REG 33 MEMORANDUM FROM ROBERT PASTOR OF THE NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL STAFF TO THE PRESIDENT'S ASSISTANT FOR NATIONAL SECURITY AFFAIRS (BRZEZINSKI) - 1978/10/04
Document Type:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
06592963
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
U
Document Page Count:
3
Document Creation Date:
April 3, 2019
Document Release Date:
April 12, 2019
Sequence Number:
Case Number:
Publication Date:
October 4, 1978
File:
Attachment | Size |
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REG 33 MEMORANDUM FROM RO[15516137].pdf | 194.59 KB |
Body:
3.5(c)
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iefr/6 33/4
Memorandum From Robert Pastor of the National Security Council Staff to the President's
Assistant for National Security Affairs (Brzezinski)
Washington, October 4, 1978
1 Source: Carter Library, National Security Affairs, Brzezinski Material, Country File, Box 45,
Latin America, 8-12/78. Confidential. A copy was sent to Mathews. Inderfurth and Denend
initialed the memorandum.
2 Brzezinski highlighted this sentence in the left-hand margin and wrote, "good." Presumably a
reference to Document XX \To account of a staff meeting was found.
3 Not further identified. A response from Brzezinski was not found. [In an October 6
44
understanding in a general sense of what we want to accomplish with our human rights
Approved for Release: 2018/10/02 C06592963
3.5(c)
MEMORANDUM
Approved for Release: 2018/10/02 C06592963
NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL
October 4, 1978
MEMORANDUM FOR: ZBIGNIEW R EZINSKI
FROM: ROBERT PAS OR (K
SUBJECT: Impact of U.S. Human Rights
Policy in Latin America
6 331/
After our discussion at the staff meeting last week, I tasked
the CIA to do an overall assessment of the impact of our human
rights policy in the Southern ConeN, No one questian-g-EFEe-----Vr-
sensitivities of certain government and military officials have
been affected by the human rights policy; the important ques-
tions are whether our long-term relationships will be strengthened
or harmed by the policy and whether the policy has led, and
will continue to lead, to improvements in the human rights
situations in those countries and in others.
While the human rights policy may be a good instrument of
ideological diplomacy in other areas, I don't think that
ought to be one of our purposes in this hemisphere. I was
working under the impression that the goals of our human
rights policy include: to contribute to a climate in which
human rights are increasingly respected and the costs of re-
pression have increased as well; to identify the United States
with a universal cause, which you have described as "the
increasing self-assertiveness of man on behalf of his own
human rights"; and to project the U.S. as an idealistic)moral
nation actively working toward a better world.
If our overall human rights policy is to be effective and
credible, one aspect needs to be that we have warmer and
closer relationships with those governments which share our
ideals and cooler and more distant relationships with those
governments that don't. This necessarily means that our
relations with the military governments in the Southern
Cone should range from being cordial and correct--as in the
case of Brazil, where we have a wide range of consultative
mechanisms--to being distant, as in the case of Chile, where
the Letelier investigation currently prevents us from taking
any other position.
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CONFIDENTIAL
pc6 33
Another element of our policy should be a willingness, at
appropriate times, to back up our rhetoric with actions,
many of which are mandated by law anyway. At the same time,
we need to continue to distinguish between the three different
"baskets" of human rights in implementing our policy. For
example, with respect to Argentina, we have informed the
government that our concern with human rights there is
focused on basket #1 (integrity of the person), and we
recognize and accept the government's assessment that demo-
cratization is a long-term goal.
I am sending you a couple of articles that were in the
New York Times in the past year, which deal with this
subject. I would be very interested in your comments on
these articles and on my perception of our human rights
policy.
cc: Jessica Mathews
CONFIDENTIAL
Approved for Release: 2018/10/02 C06592963