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A Turning Point for the OAS?
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14222 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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7 / 1988 |
2,237 Words |
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Richard T. McCormack Richard T. McCormack is U.S. ambassador to the Organization of
American States. |
The Organization of American States (OAS), which played a crucial role in the creation of the Sandinista regime in Nicaragua, is now charged with partial responsibility for verification of the cease-fire between the government and the resistance (known as Contras), pointing up its continuing importance in hemispheric politics.
The OAS, now in its 40th year, is the oldest body of its kind. Its predecessor, the Pan American Union, provided the structural and organizational model for the United Nations, and the regional body has some of the same strengths and weaknesses as the global organization.
Nevertheless, the OAS is different from the United Nations, particularly in its political orientation. A striking example of this coloration came in 1985, when the UN General Assembly condemned the United States for its economic sanctions against Nicaragua by a vote of 94-5. Exactly one week later, virtually the same resolution was raised in the General Assembly of the OAS meeting in Cartagena, Colombia. The Sandinistas had sent their international diplomatic star, the late Nora Astorga, to represent Nicaragua on that occasion. To their utter amazement, the resolution was so badly defeated in committee that it was never brought to the floor for a final vote.
The Sandinistas do not give up easily. They have submitted the resolution at the OAS General Assembly for the past three years, but each time it has failed to win approval. Meanwhile, the same resolution continues to be regularly passed by the UN General Assembly.
This has not been the only
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