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Strongman-ism in the House of the Americas
ALMAGRO... the guide is key in times of uncertainty and when there is aslowdown in economic activity but social demands are still on the rise
Columns
Sir Ronald Sanders  
October 13, 2018

Strongman-ism in the House of the Americas

In one year and eight months’ time the present holder of the Office of Secretary General of the Organisation of American States (OAS) will end his current term. Judging from his recent utterances, Luis Almagro might not offer himself for a second term — although he has not said so specifically.

In his most recent statement, on October 9, he talked about his task “in the one year and eight months I have left as SG”, and on September 16, in remarks published on the OAS website, he made it clear that he is not “so attached to the position of secretary general”.

It could be, of course, that Almagro’s remarks are setting the stage for influential members of the 34-nation body to urge him to remain and, thus, strengthen the approach he has brought to the job. That approach is one of complete separation and little or no accountability to the Permanent Council which comprises representatives of the member states.

In Secretary General Almagro’s interpretation, “The OAS is many different things.” He sees one “vested interest” as “the Permanent Council, which houses the permanent representatives of the 35 member states”. Another vested interest is “the General Secretariat, which I have the privilege of leading”.

This idea of two separate houses in the OAS, one of which he is sole master, undoubtedly accounts for Almagro’s individualistic, almost headstrong conduct as secretary general with little regard to any need for direction — or even agreement — by the Permanent Council.

Yet the OAS Charter is clear about the powers of the Permanent Council and of the General Secretariat to carry out duties assigned to it by the council. The charter states that:

“The Permanent Council shall watch over the observance of the standards governing the operation of the General Secretariat and, when the General Assembly is not in session, adopt provisions of a regulatory nature that enable the General Secretariat to carry out its administrative functions.”

It also states that: “The General Secretariat shall carry out the duties entrusted to it by the General Assembly, the Meeting of Consultation of Ministers of Foreign Affairs, or the councils.”

It is inconceivable that the government representatives who drafted the Charter envisaged a secretary general who operates independently of the Permanent Council, or who sees the organisation as consisting of separate compartments with vested interests, leaving the secretary general to formulate and execute policy separately and without accountability to the governments of the member states. Yet, this is precisely the current condition of the OAS.

Almagro is a man of strong convictions, and I have no doubt that in his mind his actions are justified and justifiable. In the context of the countries of Latin America (not the Caribbean), Almagro regards himself as a medieval white knight charging on a robust steed, lance in hand, to cut down all evil as he perceives it. It is this hubris that drives him and is captured in his own statement: “I will continue, if necessary, for years, as SG or not, and if necessary alone. If you insist on putting me into a pigeonhole, let it be the stubborn one who sided with the principles of democracy and human rights.”

In portraying himself in this way, of course, Almagro not only exposes that he has a one-dimensional view of his job, he also suggests that he alone is siding “with the principles of democracy and human rights”, ignoring that there are many member states of the OAS — the majority in the Caribbean — who have consistently upheld democracy and human rights and jealously safeguard them.

It is this hubris that may have caused him to feel that he has no reason, as secretary general, to take counsel from, to consult with, or seek the collaboration of the Permanent Council of the OAS for the public positions he takes and for the statements he makes.

In his zest “never to fit into a conventional diplomacy or the traditional international relations community pigeonhole”, as he puts it, he overlooks the essential reality that his role as secretary general is not to be the maverick he describes, but to be an essential cog in the wheel of an inter-governmental organisation that must be an honest broker in disputes; a healer of wounds; and a worker for sustainable peace and progress. The latter only comes with careful and steady diplomatic work. A torch that is lit brings light, but, used improperly, it also brings destruction.

None of this is to say that the secretary general should remain silent in the face of crass violations of the charters of the OAS, particularly the Inter-American Democratic Charter; nor does it suggest that the secretary general ought not to propose action that should be taken to safeguard democracy and human rights. However, the actions and statements of the secretary general should not be so unchecked and unbounded that it disqualifies the organisation from carrying out any role in the very situations about which he is concerned.

However, that is precisely what Almagro has succeeded in doing. The sense of balance, so important to the credibility and functioning of an inter-governmental organisation in promoting solutions, has been plucked from the hands of the OAS. In this, regrettably, he has had tacit support from a few countries whose present objectives it suits. But these countries may yet come to regret the precedent they’ve set.

Almagro is perfectly right in his latest statement, made at St Antony’s College, Oxford, on October 9, that: “Democracy does not happen by default. Human rights either. It requires hard work.”

That “hard work” is the business of diplomacy and of knitting together a quilt of consensus for international action that never closes the door to encouraging dialogue, even as it makes clear that graduated measures will be taken to express displeasure and to cause undemocratic practices to be reversed and human rights violations to end in any country in which they occur.

That is the hard work of governments that are involved together and resolved together. The secretary general’s role is to help build such inter-governmental action, and not to centre it in personal terms. And, therein, is the quandary that the OAS faces.

“Strong-manism” abounds on many sides.

Sir Ronald Sanders is Antigua and Barbuda’s ambassador to the US, Organization of American States, and high commissioner to Canada; an international affairs consultant; as well as senior fellow at Massey College, University of Toronto, and the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London. He previously served as ambassador to the European Union and the World Trade Organization and as high commissioner to the UK. The views expressed are his own. For responses and to view previous commentaries: www.sirronaldsanders.com.

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