Monday, October 16, 2006

D-day for Venezuela and Guatemala in bid to win Security Council seat

The Guatemalan delegation at today's voting for temporary U.N. Security Council seats. (Image via Monsters and Critics).

***[Please scroll down for updates to the original post.]***

Today the U.N. General Assembly will vote on which country will take over Latin America’s temporary seat on the Security Council. The two main candidates- Guatemala and Venezuela- have been fighting tooth and nail in order to gain support from member states. The winning candidate requires a minimum 2/3 majority vote from the Council which may be very difficult (hence, Chile abstaining from voting), and opens the door for a compromise candidate to get the seat.

Update (1:50pm): After three rounds of voting, Guatemala leads Venezuela but has so far fallen short of gaining 2/3 majority. (Link via Reuters).

Update (2:00pm): Little has changed after four rounds of voting with Guatemala still leading but without a minimum 2/3 majority. The door for a compromise candidate has been blown wide open. (Link via Guardian UK).

Update (2:20pm): According to Venezuela's El Universal, Guatemala led in the third round 110-76. Assuming 186 members voted in the subsequent rounds, then the winner will need at least 124 votes in favor in order to win and the tiny number of abstentions (around 6, I think) may not be enough to produce a winner.

Update (3:25pm): The Security Council has been at an impasse for over an hour now. Reuters has concluded that the biggest loser so far would be Hugo Chavez since Venezuela was very vocal in its campaign to get the Security Council seat. U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. John Bolton jokingly compared the impasse to the 2000 U.S. Presedential election.

Gone unnoticed in the coverage of the vote has been which country has the best chance as being a compromise choice for the seat. Here's a brief list of who has represented Latin America and the Caribbean since 1998, according to Wikipedia:
2006- Argentina, Peru
2005-
Argentina, Brazil
2004- Brazil, Chile
2003- Chile, Mexico
2002- Colombia, Mexico
2001-
Colombia, Jamaica
2000- Argentina, Jamaica
1999-
Argentina, Brazil
1998- Brazil, Costa Rica
Venezuela hasn't been on the Security Council since 1993 while Guatemala has never served on the Council.

Update (3:40pm): I stand corrected as BBC News reports that Costa Rica, Panama, and Uruguay are possible compromise candidates.

Update (3:50pm): Click here for a live webcast of the voting, now in its fifth round. (Link via United Nations).

Update (4:15pm): Oh. My. God. The fifth round ended with in a tie between Guatemala and Venezuela! Each received 93 votes with one member chosing Mexico. On to a sixth round!

Update (4:45pm):
The latest round of voting has the gap closing between Guatemala and Venezuela with the former leading by less than 10 votes. (Cuba and Mexico each received 1 vote). In accordance to U.N. rules, only Guatemala and Venezuela are eligible in the next round.

The U.N. has a live webcast of the voting via this link.

Update (5:05pm): Eighth round results- Guatemala 102, Venezuela 85. A 9th round of voting is now underway.

Update (5:30pm): 9th round results-
Guatemala 107, Venezuela 81. The gap has barely moved as 4 members abstained. Guatemala missed the 2/3 majority by 21 votes.

Barring a major shift the voting will continue into the evening. And from the looks of things the U.N. cafeteria will be working overtime to provide coffee to the delegates tonight.

Update (6:35pm): 10
th round results were announced at the top of the hour- Guatemala 110, Venezuela 77. Guatemala has missed the target by 15 votes.

Mercifully, the head of today's proceedings adjourned voting until tomorrow at 10am.

One of the delegates (country unknown) interviewed after today's adjournment estimates that if the vote isn't decided by the first round tomorrow then it will be yet another long day of voting.

The Argentine delegate is interviewed and he discounts any possibility of a compromise candidate and estimates that voting tomorrow will not take long. He says that his country will keep supporting Venezuela's bid along with the other Mercosur countries.

U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. John Bolton points out that the 1st and last rounds had the same vote tally. "I'm prepared for the long haul" said Bolton who view the voting as "9 defeats and a tie" for Venezuela. He refuses to consider the impasse as a "deadlock" and he bemoans those states who exploit this vote as a referndum on U.S. influence on the U.N.

The Mexican delegate admits that he's "conversating" with other delegates to see if a compromise can be found. The Chilean delegate says that their country's position in abstaining from voting remains that way and that delegates should "pause and reflect" to figure out what comes next. He also mentions that "anything could happen". "We respect both candidatures" said the Chilean delegate while the Mexican delegate noted that the change in government from Vicente Fox to Felipe Calderon may impede the possibility of Mexico being a compromise candidate.

The Guatemalan delegate doesn't believe that the U.S. pushed to hard in its favor and "resented" Venezuelan government claims that Guatemala would not represent an "independent voice" if elected. "We have no reason to step out of the race unilaterally" said the delegate who finds it "premature" that a compromise candidate is considered. He confessed that the U.S. and Guatemala do not have "identical interests" in Guatemala's bid for the Security Council since the U.S. is more concerned with stopping Venezuela's bid rather than seeing Guatemala win.

So what can we conclude from today's proceedings? Venezuela can be considered a big loser since they were unable to lead in any of the 10 rounds in spite of the hype and hoopla surrounding their bid. At the same time, the U.S.' rhetoric claiming that Guatemala had enough votes to win was untrue so they too ended on the losing end. The big winners may be member states who could be promised heaven and earth by either the U.S. or Venezuela if they change their vote. My personal hope is that a compromise candidate emerges and that may be more of a reality if subsequent rounds of voting remain relatively unchanged.

Image- CNN (U.N. Security Council vote on Iraq in 1999)

Links- Voice of America, International Herald Tribune, San Jose Mercury News, Washington Post, Bloomberg

Tags- , , ,

4 comments:

  1. Anonymous6:57 PM

    I don't see how in any way this can be construed as a loss for Venezuela. Merely mounting a successful challenge to the most powerful nation on the face of the earth and the "Washington consensus" mentality of the UNSC is a HUGE accomplishment for a developing nation such as Venezuela. The enormous lobbying on behalf of the US was not enough to stop 93 nations from supporting Venezuela's bid. Of course, if Washington hadn't chosen the country with perhaps the most atrocious human rights record in all of Latin America as it's puppet candidate, this thing might be over already. So for those of us who want some democratization of the security council, perhaps the choice of Guatemala works in our favor by creating an acutal contest for the seat.

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  2. I’m not sure I can give you that, annon. The UN has a long, well-known history of voting against the US.

    But I wonder if Chavez could have won had he not made such a spectacle of himself at the UN calling Bush the devil.

    Don’t get me wrong, I was very amused: “I can still smell the sulfur. Still today!” That’s funny.

    But in doing so, he gave fense-sitters no cover to vote for him.

    On the other hand, one story is that 93 nations voted for a guy who called Bush the devil!

    I think we can say with confidence, therefore, that among international leaders, Bush has some very high negatives.

    That was not the case immediately following 9/11.

    nice work, Latin Americanist.

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  3. Anonymous: It is a loss for Venezuela in that Chavez engaged in several highly visible globe-trotting tours partly in order to get states to vote for him. The key term in that sentenced is "highly visible" because Chavez constantly declared in his rhetoric how Venezuela would capture the Council seat. So far Venezuela has been unable to lead in even 1 round. Hence, the hype did not meet the reality. Yeah, the U.S. lobbying effort must have been enormous, (which was why it was suprising that Guatemala was unable to get to within 20 votes of the 2/3 majority), but it was without the very public chest-thumping that Chavez showed.

    redwood: What you mention in the first 4 paragraphs was exactly what a lot of the articles I read mentioned- did Chavez' "bush is the 'devil'" speech backfire. One could spin it that way, but I think it helped him more than hurt him in the sense that he played towards his audience and knew how to get their attention. I am honestly hoping that the stalemate continues so that a compromise candidate can be chosen. (I'm also disgusted with the negative vitrol being spewed both ways between Caracas and Washington which is why I hope neither side wins in the end).

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  4. If that’s so, Erwin, then I should think Chavez’ ability to move votes based on insulting Bush is an even greater indication of Bush’s weakness among world leaders.

    In either case, that’s a change for the worse from 9/11.

    Indeed, his failure is staggering. It appears that the only job he undertook on the international stage was to persuade leaders of other nations that harboring terrorists is not in their self-interest.

    How’d he screw that up?

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