id: 144905 date: 3/7/2008 20:06 refid: 08SANTIAGO221 origin: Embassy Santiago classification: CONFIDENTIAL destination: 07SANTIAGO1983|07SANTIAGO417|07SANTIAGO458|08SANTIAGO194|08SANTIAGO207|08SANTIAGO70 header: VZCZCXYZ0000 PP RUEHWEB DE RUEHSG #0221/01 0672006 ZNY CCCCC ZZH P 072006Z MAR 08 FM AMEMBASSY SANTIAGO TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 2880 INFO RUEHAC/AMEMBASSY ASUNCION PRIORITY 3366 RUEHBO/AMEMBASSY BOGOTA PRIORITY 1979 RUEHBR/AMEMBASSY BRASILIA PRIORITY 0222 RUEHBU/AMEMBASSY BUENOS AIRES PRIORITY 0843 RUEHCV/AMEMBASSY CARACAS PRIORITY 1686 RUEHLP/AMEMBASSY LA PAZ MAR 5726 RUEHPE/AMEMBASSY LIMA PRIORITY 5491 RUEHMN/AMEMBASSY MONTEVIDEO PRIORITY 3953 RUEHQT/AMEMBASSY QUITO PRIORITY 1824 RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHDC PRIORITY ----------------- header ends ---------------- C O N F I D E N T I A L SANTIAGO 000221 SIPDIS SIPDIS E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/07/2018 TAGS: PGOV, PREL, PINR, ECON, ECPS, CO, VE, EC, CI SUBJECT: CHILE'S SPOKESMAN PREFERS URIBE TO CHAVEZ REF: A. SANTIAGO 194 B. SANTIAGO 207 C. 07 SANTIAGO 1983 D. SANTIAGO 70 E. 07 SANTIAGO 417 F. 07 SANTIAGO 458 Classified By: Paul Simons for reasons 1.4 (B&D) 1. (C) Summary. Government spokesman Vidal told the Ambassador the GOC considered Uribe an ally, and an alternative to Chavez in South America. This friendship made the current Colombia/Ecuador conflict "complicated" for the GOC given Chile's historical respect for the inviolability of settled borders. He also commented on Chilean internal politics, expressing confidence in the ruling coalition Concertacion's chances of winning 2008 municipal elections. Vidal was critical of Chile's "right-wing" press as unfair to the GOC. The Ambassador advocated for the U.S. ATSC digital television standard. End summary. 2. (U) The Ambassador met with Secretary General of the Government Francisco Vidal on March 6. Vidal, who is a Minister and the Administration's spokesperson, was appointed in December after the previous Secretary General, Ricardo Lagos Weber, stepped down to run for the Senate. Vidal held the same position under former President Ricardo Lagos. The Ambassador was accompanied by E/POL Counselor and E/POLoff. GOC Perspective on Colombia and Ecuador --------------------------------------- 3. (C) Vidal described the tension between Colombia and Ecuador over Colombia's incursion into Ecuadorian territory (refs A & B) as "complicated for the Chilean government." Chile, he said, in a clear allusion to its ongoing dispute with Peru, obviously considers borders and sovereignty issues sacrosanct. However, the GOC's friendship with Uribe is also important. Uribe, he said, is an ally in providing a non-"Chavista" model for South America. As spokesman, Vidal had been asked the GOC's opinion on Chavez's role in this conflict, but explained he refused to answer to avoid escalating the tension. The GOC might, however, speak out more on Chavez's "interference" in the months ahead when the situation is more calm. (Note: Foreign Minister Foxley already issued a veiled criticism of Chavez's interference in a statement earlier this week - ref B. End note). The Ambassador acknowledged Chile's helpful role in working with Brazil and others to de-escalate tensions. He and Vidal agreed that the Organization of American States had been helpful in defusing the crisis. ATSC Digital Television (DTV) Standard -------------------------------------- 4. (SBU) As part of the Embassy's full-court press to all relevant decision-makers (ref C & D), the Ambassador advocated on behalf of the ATSC standard for DTV, and gave Vidal a one-page fact sheet on the advantages of ATSC. The Ambassador noted the principal ATSC advantages of low cost and reliability, and its rigorous field-testing in the demanding U.S. market. He encouraged the GOC to select a standard carefully so as to avoid another public relations crisis like Transantiago (Santiago's mass-transit system; ref E & F), eliciting a laugh from Vidal. Vidal offered no substantive response on the merits of the ATSC system. Internal Chilean Politics -------------------------- 5. (SBU) Joking with the Ambassador about the fact that the Ambassador had already met two Ministers of Interior during his three months in Chile, Vidal predicted Bachelet's third cabinet would stay through Bachelet's term. He expressed confidence that the ruling center-left Concertacion coalition would win the municipal elections in October 2008, in part due to support from the Communist Party, but was less confident about the December 2009 presidential election. Vidal noted that the center-right Alianza coalition's only hope of Presidential victory was in the first round -- if no candidate gained a first round victory, the expected shift of Communist party votes to the Concertacion candidate in the second round would probably ensure a Concertacion victory. 6. (C) Vidal lamented the bitterness of the current political debate in Chile and the lack of any concrete policy proposals from the opposition. Alianza was "exaggerating" problems of corruption and Transantiago, and that the press, "owned by the right," would never print a pro-government story. He pointed out that state-owned newspaper La Nacion has a Sunday readership of around 35,000 compared to El Mercurio's almost 350,000 and La Tercera's 300,000. (Note: Actual figures are La Nacion: 17,000; El Mercurio: 263,000; and La Tercera: 222,000. End note). Despite Chile being ranked equal to the U.S. in corruption levels by Transparency International, and Transantiago is improving, Concertacion is portrayed by the press as ineffective and corrupt. 7. (SBU) Vidal expressed some concern about the world economy, but said Chile's reserves (thanks to GOC saving and high copper prices) would protect it from a crisis. Comment ------- 8. (C) Vidal, who is close to both Bachelet and former President Lagos, was brought in to help increase order within the GOC and improve coordination with the Concertacion political parties. He is a lightning rod for the opposition, who believe he epitomizes the arrogance and "corruption" bred under 18 years of Concertacion governments. A master politician who is smooth as silk, Vidal was very positive about the GOC's relationship with the USG and expressed views very similar to our own on the conflict between Ecuador and Colombian and his concern over Chavez's interference. His views reflect a growing consensus within the GOC in support of free trade and increasing concern about Chavez's influence in the region. Biography of Vidal ------------------- 9. (U) Vidal (54) replaced Ricardo Lagos Weber as Secretary General of Government on December 6, 2007. He is a third-time minister, previously serving under former President Lagos as Minister of Interior (succeeding Insulza when the latter resigned to run for OAS SecGen) and Secretary General of Government (2001-2005). As Minister of Interior, he oversaw security and intelligence services. More importantly, he directed President Lagos, three-minister "political committee" (Interior, Secretary General of the Presidency, and Minister/Spokesman) to shepherd Lagos, legislative agenda. President Bachelet,s ability to restore order to La Moneda will depend in part on Vidal,s willingness to defer to current Interior Minister Perez Yoma, as well as his ability to cooperate with Perez Yoma and Minister Viera-Gallo -- a political heavyweight in his own right and no shrinking violet. 10. (C) He is a long-time political associate of former President Lagos and the two remain very close. He is also close to President Bachelet, who appointed him as director of TVN (National Television) shortly after she assumed the presidency. Vidal is respected within the Concertacion coalition and is described by Concertacion contacts as ambitious, politically shrewd and loyal. He was accessible to the Embassy and generally supportive of bilateral security and intelligence cooperation during his brief stint as Interior Minister at the end of the Lagos presidency. 11. (U) His academic and NGO positions include Dean of the Economic Science and Administrative faculty of Universidad Central (1998-1999) and Executive Director of Chile 21 Foundation (1994-2000), a center-left think tank that advises Socialist Party and Party for the Democracy government officials, political figures and members of Congress. 12. (U) A member of the PPD, Vidal served as the party's vice-president from 1996 to 2000. Vidal is a professor of history and geography with a master's degree in history from the University of Chile. Vidal does not speak English. SIMONS =======================CABLE ENDS============================