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Viewing cable 06BUENOSAIRES2070, FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF 9/11; GSP REVIEW; ARGENTINE PRESIDENT

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06BUENOSAIRES2070 2006-09-12 10:33 2011-08-25 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Buenos Aires
VZCZCXYZ0000
OO RUEHWEB

DE RUEHBU #2070/01 2551033
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 121033Z SEP 06
FM AMEMBASSY BUENOS AIRES
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 5870
INFO RHMFISS/CDR USSOCOM MACDILL AFB FL//SCJ2//
RULGPUA/USCOMSOLANT
UNCLAS BUENOS AIRES 002070 
 
SIPDIS 
 
STATE FOR INR/R/MR, I/GWHA, WHA, WHA/PDA, WHA/BSC, 
WHA/EPSC 
CDR USSOCOM FOR J-2 IAD/LAMA 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: KPAO OPRC KMDR PREL MEDIA REACTION
SUBJECT: FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF 9/11; GSP REVIEW; ARGENTINE PRESIDENT 
KIRCHNER'S UPCOMING TRIP TO NEW YORK; BOLIVIA; 
CUBA/VENEZUELA/ARGENTINA; 09/11/06; BUENOS AIRES 
 
 
1. SUMMARY STATEMENT 
 
Weekend local papers' special supplements cover the fifth 
anniversary of the September 11 attacks. Other international stories 
include the impact of the GSP review on Argentina; Argentine 
President Kirchner's upcoming trip to New York; the situation in 
Bolivia and its impact on Latin America, particularly on Brazil and 
Argentina; and Cuba's debt owed to Argentina. 
 
2. OPINION PIECES AND KEY STORIES 
 
- "The decadence of the Empire?" 
 
Centrist newspaper "Perfil" carries an opinion piece by Rosendo 
Fraga, head of Centro de Estudios Nueva Mayoria, who writes (09/109 
"The September 11 attacks put in evidence the limits of the US as 
the only world power. 
 
"The trouble met by the US in Iraq and Afghanistan and the problems 
it faces in the Middle East, along with Israel, revived opinions 
that the world's first power may have reached its peak and that 
these events are marking the beginning of the decline that every 
empire has suffered in history. 
 
"... What will surely happen with a new US administration, whether 
Republican or Democratic, is that the country will certainly enter a 
cycle of greater isolation and that it will get less and less 
involved in international conflicts. This is why, we should notice 
what may be a US retreat at the beginning of its decay - which some 
day will come, but, in my opinion, not yet. However, the 'global war 
on terrorism' seems to have brought more disadvantages than benefits 
at an international level." 
 
- "Secrets and lies of the White House" 
 
Hugo Alconada Mon, Washington-based correspondent for 
daily-of-record "La Nacion," writes (09/10) "... The search for Bin 
Laden reveals the worst side of the Bush administration, with 
government officials who feed US citizens' fears in order to win the 
advantage in elections, while they are attempting to disguise their 
own incompetence during the months that followed the September 11 
attacks. 
 
"... The White House is now pressuring the intelligence community 
and the US Pentagon to focus on Iran, the second member of Bush's 
'axis of evil.'" 
 
- "US foreign policy in the shadow of September 11" 
 
Mark Joyce, contributor to liberal, English-language "Buenos Aires 
Herald," writes (09/11) "... There is no doubt that the events of 
September 11, 2001 had a powerful, immediate impact on US foreign 
policy, giving a sense of direction and purpose to a Bush 
administration that previously had defined its foreign policy agenda 
in largely negative, anti-Clintonian terms... 
 
"... The rhetoric of democracy promotion and security planning 
represented a merger of the two dominant schools of post-Cold War, 
US foreign policy thinking, as represented by the internationalists 
and neoconservatives within the Bush administration... 
 
"In place of Communism, Islamic extremism was now installed as the 
monolithic, global threat against which US foreign policy and the 
military system must be aligned. But rather than merely containing 
and deterring the new threat, the US would go on the offensive with 
both 'hard' and 'soft' power, destroying terrorist cells while 
eliminating the conditions under which they are able to thrive." 
 
- "Five years after the September 11 attacks" 
 
Muriel Balbi, contributor to business-financial "InfoBae," writes 
(09/11) "... Five years after the September 11 attacks, the US 
started the greatest investigation ever launched. However, five 
years later, only one person has been sentenced - Zacarias 
Moussaoui. 
 
"The biggest purpose, the capture of Osama bin Laden, dead or alive, 
was not achieved in spite of the millions of dollars used for 
military operations and intelligence efforts. The arrests of alleged 
terrorists were also fruitless... 
 
"The most important military offensive, the so-called 'Enduring 
Freedom' operation, was a harsh blow to Al Qaeda but it did not 
dismantle international terrorism. 
 
"... The reduction in popularity ratings was a reflection of 
 
 
discontent vis-`-vis an unpopular war, whose purposes were worn out 
with the passing of time..." 
 
- "There is still no evidence on who was behind the attacks" 
 
Oscar Raul Cardoso, international analyst of leading "Clarin," 
writes (09/11) "Contrarily to what critics of President George W. 
Bush say, the two main questions his administration must still 
answer about the September 11 attacks are related not to the 
existence of WMD, which are mentioned as a reason for the invasion 
of Iraq, or the alleged partnership between Al Qaeda and the Hussein 
regime. 
 
"Truly enough, Bush has told gigantic lies in relation to these two 
issues, but the two of them are clouded by the main question - who 
was responsible for the attacks? 
 
"... No one has ever exhibited a conclusive piece of evidence that 
Osama bin Laden Al Qaeda planned and executed the first act of war 
in history against the US on its own territory. 
 
"... There is a second major question... How important were the 
September 11 attacks for Bush's plans? Ever since the September 11 
attacks, he has pleaded for the re-establishment of the 'Imperial 
Presidency,' which was worn out after the Vietnam War and the 
downfall of former president Nixon. But this time, the suffocation 
of freedoms and guarantees threatens to be global." 
 
- "Condoleezza Rice - the US is still 'not completely safe'" 
 
Leading "Clarin" reports (09/11) "US Secretary of State Condoleezza 
Rice reiterated that the US is a safer country than before the 
September 11 attacks, although she admitted that it is not 
'completely safe' yet and that it should not cede in the global war 
on terrorism in Iraq and other places. 
 
"She also insisted that the overthrown Iraqi president Saddam 
Hussein had ties with Al Qaeda in spite of several reports denying 
those ties. 
 
"... Rice also acknowledged that the Taliban are 'better organized' 
in Afghanistan, but she asserted that they do not pose a threat for 
Afghan President Hamid Karzai." 
 
- "Senators accuse Bush of not telling the truth" 
 
Ana Baron, Washington-based correspondent for leading "Clarin," 
comments (09/09) "The fifth anniversary of the September 11 attacks 
has become an election battlefield. Both the party in power and the 
opposition are using the anniversary to reap benefits. 
 
"Last night, the (US) Senate Intelligence Committee released a 
report proving that the CIA had no evidence that there were ties 
between Saddam Hussein and Jordanian terrorist leader Abu Musab 
al-Zarwawi and Al Qaeda. 
 
"According to the report, Bush said many times that Saddam had 
harbored Zarwawi and his followers,  to justify the war in Iraq, 
although the CIA had no evidence of this. 
 
"Democratic Senator Carl Levin said that the new report 'is a 
devastating sign of the Bush administration's constant, misleading 
and false attempts to connect Saddam to Al Qaeda and, in this way, 
justify the invasion and the war in Iraq." 
 
- "Taiana will ask that GSP benefits continue for exports to the 
US" 
 
Eleonora Gosman, on special assignment to Rio de Janeiro for leading 
"Clarin," comments (09/10) "Argentine FM Jorge Taiana will hold 
today a key meeting with a powerful USG official, USTR Susan Schwab, 
who has already said that Argentina and Brazil will likely lose 
their GSP benefits... 
 
"Taiana is not ignoring the political aspect of the issue because, 
according to him, this was the argument used by the Bush 
administration to 'convince Peru' of the need to sign an FTA with 
the US. 
 
"During a meeting with 'Clarin', Taiana underscored that he would 
ask her to keep Argentina under the GSP. However, he said that it 
only affects 15% of Argentine foreign trade, this is some 600 
million dollars, and that within this volume of exports to the US 
market, only a small amount would be affected... 
 
"Consulted on the US negative vote on the IDB loan for Argentina, 
 
 
Taiana said that it is striking that the vote was negative when the 
USG could have abstained from voting." 
 
- "Attracting investment, the main purpose of Kirchner's visit to 
New York" 
 
Walter Curia, columnist of leading "Clarin," writes (09/10) 
"Promoting investment is the main purpose of President Nestor 
Kirchner's trip to New York in the framework of his attendance to 
the 61st UN General Assembly. 
 
"... The visit of the President to New York seems conditioned by two 
recent events that mark the status of the US-Argentine relationship 
- first, the USG's decision to remove Argentina from the GSP 
system..., and, second, the US vote against the IDB granting a loan 
for the country's satellite development. 
 
"If the removal of GSP has a relative impact and is part of a 
broader decision by the Bush administration involving other 
developing countries, the vote against the IDB loan cannot be taken 
otherwise but as an expression of irritation. Argentina's 
partnership with President Hugo Chavez and Argentina and Mercosur's 
vote in favor of Venezuela's entry into the UN Security Council 
appear as the main reasons for it." 
 
- "Vis-`-vis serious unattended conflicts" 
 
Joaquin Morales Sola, political columnist of daily-of-record "La 
Nacion," comments (09/10) "... Neither Brazil nor Argentina wants 
Bolivia's secession, regardless of the fact that the area in 
conflict is today the second largest energy reserve of the region 
after Venezuela... 
 
"... Bolivia's secession could end up in a serious arm-wrestling 
match between Brazil and Argentina due to the control of Bolivian 
energy resources... The Bolivian conflict could well worsen the 
Argentine energy crisis. 
 
"... Argentina's neglect of Uruguay is pushing Uruguay to 
Washington's arms. Tabare Vazquez announced to Lula that Uruguay 
will start holding negotiations aimed at reaching an FTA with the 
US. Lula answered that a commercial deal is possible, although not 
an FTA because it could infringe on Mercosur arrangements. Uruguay 
is offended with its Mercosur major partners." 
 
3. EDITORIALS 
 
- "Consequences of the 09/11" 
 
An editorial in leading "Clarin" reads (09/11) "... The September 11 
attacks against the US made the most powerful country in the world 
and the entire world take note of the terrorists' colossal ability 
to damage any point of the world. 
 
"They also changed the US relationship with the international 
community based on the USG's decision to connect the global fight on 
terrorism to the invasion and occupation of Iraq in disregard of the 
UN framework. 
 
"On the other hand, this scenario deepened the divide between the 
Western and the Arab worlds... 
 
"Five years later, one can observe that the international community 
continues to face risks of instability and unrest, and that security 
and peace are jeopardized by terrorists. Extreme inequality and 
injustice are also a constant source of conflict and violence. 
 
"Also, it became obvious that the way to fight these threats 
efficiently should be the reinforcement of the tools of democratic 
countries and free societies, international judicial commitments and 
consensus among nations." 
 
- "Another present for Fidel" 
 
An editorial in daily-of-record "La Nacion" (09/09) "A few days ago, 
the Argentine Government decided to become indebted in dollars at a 
rate of 8.4% per year, which is higher than that of the 
now-cancelled debt owed to the IMF. 
 
"... Some national legislators who make up the so-called 
Congressional Group for Friendship with Cuba are pushing an 
initiative for a gigantic write-off on Cuban debt owed to Argentina 
- nothing less than 75%. 
 
"... Perhaps, the time has come to explore another alternative - to 
pay off our debt with Venezuela by using the large credit we have 
 
 
with Cuba. In this way, the Chavez administration could collect the 
money from Fidel Castro or, if he wants to, Chavez could forgive 
Castro's debt based on their public friendship..." 
 
To see more Buenos Aires reporting, visit our 
classified website at: 
http://www.state.sqov.gov/p/wha/buenosaires 
 
MATERA