U.S.)-50-55. 
 Voting "yes" were Australia, Fiji, Japan, Kiribati, the 
Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, New Zealand, Palau, 
Samoa, Timor-Leste, Tonga, and Vanuatu.  Voting "no" were 
China, DPRK, Indonesia, Malaysia, Burma (Myanmar), Solomon 
Islands, Tuvalu, and Vietnam. Abstaining were Brunei, Laos, 
Mongolia, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, ROK, Singapore, and 
Thailand.  Cambodia was absent. One more "yes" vote was 
added, but two were subtracted.  Timor Leste, after much U.S. 
lobbying even with their President, voted "yes" rather than 
being not present.  Brunei switched from a "no" vote in last 
year's Plenary to abstaining.  The real disappointment was 
the shift by Tuvalu from a "yes" vote last year to a "no" 
vote and by the Solomon Islands from abstaining to a "no" 
vote. 
 
18. (U) The DPRK draft human rights resolution passed in the 
Plenary by a vote of 101(U.S.)-22-59.  Last year's Plenary 
vote was 99(U.S.)-21-56.  The DPRK resolution garnered more 
"yes" votes by far than any other human rights resolution 
this session.  This was the third time the UNGA has passed a 
human rights resolution on the DPRK.  It was EU-sponsored 
(and the United States cosponsored).  The resolution 
expresses very serious concern at the persistence of 
continuing reports of systemic, widespread and grave 
violations of civil, political, economic, social and cultural 
rights and the continued refusal to recognize the mandate of 
the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in 
the DPRK.  Two new "yes" votes were added and three were 
subtracted.  Cambodia went from an abstention in 2006 to a 
"yes" vote - the first time Cambodia appears to have voted 
"yes" for a country-specific human rights resolution. 
Kiribati for the first time in recent memory added its proxy 
a "yes" for a human rights vote other than Iran.  Both Nauru 
and Vanuatu maintained their new "yes" votes cast in 2006. 
Both the Solomon Islands and ROK, in a decision that went to 
the top of their Government and was fought by their Mission 
in NYC, switched from a "yes" vote to an abstention.  Both 
Malaysia and Myanmar went from an abstention in 2006 to a 
"no" vote.  In sum, voting "yes" this year were Australia, 
Cambodia, Fiji, Japan, Kiribati, the Marshall Islands, 
Micronesia, Nauru, New Zealand, Palau, Papua New Guinea, 
Samoa, Timor-Leste, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu. Voting "no" 
were China, DPRK, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Burma (Myanmar), 
and Vietnam.  Abstaining were Brunei, Philippines, ROK, 
Singapore, Solomon Islands, and Thailand.  Mongolia was 
deliberately absent. 
 
19.  (U) The U.S. sponsored draft resolution on Belarus 
passed in the Plenary vote of 72(U.S.)-33-78 compared with 
last year's vote of 72(U.S.)-32-69.  Voting "yes" were 
Australia, Japan, the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, New 
Zealand, Palau, ROK, Timor-Leste, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu. 
 Voting "no" were China, DPRK, Indonesia, Malaysia, Burma 
(Myanmar), and Vietnam.  Abstaining were Brunei, Cambodia, 
Fiji, Laos, Mongolia, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, 
Samoa, Singapore, Solomon Islands, and Thailand.   Kiribati 
 
USUN NEW Y 00001209  006 OF 010 
 
 
was absent.  Fiji shifted from a "yes" vote in the Plenary in 
2006 to abstaining.  Cambodia and Nauru, absent in 2006, 
abstained. 
 
20. (U) The Burma human rights resolution, sponsored by the 
EU, passed in the Third Committee by a vote of 88(U.S.)-24-66 
and in the Plenary by a vote of 83(U.S.)-22-47.  The numbers, 
including three more ASEAN "no" votes, undoubtedly reflect 
the Burmese military government's violent suppression of 
peaceful protests last September.  The vote was an 
improvement over last year's votes of 79(U.S.)-28-63 and 
82(U.S.)-25-45 in the Third Committee and the Plenary, 
respectively. This was the second year the Burma resolution 
was voted upon.  Past resolutions were adopted by consensus. 
The United States again co-sponsored.  The resolution 
strongly calls on the government of Myanmar to exercise 
utmost restraint and to desist from further arrests and 
violence against peaceful protesters and to release without 
delay those arbitrarily arrested and detained as well as all 
political prisoners, immediately and unconditionally, 
including Aung San Suu Kyi.  It also calls on the Government 
of Myanmar to permit all political representatives and 
representatives of ethnic nationalities to participate fully 
in the political transition process without restrictions and 
to resume, without further delay, a dialogue with all 
political actors, including the NLD and ethnic groups.   The 
resolution extends the mandate for the SG's Special Envoy by 
requesting the SG "to continue to provide his good offices" 
and to give all necessary assistance to enable his Special 
Envoy and the Special Rapporteur to discharge their mandates 
fully and effectively.  Voting "yes" on the Third Committee 
draft human rights resolution on Burma with the United States 
were Australia, Japan, the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, 
Mongolia, Nauru, New Zealand, Palau, ROK, Timor-Leste, 
Tuvalu, and Vanuatu. All but Tuvalu and Vanuatu repeated 
their "yes" votes in the Plenary which took place in the 
early morning hours of Saturday, December 22 (Tuvalu and 
Vanuatu were absent).  Voting "no" in both the Third 
Committee and the Plenary were China, DPRK, Laos, Malaysia, 
Burma (Myanmar), and Vietnam.  Abstaining in the Third 
Committee were Brunei, Fiji, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, 
Philippines, Samoa, Singapore, Solomon Islands, and Thailand. 
 Cambodia, Kiribati, and Tonga were absent in the Third 
Committee, but in the Plenary Tonga voted "yes". (Cambodia 
and Kiribati were again absent in the Plenary, joined by PNG, 
Samoa, Solomon Islands, and as mentioned above Tuvalu and 
Vanuatu.) Brunei and Indonesia both switched from a "no" vote 
in 2006 to abstaining and Cambodia switched from a "no" vote 
to being absent.  Vanuatu went from being absent to voting 
"yes". 
 
21.  (U) Two U.S. sponsored resolutions - on elections and 
rape - passed in the Plenary. Our biennial elections 
resolution titled "Strengthening the role of the United 
Nations in enhancing the effectiveness of the principle of 
periodic and genuine elections and the promotion of 
democratization" was easily adopted by consensus.  The Third 
Committee, after weeks of intense negotiations primarily with 
the African delegations, managed to achieve consensus on the 
U.S. resolution on "Eliminating rape and other forms of 
sexual violence in all their manifestations, including in 
conflict and related situations."  The original title was 
"Condemning the use of rape as an instrument of state 
policy."  Thirteen EAP delegations signed on as co-sponsors 
contributing to the momentum for final approval by consensus: 
 
USUN NEW Y 00001209  007 OF 010 
 
 
 Cambodia, Indonesia, Japan, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, 
Nauru, New Zealand, Palau, Philippines, ROK, Samoa, 
Timor-Leste, and Vanuatu.  Timor-Leste was the first country 
to sign on as a co-sponsor.  The resolution calls on the 
Secretary General to report on the resolution's 
 
SIPDIS 
implementation in the 63rd UNGA - a report that may well 
mention Sudan and Burma. 
 
--------- 
Elections 
--------- 
 
22. (U) With the help of intense lobbying in capitals, 
Washington, and New York, the U.S. candidate won for the 
Independent Audit Advisory Committee, which is an important 
part of our UN reform efforts.  Initially at a disadvantage 
for late entry into the race after the other WEOG candidates 
from Spain and Switzerland, David Walker proved to be an 
exceptionally well-qualified candidate.  His service as the 
Comptroller General of the United States and head of the U.S. 
Government Accountability Office proved quite relevant. 
Walker obtained 99 votes on the first ballot, with 93 (a 
two-thirds majority) required to win.  EAP lobbying paid off, 
with the large majority of EAP countries promising support 
including: Australia, Brunei, Cambodia, Fiji, Indonesia, 
Laos, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Mongolia, Nauru, New 
Zealand, Palau, Philippines, ROK, Samoa, Solomon Islands, 
Timor-Leste, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, and Vietnam.  Japan 
noted they were unable to support our candidate. 
 
23. (U) Another success was the re-election of the U.S. 
nominee to the Committee Against Torture.  With 12 contenders 
for five seats, Felice Gaer walked away with the most votes 
(86 on the first ballot) to win an unprecedented third term. 
This body of experts meets in Geneva to oversee the 
implementation of the UN Convention Against Torture and Other 
Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. 
 
24. (U) Efforts to date to promote the U.S. candidate, 
Pierre-Richard Prosper, for the Committee for the Elimination 
of Racial Discrimination have proven positive.  The election 
is in January 2008. 
 
--------------------------------------------- ---------- 
Security Council Issues: Burma, Timor-Leste 
--------------------------------------------- ---------- 
 
25. (U) Burma's military regime's brutal crackdown in 
September on Buddhist monks and peaceful demonstrators helped 
to overcome Chinese and Russian opposition to bring Burma 
before the Security Council.  The Secretary General's Special 
Advisor on Myanmar Ibrahim Gambari briefed SC members after 
both his September and November trips to Burma.  SG Ban, who 
joined the October 5 briefing, denounced the regime's 
crackdown as "abhorrent and unacceptable" and called for 
active international support of the UN good offices mission, 
including that of the UN Security Council.  The SC, on 
October 11, issued its first-ever Presidential Statement on 
Burma. 
 
26. (SBU) Indonesia served as SC President for the month of 
November.  A SC mission visited Timor-Leste in December.  The 
SC last February extended the mandate of the UN Mission in 
Timor-Leste (UNMIT) for one year until February 28, 2008. 
 
 
USUN NEW Y 00001209  008 OF 010 
 
 
----------------------------------------- 
Bloc Politics and EAP Country Performance 
----------------------------------------- 
 
27. (SBU) ASEAN countries sometimes went their own ways this 
UNGA, as seen in their diverse votes on the Burma no-action 
motion in the Third Committee and the Burma and Iranian human 
rights resolutions.  The Philippines and Thailand again split 
off to abstain on some Middle East issues this session. 
Singapore took over the ASEAN Chair from the Philippines. 
Cuba took over from Malaysia last year as the NAM 
coordinator, making NAM decisions all that more likely to go 
against US interests. 
 
28. (C) As in past years, Pacific Island Forum (PIF) 
countries consult regularly on UN issues.  Tonga now serves 
as the Pacific Island Forum chair, having replaced Fiji. 
Counting Australia and New Zealand, the Pacific Islands now 
number 14, with the addition of Tuvalu as a member in 2000 
and Kiribati, Nauru, and Tonga in 1999.  While not exactly a 
voting bloc, the islands are an influential group whose votes 
are increasingly solicited by others.  The United States can 
not take these votes for granted when we seek support on 
human rights and Middle East resolutions.  The most important 
issues to the islands are sustainable development and climate 
change, where the US is not always viewed as supportive. 
Belarus, Iran, and the Palestinian Observer Mission to the 
UN, for example, lobbied aggressively on human rights and 
Middle East issues.  Tuvalu, the Solomon Islands, and to a 
lesser extent Nauru have proven to be somewhat susceptible. 
Tuvalu's new Permrep, who had gone back to his capital to get 
his instructions from the Foreign Ministry reversed at the 
Cabinet level, talks about the need to develop new friends 
with countries like Venezuela.  Even the Charge from 
Micronesia, one of our closest friends, explained he could 
not vote with the United States against the Durban Conference 
resolution, but would abstain, because this is a G-77 
resolution and Micronesia is a G-77 member. 
 
29. (C) The best way to get island votes is to spend time 
with these small delegations and to provide written talking 
points for them to share with their capitals, when needed. 
Most regular contact in New York ends after the Senior 
Advisor departs.  The islanders have appreciated lunches in 
the past with the U.S. Permrep and the session U/S  Burns 
holds each September with their heads of delegation to the 
General Debate.  It has been helpful to have Palau's Permrep, 
who almost always votes with the U.S., in New York and not to 
have to pursue a proxy.  Kiribati, due to cost, is now the 
only Pacific island without a UN Mission in New York; their 
Vice President did participate in September's General Debate. 
 Kiribati traditionally grants its proxy to New Zealand on 
the Iran human rights resolution and for the first time this 
year granted a proxy on the DPRK human rights resolution. 
One has to start well in advance to line up this proxy.  The 
Solomon Islands, with its faltering government and poor 
relations with Australia and New Zealand, is often the odd 
island out on human rights and other votes, but may 
increasingly be joined by Tuvalu.  Vanuatu - with its new 
Permrep and the encouragement of the EAP Senior Advisor - has 
more often been able to participate in votes.  For many of 
the islands with small missions, just showing up for a vote 
is a major feat.  Some have made effective use of interns to 
supplement their small delegations. Taiwan has managed to get 
into the UN via the back door, placing interns in a few 
 
USUN NEW Y 00001209  009 OF 010 
 
 
delegations including the Marshall Islands, Nauru, and Palau. 
 When the Marshall Islands Permrep returns home for a week in 
January 2008, the Taiwan intern will be the only one 
remaining in their Mission. 
 
30. (SBU) Because almost all of developing Asia is organized 
in one regional group or another, Mongolia feels left out, 
belonging to no sub-regional group and believes this impacts 
on its inability to get elected to UN bodies, leading it to 
drop its candidacy for a Security Council seat for 2009-2010. 
 Mongolia has recently played a more active role as seen in 
its two resolutions adopted by consensus this UNGA on 
"Cooperatives in Social Development" and declaring October 15 
of each year the "International Day of Rural Women." 
Timor-Leste, a recent UN member, is feeling its way on the 
issues and, without being a member of a group, is amenable to 
considering questions on their merits. Timor-Leste's new 
Permrep this session cast laudatory "yes" votes on all the 
human rights resolutions including Iran and "no" votes 
against all no action motions.  In sum, it is very important 
to get to know and spend time with the Permreps. 
 
31. (C) Japan has performed solidly, if very cautiously in 
view of its permanent seat aspirations on the SC, and its bid 
for election to a temporary Peacebuilding two-year seat for 
2009-2010.  Japan chairs the newly created Peacebuilding 
Commission as part of its efforts to be seen as a 
Constructive player.  As a fellow large contributor, Japan 
can generally be counted on to consider seriously the 
financial implications of Council decisions, especially those 
related to the expansion of peacekeeping mandates.  Japan's 
willingness to back U.S. positions was only constrained by 
its desire to be as inoffensive to as many other delegations 
on as many issues as possible to obtain maximum support for 
its overarching objective: securing a permanent SC seat. 
 
---------- 
The Future 
---------- 
 
32. (C) Vietnam will replace Qatar on the SC in January 2008. 
 The Asian group had agreed earlier to nominate Vietnam as 
the only candidate for a non-permanent SC seat for 2008-2009. 
 Vietnam's efforts to emerge on the world stage mean it will 
have to start taking clear stands on issues of international 
peace and security out of its region.  Their approach to most 
issues more closely resembles that of China, rather than the 
United States; Vietnam's voting coincidence with us in the 
General Assembly is very low.  Iran and Japan are the only 
two candidates running in the fall of 2008 for a 2009-2010 SC 
seat, after Mongolia concluded its win was unlikely and 
withdrew.  Japan was a late entrant and has already served on 
the SC nine times, most recently in 2005-2006.  Iran has 
served once, in 1955-1956.  Japan is a responsible UN member, 
chairs the Peacebuilding Commission, and is the UN's second 
largest contributor.  Iran, that may garner OIC support, has 
resolutions against it in both the SC and the General 
Assembly.  The United States will need to develop our 
approach to this election taking place in October 2008. 
 
33. (C) The issue of SC enlargement may again prove too 
difficult to resolve.  In pursuit of a permanent seat, 
Japan's new prime minister has reached out more to China and 
has refrained from visiting the controversial Yasukuni 
Shrine.  China remains non-supportive wanting Japan's leaders 
 
USUN NEW Y 00001209  010 OF 010 
 
 
to apologize for WWII atrocities and to cease visits to the 
shrine.  The ROK has signaled its opposition to new permanent 
members of the Security Council.  As President Bush said in 
his General Assembly address, the United States continues to 
support Japan's candidacy for permanent membership and 
believes that the candidacies of other nations should be 
considered as well. 
 
34. (C) As the two largest UN contributors, the U.S. and 
Japan will need to work closely together to pursue critical 
management reforms in the Secretariat and fiscal restraint, 
especially important with a UN biennial budget proposal for a 
25 percent increase.  Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, when he 
was sworn in as the first Asian Secretary General in 35 years 
(since U Thant of Burma), promised that his first priority 
would be to restore trust in a United Nations that has been 
criticized for corruption and mismanagement and witnessed 
distrust among members deeply divided over UN reform.  His 
work is cut out for him. 
 
35. (U) The good showing this UNGA by EAP countries - with 
the Pacific Islands often our best allies in the UN - was 
attributable to concerted efforts on all fronts: in New York, 
in Washington, and in capitals.  Our embassies in particular 
deserve our gratitude for their lobbying efforts with host 
governments, often on short notice.  In general, EAP 
countries helped us to realize most U.S. objectives during 
this 62nd UNGA. 
KHALILZAD 
 
 
 
 
 
Khalilzad