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Viewing cable 10THEHAGUE65, CWC: WRAP-UP FOR THE WEEK ENDING JANUARY 29, 2010

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
10THEHAGUE65 2010-02-01 17:32 2011-08-30 01:44 CONFIDENTIAL Embassy The Hague
VZCZCXYZ0001
OO RUEHWEB

DE RUEHTC #0065/01 0321732
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
O 011732Z FEB 10
FM AMEMBASSY THE HAGUE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 3729
INFO RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC PRIORITY
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHDC PRIORITY
RHEBAAA/DEPT OF ENERGY WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHDC PRIORITY
RHMFISS/DTRA ALEX WASHINGTON DC//OSAC PRIORITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L THE HAGUE 000065 
 
SIPDIS 
 
STATE FOR ISN/CB, VCI/CCA, L/NPV, IO/MPR, 
SECDEF FOR OSD/GSA/CN,CP> 
JOINT STAFF FOR DD PMA-A FOR WTC 
COMMERCE FOR BIS (BROWN, DENYER AND CRISTOFARO) 
NSC FOR LUTES 
WINPAC FOR WALTER 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/01/2020 
TAGS: PARM PREL KTIA OPCW CWC
SUBJECT: CWC: WRAP-UP FOR THE WEEK ENDING JANUARY 29, 2010 
 
REF: A. THE HAGUE 51 
     B. THE HAGUE 29 
     C. GRANGER-ISN/CB E-MAIL (01/15/2010) 
     D. MIKULAK-DEL E-MAIL (01/22/2010) 
     E. SMITH-ISN/CB E-MAIL (11/22/2009) 
     F. STATE 7592 
 
Classified By: Janet E. Beik for reasons 1.4 (B) and (D) 
 
This is CWC-08-10 
 
------- 
SUMMARY 
------- 
 
1. (SBU)  After the positive opening meeting of the 
destruction deadline consultation (Ref A), 
delegations at the Organization for the Prohibition 
of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) turned their attention 
to the next potentially difficult consultation on 
"situations not foreseen" by the Chemical Weapons 
Convention (CWC).  U.S. Delreps met with the 
facilitator for that consultation, Michael Hurley 
(Ireland), privately on January 22, and then 
sequentially with the OPCW Legal Advisor, and the 
UK, South African and Russian delegations on 
January 25 and 26.  The Western European and Others 
Group (WEOG) also discussed the issue again (Refs A 
and B) on January 26.  Hurley convened the second 
meeting of his consultation, and his first of the 
new year, on January 27.  Details of all of these 
meetings follow. 
 
------------------------------ 
FACILITATOR ON HIS DRAFT PAPER 
------------------------------ 
 
2. (C) Delreps Beik, Granger and Legal Counselor 
Kim met with Michael Hurley (Ireland) on January 22 
to discuss his draft paper for the "situations not 
foreseen" consultation (Ref C), having received 
Washington's initial guidance to request that he 
return to earlier drafts from the UK and South 
Africa (Ref D).  Hurley said he fully expected 
major changes to be proposed to his draft, but 
cautioned against going back to the South African 
draft (particularly the latest version with the 
Iraq paragraph, sent to the Department in Ref E). 
The UK draft was never public, shared in confidence 
only with a small handful of delegations, and 
Hurley said the South Africans would not accept it. 
 
3. (C) Hurley explained that he is trying to steer 
a careful line between the South African agenda and 
potential "mischief" from Iran and others.  Many 
delegations, he said, have concerns about the whole 
exercise, feeling blindsided by the small group 
discussion at the Executive Council (EC) session in 
October and not understanding what the EC 
agreed.  In December, when he was about to share 
his draft paper with the U.S. and UK, he said he 
was called by the Director-General (DG) and sent to 
the Legal Advisor.  The delay in his paper was due 
to consideration of the draft by the OPCW Technical 
Secretariat (TS).  The Legal Advisor, he said, was 
comfortable with the shape of the paper and the 
content.  The Verification Branch has also been 
actively interested in it.  Delrep asked about a 
connection to future verification of the bunkers in 
Iraq.  Hurley responded that the TS had not overtly 
included Iraq as part of the picture; he felt the 
South African attempt to add Iraq to their draft is 
more problematic in that regard than his draft. 
Even if the guidelines were cited for avoiding 
standard verification procedures in Iraq, he said, 
the Council would still have to take up the 
Qmatter.  He also said he did not see the Iraqi 
bunkers as falling under the "discovery" of new 
weapons that he emphasizes throughout his draft. 
 
4. (C) Hurley believes South African Ambassador 
Goosen will honor his commitment to keep this 
process oriented toward the future.  Goosen, in his 
view, wants to claim credit for producing a set of 
guidelines that plug a gap in the Convention as the 
outcome of this consultation.  If crossed, Hurley 
said, Goosen would not hesitate to gin up support 
for more extreme avenues of discussion (of what 
occurred in Iraq after 2003), which Iran and others 
might gladly pursue.  The Iranian delegation to 
date has been positive, Hurley said, in his 
meetings with them. 
 
5. (C) Hurley agreed that the draft paper is too 
long and perhaps overly repetitive; he thought it 
easier to remove language than add in later.  He 
was following a logic-gram that does mirror the 
verification annex.  In response to Delreps' 
questions, Hurley said that the proposed guidelines 
are not intended to be legally binding, and that he 
is open to ways to make that intention clear.  He 
noted that the guidelines probably would be 
appended to an EC decision and the language of that 
decision could help frame the status of these 
guidelines and their relationship to the 
Convention.  He was open to the prospect of working 
on the decision language along with the guidelines, 
rather than sequentially, if that would help.  He 
did not see this text as legally binding in any 
sense, but remains open to language suggestions 
that would ease that concern.  One of the strong 
points of consensus he found in the November 
facilitation meeting was agreement that any 
guidelines would not in any way impact the sanctity 
of the Convention. 
 
6. (C) On "force majeure", Hurley intended to frame 
the concept of "unforeseen situations" which, he 
said, "makes everyone nervous."  He tied it to new 
discoveries, also a deliberately chosen term to 
avoid the legal issues of "possession and 
control."  He expressed his openness to other 
formulations that would limit the situations for 
which the guidelines would apply.  When Delreps 
asked why the limitation to non-States Parties had 
dropped out of the draft, broadening the paper 
immensely, Hurley was genuinely surprised, citing 
the language from EC-58 that mandated this 
facilitation which is not limited to non-States 
Parties.  He thought returning to that narrow a 
scope might require taking his remit back to the 
Council. 
 
7. (C) After a lengthy discussion of the 30-day 
reporting requirement included in the draft 
guidelines, Hurley said he had tried to meet 
earlier U.S. concerns about any set timelines by 
adding the safety considerations and a potential 
series of reports with no real information other 
than that CW had been discovered.  South Africa, he 
said, feels strongly that reports have to come back 
to OPCW and the political bodies.  Again, he said 
he was open on how to capture that but felt there 
will be strong pressure for some kind of reporting 
requirement (deadline). 
 
8. (C) Hurley described his plan to introduce the 
draft paper on January 27, expecting delegation 
comments and reactions from capitals at the next 
meeting, February 3.  He would then take 
Qmeeting, February 3.  He would then take 
changes/proposals both in the meetings and 
privately.  Delreps discussed a pause after these 
sessions for a new draft for discussion after the 
February EC, with the possibility for bilateral 
meetings with experts on the margins of the EC, but 
without discussion in the EC itself except his 
report that consultations have taken place and that 
he is working on a new draft.  Delrep expressed 
appreciation to Hurley for all of his work and said 
that we want him to remain in control of the 
process; Delreps would be consulting with others on 
possible ways forward and would stay in close touch 
with him as things progressed. 
 
--------------------- 
LEGAL ADVISOR'S VIEWS 
--------------------- 
 
9. (SBU) Delreps Beik, Granger and Legal Counselor 
Kim met with OPCW Legal Advisor Santiago Onate on 
January 25 to discuss USG concerns with the draft 
paper on "situations not foreseen" by the CWC. 
Onate confirmed that his office had advised Hurley 
on the drafting of the paper and would attend the 
discussions, but said the lead office in OPCW for 
the issue is the Verification Branch.  Onate drew 
the critical distinction between policy and legal 
issues, understood the questions and concerns posed 
by Delreps, and confirmed that the draft guidelines 
prepared by Michael Hurley are simply a starting 
point for discussion that can be revised along the 
way to reflect the appropriate scope and mandate of 
this facilitation. 
 
10. (SBU) Onate stated that the threshold issue 
regarding this paper is the policy question of the 
desired scope of this exercise.  Is it limited to 
conflicts involving a state party on the territory 
of a non-state party, or will it be more expansive 
to cover other sorts of situations?  All the other 
issues or decisions flow from this threshold 
question, but Onate noted that the EC-58 language 
is ambiguous and could proceed in different 
directions.  He emphasized that the scope is a 
"political question, not a legal one." 
 
11. (SBU) Onate stated that no one is interested in 
imposing new legal rights or obligations on the 
States Parties, nor is anyone interested in making 
amendments to the Convention.  He said that he 
viewed the guidelines as not legally binding and 
"unenforceable."  In Onate,s view, any guidelines 
should be implemented without prejudice to the 
Convention.  Accordingly, the guidelines should 
focus on technical and procedural details.  In 
response to Delreps' question, Onate agreed that 
the language of the guidelines could be revised or 
"softened" so that it would not have the "shalls" 
and other language indicative of legally binding 
intent; rather, the guidelines could say that the 
States Parties are "expected to" or "should" do 
certain things under certain circumstances.  He 
thought this a fairly simple fix that the 
consultations could easily make. 
 
12. (SBU) On the issue of "force majeure", Onate 
said that the term is not used in the proposed 
guidelines, but the concept of an irresistible 
force or unforeseen event is used throughout 
Hurley,s draft paper.  Onate noted that, in his 
view, force majeure was used in accordance with 
what he understood to be the traditional 
international law definition of the term.  Onate 
confirmed that he had spoken to Hurley about the 
concept, and noted that Hurley did not want to 
expressly refer to the term, as he was concerned 
that force majeure could be extended by certain 
states parties to cover or excuse almost anything 
under the Convention.  Onate also explained that he 
Qunder the Convention.  Onate also explained that he 
could think of only one precedent where the OPCW 
had relied on a force majeure in order to suspend a 
treaty obligation; in that case, the OPCW agreed to 
temporarily postpone an inspection of a facility in 
France because there was labor unrest and potential 
for trouble at the facility. 
 
13. (SBU) Onate agreed with Delreps that the 
 
current draft guidelines could be read more broadly 
than conflicts involving non-State Parties, and in 
fact could be read to cover other types 
of situations.  When asked specifically about 
future inspections in Iraq, he said that those 
would be covered under the security provisions of 
the Convention and did not require guidelines such 
as these.  When asked about the concept of 
"discovery" and its potential application to 
Abandoned Chemical Weapons (ACW), Onate replied 
that ACW is clearly envisaged by the Convention and 
has a well-established practice.  He did not see 
these proposed guidelines affecting that issue, as 
their focus is related to verification. 
 
----------- 
UK DELEGATE 
----------- 
 
14. (C) Following the meeting with Legal Advisor 
Onate, Delreps met with UK Delegate Karen 
Wolstenholme to discuss Hurley's draft paper and 
the upcoming consultation.  Delrep broadly conveyed 
Washington's concerns with the paper to 
Wolstenholme, who posited that South Africa just 
wanted some text on the table and seems willing to 
accept almost anything as long as they get a final 
product.  According to Wolstenholme, London could 
live with the draft paper but has some concerns 
with its inconsistencies, sees no need to include 
provisions for storage of CW, and would prefer to 
limit any use of force majeure.  She said she 
planned to say nothing in the consultation and let 
others voice their concerns, including Germany and 
Italy, who have very strong feelings about the 
whole exercise. 
 
15. (C) When Delrep asked about introducing text 
from the UK's draft paper -- which was only shared 
confidentially with a few delegations in October 
and never formally circulated -- Wolstenholme 
responded that it might be possible to table it as 
an alternative to, or modification of, the South 
African draft paper, but only if and when 
resistance to Hurley's paper strengthens.  She said 
she would check with London on whether they would 
agree to the UK sponsoring text in the 
consultations.  Wolstenholme noted that Hurley's 
first consultation in November had discussed the 
scope of the consultations but had not reached any 
agreement aside from needing to continue the 
discussion.  She suggested that further discussion 
could be engineered to pave the way for introducing 
new draft language, whether the UK paper or another 
facilitator's draft. 
 
------------------------ 
SOUTH AFRICAN AMBASSADOR 
------------------------ 
 
16. (C) Delreps Beik and Granger met with South 
African Delegate Marthinus van Schalkwyk on January 
26; South African Ambassador Peter Goosen, who 
insisted on attending the meeting as well, 
dominated much of the discussion.  Throughout, 
Goosen continued to take potshots at the U.S. 
position as often as possible while alternately 
portraying himself as a friend and looking out for 
U.S. interests.  After Delrep gave a broad overview 
of U.S. concerns with the scope, length and 
legalistic tone of Hurley's draft paper, Goosen 
retorted "that's what you get when you choose an 
honest, transparent facilitator" and added, "You 
should have taken Marthinus (as facilitator) when 
Qshould have taken Marthinus (as facilitator) when 
we offered him but now you're stuck with Hurley." 
 
17. (SBU) When asked about the status of the South 
African draft paper, Goosen said he sees only one 
paper on the table currently: the facilitator's. 
 
Like the U.S. and the UK, Goosen had expected to 
see a draft of Hurley's paper before it was 
circulated but didn't.  He had thought that 
Hurley's draft would merge the South African and UK 
papers, and he agreed that Hurley's paper needs to 
be revised.  Goosen would not oppose the 
reintroduction of the South African paper -- only 
if done by Hurley -- but said pointedly, "You just 
like ours now that you've seen Hurley's."  Delrep 
noted that Washington would want changes to some of 
the substance and specific language in the South 
African draft but liked its length and format. 
Goosen suggested that it would be best to have only 
a very general discussion on Hurley's paper during 
the consultation and then give the facilitator a 
chance to redraft it.  Goosen expressed no sense of 
urgency but admitted wanting to have guidelines to 
agree by the Conference of the States Parties in 
December. 
 
18. (SBU) Goosen stressed his key concern in the 
whole exercise is addressing an issue of principle. 
According to Goosen, U.S. and UK destruction of 
chemical weapons (CW) in Iraq took place outside of 
the CWC; he admitted that the rules of the 
Verification Annex did not work in the situation 
but countered that States Parties still need to 
play by the rules.  Goosen claimed that India, 
Russia and others feel similarly, though he 
recognized Indian and Russian unease at the broad 
scope seemingly conferred by the consultation's 
title.  Regardless of its title, Hurley's 
consultation, in Goosen's view, should make sure a 
similar situation does not happen "with vague 
reports delivered six years later." 
 
19. (SBU) Goosen then spoke against reopening 
discussion on the scope of the consultation for 
fear that it would turn into an interminable, 
circular debate similar to what he saw as a 
complicated discussion during the first 
consultation in November.  Van Schalkwyk added that 
opening up the scope would give Russia, India, 
China and others a chance to target the U.S. and 
the UK on what was done in Iraq.  Both Goosen and 
van Schalkwyk were adamant that they wanted to 
avoid this.  Goosen told Delreps that Iran, India 
and Russia believe the U.S. was non-compliant in 
Iraq and that they initially wanted to request a 
legal opinion supporting that assertion. 
Reiterating his desire not to "tar and feather" the 
U.S. and the UK, Goosen said it would be useful for 
the exercise for the U.S. and the UK to share their 
"practical experiences" to inform the guidelines 
and make them realistic. 
 
20. (SBU) According to Goosen, the consultation is 
not -- and should not be -- limited to non-States 
Parties.  Non-States Parties cannot be bound by the 
CWC, so the focus must be on States Parties and 
specifically on possession and control: what to do 
when CW or CW capability falls into the hands of a 
State Party.  Goosen also raised the possibility of 
broadening the consultation to look at cases of 
interdiction.  Throughout the meeting, Goosen noted 
his flexibility on the final product but reaffirmed 
the need for timelines and for protecting the CWC. 
Van Schalkwyk said that the only thing that is "not 
QVan Schalkwyk said that the only thing that is "not 
foreseen" is why a State Party could not comply 
with the CWC, including the Verification Annex.  He 
continued that security and safety concerns could 
result in the only legitimate unforeseen situation. 
Summarizing the South African view of what the 
final guidelines should look like, van Schalkwyk 
said that a State Party ultimately should prove: 
-- discovery, possession and control; 
-- complete destruction; 
-- the absence of any remnants. 
This would constitute the complete information 
package at the end of the process and would 
represent a lower standard than currently set by 
the Verification Annex. 
 
-------------------------------------- 
RUSSIAN DELEGATION: WAITING FOR MOSCOW 
-------------------------------------- 
 
21. (SBU) On January 26, Delreps Beik, Granger and 
Legal Counselor Kim met with the Russian 
delegation, including Deputy PermRep Konstantin 
Gavrilov and Delegates Vladimir Ladanov, Maxim 
Musikhin and Denis Chekhonin.  Gavrilov stressed 
there is no need to push the "situations not 
foreseen" issue: his mantra throughout the meeting 
was to slow things down.  In his usual style, 
Gavrilov dismissed the entire initiative as a South 
African attempt to be relevant, nothing more.  He 
said that Moscow is still reviewing Hurley's draft 
paper and had not provided guidance yet. 
 
----------------------- 
WEOG DISCUSSION ROUND 3 
----------------------- 
 
22. (SBU) During the weekly meeting of the Western 
European and Others Group (WEOG) on January 26, 
Delrep added "situations unforeseen" to the agenda, 
following two previous WEOG discussions (Refs A and 
B).  Delrep noted that there still appear to be 
differences of opinion on the purpose of the 
consultation.  She suggested that addressing the 
scope would be useful before starting a drafting 
exercise on the facilitator's guidelines. 
 
23. (SBU) Italian Delegate Giuseppe Cornacchia 
responded that the scope of the consultation had 
moved unexpectedly and that Hurley's draft 
guidelines go too far in trying to define 
situations which are neither foreseen nor 
predictable.  He expressed his fear that widening 
of the consultation's scope will make a solution 
even more elusive.  UK Delegate Wolstenholme noted 
that there was no agreement on scope following 
Hurley's first consultation in November.  Echoing 
Delrep's comment, she questioned whether the 
consultation would be ready for such a legalistic 
document as Hurley's draft and recommended 
returning to a simpler paper.  Wolstenholme opined 
that it would help knowing South Africa's aims as 
the instigator of the exercise but admitted that 
they are far from clear.  Turning to Hurley's draft 
guidelines, French Delegate Raja Rabia reported 
that Paris has a number of concerns with the text, 
including putting too much burden on the 
"discovering" State Party.  Rabia also shared 
French views that the minimum timeframe for 
reporting should be no less than 60 days with at 
least 6 months before the initial "declaration" is 
required.  She concluded that the guidelines should 
focus on the need to inform the TS rather than 
other obligations. 
 
------------------------------------ 
THE CONSULTATION -- POLITE CONFUSION 
------------------------------------ 
 
24. (SBU) On January 27, Facilitator Michael Hurley 
chaired his second consultation on "situations not 
foreseen" and introduced his draft guidelines.  He 
acknowledged that the draft was longer than 
expected but explained this was due to trying to 
accommodate as wide a range of circumstances as 
possible.  Hurley also explained that he opted for 
Qpossible.  Hurley also explained that he opted for 
firm language (i.e., "shall" rather than "could") 
for clarity and precision but that the decision 
adopting the guidelines could explain their status. 
Expounding on his mandate from the EC-58 report, 
Hurley said it was to explore situations where the 
implementation of procedural norms either would not 
be possible or would be impeded.  He admitted that 
the word "unforeseen" had become an irritant and 
source of confusion; this is why he chose to focus 
on operational methods in his guidelines rather CWC 
concepts.  In this vein, Hurley chose an 
alternative formulation when referring to 
"possession and control" in order to distinguish 
the guidelines from Article I.  He provided a 
section-by-section overview of his draft, 
highlighting the final section (paragraphs 16-20) 
as the most important in confirming the authority 
of the policy-making organs, even if their role is 
ex post facto.  Hurley stressed that he tried to 
stay close to the Convention and to accepted norms, 
including generally-agreed concepts of 
international law (i.e., force majeure), and noted 
the only new idea in his draft is the 30-day 
timeline for reporting. 
 
25. (SBU) South African Delegate van Schalkwyk made 
the first intervention, noting that he was awaiting 
guidance and could not engage substantively. 
However, he noted the purpose of the guidelines 
should not be to displace the Convention but to 
address situations where States Parties face 
practical difficulties in implementation.  Hurley 
agreed that practical difficulties should not 
detract from CWC obligations. 
 
26. (SBU) Italian Delegate Cornacchia noted his 
support for Hurley's facilitation but also his 
difficulty with the concept, stating it would be 
impossible to cover all imaginable situations.  He 
also pointed out that the CWC is clear on the 
obligations of discovering and territorial State 
Parties but said that discussing non-States Parties 
would be a different matter.  French Delegate Rabia 
then intervened to say that France had expected a 
list of "best practices" rather than guidelines 
creating more obligations for States Parties. 
Echoing Cornacchia's statement on the distribution 
of responsibilities, she said the guidelines 
unfairly place the entire burden on the discovering 
state.  Finally, Rabia stated French opposition to 
the proposed timelines for reporting, suggesting 
instead at least 60 days for the initial report and 
6 months. 
 
27. (SBU) Like others, Indian Delegate Pankaj 
Sharma noted his comments were preliminary and that 
he was waiting guidance from capital on Hurley's 
draft.  Echoing Cornacchia, Sharma said he is 
trying to understand what the consultations and 
guidelines are trying to address.  He reiterated 
his previous request for details on similar 
exercises in other conventions, and he asked for an 
explanation of the difference between "unforeseen 
events" and "irresistible force" and why the two 
formulations had been used.  Like Sharma, Mexican 
Delegate Blanca Polo asked what the consultation is 
trying to accomplish and expressed a need for 
clarity before proceeding further.  Referring to 
the concept of discovery in Hurley's draft, she 
said it is not clear where discovery is to take 
place; Polo stated that the Convention is clear on 
what should be done in a State Party, but not in a 
Qwhat should be done in a State Party, but not in a 
non-State Party. 
 
28. (SBU) Russian Delegate Gavrilov said he also is 
awaiting guidance but stressed the need for 
consensus on the scope of discussion before the 
consultation could proceed.  He stated that any 
agreed guidelines could only add value to help 
implement the Convention and not supersede it. 
Chinese Delegate Li Dong stated that Beijing is 
still examining the complicated legal issues raised 
by the consultation but affirmed that the 
guidelines should not affect the Convention, 
including the Confidentiality Annex.  Australian 
Delegate Mike Byers read a prepared statement with 
preliminary comments that the guidelines' language 
should be broad and general enough to accommodate 
unpredictable conflict situations.  Byers said that 
the three key dimensions of the guidelines should 
be to address: 
-- the threshold for triggering them (e.g., safety, 
security, military necessity or impossibility); 
-- the manner of complying with the CWC (as 
substantively as possible); 
-- the timeframe for complying with the CWC (as 
soon as practicable). 
 
29. (SBU) Echoing sentiments conveyed in most other 
inventions, German Delegate Ruth Surkau expressed 
unease with the title of the guidelines and the 
consultation, explaining that the Convention 
provides the framework for addressing all 
situations and that nothing can be foreseen outside 
of the CWC.  She stressed the need to define the 
scope more clearly as well as to insure the role 
and authority of the policy-making organs are not 
undermined.  Dutch Ambassador Lohman joined the 
foray by stating his puzzlement with what is being 
discussed and asking for clarity on the relation of 
the guidelines to the Convention.  Delrep noted 
that previous interventions had reflected many of 
Washington's questions but highlighted that the 
draft guidelines appear legalistic in form and too 
much like an annex to the Convention.  She 
suggested that discussion at next week's 
consultation focus on general comments rather than 
developing into a long, drawn-out drafting 
exercise. 
 
30. (SBU) Responding to the question posed by the 
Indian delegate, Legal Advisor Onate gave a number 
of examples of force majeure in other conventions 
and stated that it is a normal concept usually 
associated with natural occurrences but also human 
ones, such as acts of war, insurrections, etc. 
Onate stated that the Convention clearly authorizes 
the policy-making organs to deal with situations 
where full implementation of some parts of the 
Convention, including the Verification Annex, is 
not possible.  Describing the genesis of the 
consultation, Onate said that two States Parties 
came into possession of CW on the territory of a 
non-State Party -- a situation envisaged in Article 
I -- and that their destruction of the CW was in 
line with the Convention's main objective. 
However, he explained that the destruction was done 
outside of normal procedures, which created the 
problem being addressed.  Onate continued that 
Hurley's paper does not create new obligations but 
rather clarifies what to do when certain 
circumstances come into play. 
 
31. (SBU) Brazilian Delegate Marcelo Ramalho said 
Brazil currently does not have a position on the 
guidelines or the consultation because it is not 
clear what is being addressed.  He also asked about 
situations of discovery on the high seas and in 
outer space.  Onate responded that the Convention 
clearly does not deal with the high seas or outer 
space.  Lebanese Delegate Rami Adwan stated two 
problems with the draft guidelines: legal and 
Qprocedural.  The legal problem stems from avoiding 
the term "force majeure" and forcing the use of 
another suitable, agreed term.  The procedural 
problem results from the guidelines going beyond 
the available flexibility of dealing with States 
Parties' practical breach of their obligations. 
Venezuelan Delegate Jorge Petit (speaking for the 
first time in any consultation) agreed with the 
remarks of the Lebanese and Brazilian delegates and 
asked for clarification and examples of 
"irresistible force."  He also suggested the 
possibility of cooperation and coordination with 
other international organizations, including the 
International Maritime Organization and IAEA.  The 
Thai delegate supported the Venezuelan delegate's 
intervention and asked for more clarification on 
the concept of the consultation and the guidelines 
before questioning whether they were fully 
compatible with the mandate given by EC-58. 
 
32. (SBU) Before closing the meeting, Hurley tried 
to reach agreement on the title to be used in 
referring to the consultation.  Unable to, he said 
the issue would need to be finalized during the 
next consultation. 
 
33. (SBU) DEL COMMENT:  Despite some expectations 
that the consultations would go quickly and reach 
agreement on guidelines early in the year, it is 
clear that this is just the beginning of a long 
process.  Aside from South Africa and the 
facilitator, no one sees any urgency in moving 
forward as long as there remains confusion with 
the purpose and expected results of the entire 
endeavor.  END COMMENT. 
 
34. (U) BEIK SENDS. 
 
LEVIN