Latin America
Related: About this forumArgentine Foreign Minister Susana Malcorra’s bid for UN Secretary General wins support from U.S.
The U.S. government will support Foreign Minister Susana Malcorras bid to become the next Secretary General of the United Nations, reports suggested yesterday. Malcorra had served as chief of staff to retiring Secretary General Ban Ki-moon before becoming Argentinas Foreign Minister last December.
Sources inside the U.S. government told Britains Sunday Telegraph that President Barack Obama and his National Security Adviser Susan Rice fully back Malcorras candidacy, with the newspaper suggesting that Downing Street is concerned such a move would damage its position over the Falkland/Malvinas Islands.
The recently-appointed Foreign minister is enthusiastically supported by Ms. Rice, the newspaper said, quoting a source in Washington. Obama is said to have been won over by arguments in Ms. Malcorras favor from his Argentine counterpart Mauricio Macri on a visit to Buenos Aires in March that was widely seen as an attempt to reset US-Argentine relations, the Telegraph wrote.
Malcorra however will need more support than just the United States to be elected to the position, as she competes to be the first woman to head the United Nations since it was created in 1945. There are currently five women among the 10 candidates vying for the position, with New Zealands former Prime Minister Helen Clark and Bulgarian diplomat Irina Bokova reported to be the favorites.
At the same time, the countrys recently-appointed Foreign Minister also faces several other hurdles. The United Kingdom, one of five security council members with veto powers, has been a vocal advocate of having the next UN Secretary General be a woman. They are, however, apparently uneasy about electing a secretary-general from Argentina due to the Falklands/Malvinas sovereignty dispute.
Some experts claim that the Macri administrations recent attempts to play down the dispute over the islands is primarily due to Macri's goal of obtaining Britain's support for Malcorras candidacy.
At: http://buenosairesherald.com/article/215635/malcorra%E2%80%99s-un-bid-wins-support-of-washington
LarryNM
(493 posts)forest444
(5,902 posts)Malcorra would be a good choice in that while definitely a corporate critter (she briefly served as CEO of Telefónica Argentina amid the 2001 crisis, during which she laid off 400 people) her persona would put a kinder, gentler - and dare I say grandmotherly - face on today's subordinate and thoroughly useless UN. People are suckers for that, as Reagan knew so well.
Still, she does carry some political baggage - the most troubling of which being allegations she systematically covered up child abuse reports against UN Peacekeeping forces in Africa in 2014.
My guess is that she'll come close; but that UK objections to the mere thought of having an Argentine-born Secretary General will outweigh whatever tepid support she might have from Obama and others.
Judi Lynn
(160,475 posts)This would be a good time for other countries to show they don't have to follow US suggestions, or coercion, and vote for the ones they really would like to see in this spot.