81. Memorandum From the Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs (Wilcox) to the Secretary of State1

SUBJECT

  • U.S. Policy with respect to Soviet Bloc Candidates in the UN

Discussion

In recent years, we have normally followed the practice of abstaining or voting against Soviet-bloc candidates, depending on the circumstances in each case. This has not usually prevented their election, the notable exception being the Security Council, and it has created certain problems for us in the pursuit of other objectives. (See attached memorandum.) Our unwillingness to vote for the USSR has made it increasingly difficult for us to argue convincingly that other members should vote for China’s re-election to various UN bodies on which the permanent members of the Security Council are traditionally represented. Moreover, it is to our advantage to have the USSR represented on certain UN bodies, for example, the Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions and the Committee on Contributions. The Soviet-bloc candidate is sometimes, because of a particular circumstance, a desirable addition to a technical body from the standpoint of US interests in that body. Where Soviet-bloc candidacies are uncontested and their success a foregone conclusion our refusal to vote for them under any circumstances appears unduly rigid in the eyes of other governments, particularly as the USSR and its satellites do not follow a comparable practice with respect to the US. In the case of Poland, our refusal to vote for Soviet-bloc candidates appears inconsistent with our current policy toward that country. Such problems as these have for some time cast doubt on the wisdom of our continuing to follow a hard and fast line in this matter, and we twice departed from our usual practice in 1956 by supporting a Czech for Vice-President of the IAEA Conference and Poland for election to the Economic and Social Council.

At the forthcoming General Assembly, the USSR will again be a candidate for one of the vice-presidencies (as will the US, UK, [Page 228] France, and China) and presumably for re-election to the Advisory Committee and the Committee on Contributions. There will as usual be a Soviet-bloc candidate for one of the seven main committee chairmanships. Czechoslovakia is a candidate for election to succeed the Philippines on the Security Council, and Judge Winiarski of Poland is a candidate for re-election to the International Court of Justice. If the usual pattern prevails, all these candidacies will be successful except that of Czechoslovakia for the SC, where Japan is the rival candidate.

Recommendations

1.
That we vote for the USSR when it is a candidate for election to a body on which the five permanent members of the Security Council are traditionally represented or to a body where certain US interests are served by having the USSR represented, subject to the possibility of casting a negative vote, a blank ballot, or abstaining if it is decided that circumstances make one of these alternatives desirable in a given case;
2.
that we vote for Poland where there is no rival candidate we prefer unless we have special reasons for opposing the specific Polish candidacy; and
3.
that we abstain or vote negatively on other Soviet-bloc candidates unless there are compelling reasons for an affirmative vote, in which cases, the Department would decide on an individual basis whether an exception to the general practice should be made.

[Attachment]

2

QUESTIONS RAISED BY US VOTING POLICY ON SOVIET-BLOC CANDIDATES

FE has from the beginning (September 1953) expressed reservation about the policy of not voting for the USSR in cases where the five permanent members of the Security Council are traditionally represented because of the bearing of this policy on our efforts to maintain unimpaired the Republic of China’s standing within the UN as one of the Big Five. In seeking the re-election of China to UN bodies, probably our most effective argument with UN members who are unsympathetic toward the Republic of China is that the five permanent members of the SC are traditionally represented. This argument becomes increasingly difficult to use when it is [Page 229] generally known that we do not vote for the USSR in the same circumstances.

The desirability of continuing this policy has also been questioned in the case of the UN Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions, the UN Committee on Contributions, and the Narcotics Commission, on the ground that some of our objectives in these particular bodies are served by Soviet or Soviet-bloc participation.

The U.S. Delegation to the Economic and Social Council in 1956 asked for reconsideration of this policy on the ground that it interfered seriously with the Delegation’s ability to negotiate acceptable “slates” for the functional commissions and to secure the reelection of China to these bodies.

This question also arose in 1956 in connection with our decision to make exceptions and to support a Czech for Vice-President of the IAEA Conference, as part of a general agreement on the officers of the Conference, and to support Poland for election to ECOSOC, in view of changing Polish-Soviet relations.

It was raised again in 1957 before the spring session of the Economic and Social Council. While EUR did not consider the international circumstances at that time propitious for any change in policy, it was agreed that this question should be re-examined again before the 12th General Assembly.

Our policy of not voting for the USSR or Soviet-bloc candidates has not in most cases, the notable exception being the Security Council, prevented their being elected. Most UN Members believe that each geographic area in the UN should be represented on its various bodies and that the election of a country does not connote approval or disapproval of its Government or its conduct.

With respect to the Security Council, US statements during the recent GA debate on enlargement of the Council commit us to accept the allocation of a seat to Eastern Europe if agreement is reached on a suitable enlargement. The US representative said in the debate that with the proposed increase in the number of non-permanent seats, “it would be possible to provide representation to Eastern Europe without denying equitable representation to other geographic areas.” Within this context, he said further that the US “would support an appropriate allocation of all non-permanent seats in an expanded council.” The USSR had made clear that it would not support any increase unless provision were made inter alia for representation of Eastern Europe, which, in informal discussions, it defined as including Yugoslavia but not Greece, Turkey or Finland.

While agreement on the allocation of a seat to Eastern Europe would not commit us necessarily to support the Soviet candidate for this seat in an enlarged Council, it would certainly seem to preclude [Page 230] our supporting a candidate from outside the area for this seat. We could of course abstain or vote negatively on an unpalatable candidate from the area, but active efforts to defeat this candidacy would not only almost certainly prove futile but would undoubtedly be regarded generally as contrary to the agreement allocating a seat to Eastern Europe, except in the unlikely event of rival candidacies from within the area.

Though our practice of abstaining or voting negatively on all Soviet-bloc candidates is generally known within the UN, most of the votes concerned are by secret ballot and therefore not likely, where the election of the Soviet-bloc candidate is assured and there is no rival candidate, to attract attention or receive widespread publicity. Moreover, many of the posts involved are of such character that there is little public interest in them.

  1. Source: Department of State, Central Files, 310.361/9-1257. Confidential. The date is from a copy of this memorandum ibid., IO Files: Lot 60 D 113, 12th GA Session. Both copies contain spaces for the concurrences of the four geographic bureaus but on neither text are the concurrences indicated. The source text contains the handwritten notation “approved by Secty 9/12/57.”
  2. No drafting information is given on the source text.