News

ACCESSION NUMBER:290766

FILE ID:LEF321

DATE:06/23/93

TITLE:MENEM TO MEET CLINTON JUNE 29 (06/23/93)

TEXT:*93062321.LEF

1LEF321   06/23/93



MENEM TO MEET CLINTON JUNE 29

(Visit is first by Latam president) jlr (540)

(With Lsi310 of 06/23/93)

By Jaime Lopez Recalde

USIA Special Correspondent

BUENOS AIRES -- Argentine President Carlos Menem will meet President Clinton

in the White House June 29, the first Latin American chief of state to do

so since Clinton took office in January.



The meeting with Clinton will be part of Menem's three-day official working

visit to Washington.  He will be accompanied by four cabinet ministers and

a delegation that includes military leaders, diplomats, senators,

congressmen, and senior officials of his administration.



Although no official agenda has been announced for the presidents' meeting,

news reports and diplomats here anticipate they will discuss bilateral,

hemispheric, and multilateral issues.



The Foreign Ministry said the Menem-Clinton meeting would last from 11:25

a.m. to 2 p.m. and include a luncheon and joint news conference.



Argentine Economics Minister Domingo Cavallo, Foreign Minister Guido Di

Tella, Health and Social Services Alberto Mazza, and Defense Minister Oscar

Camilion will hold meetings with their American counterparts.



The meetings are sure to include issues of mutual U.S.-Argentine interest,

such as support for democratic governments, human rights, and the

maintenance of world peace.



Menem goes to Washington on his second official visit since taking office in

July 1989.  He has an impressive record of achievements behind him.  When

he assumed office, Argentina's monthly inflation rate stood at three

digits, a situation caused by, among other things, excessive public

spending on the deficit and the state-owned industries.



With Cavallo's designation as economics minister, the new administration

imposed a strict economic plan, known as convertibility, that fixed the

value of the dollar at one peso, a parity that has continued for more than

two years.



Privatization of many state-owned companies and industries, including the

national airline, Aerolineas Argentinas, and the telephone, gas and

electricity, railroad, and steel companies, was initiated at the same time.



Even more significantly, the Menem administration introduced changes in

foreign policy that took Argentina away from its traditional nationalism

and membership in the Non-Aligned Movement and toward a major association

with Western countries.  The move included re-establishment of diplomatic

relations with Britain, with whom Argentina went to war over the Falkland

Islands in 1982.



Since then, the Argentine military has taken part in United Nations

peacekeeping operations in the former Yugoslavia, Angola and other places,

and  participated in the Persian Gulf blockade imposed to reverse Iraq's

1990 invasion of Kuwait.



Menem has also paid close attention to the crisis in Haiti, where a former

Argentine foreign minister, Dante Caputo, serves a special envoy of both

the United Nations and Organization of American States.  On Cuba, the

Argentine leader has called for a process of democratization on repeated

occasions.



On bilateral and international issues, Menem recently sent the Senate a

proposal for a patent law intended to guarantee intellectual property and

1rdered the dismantling of the Condor II missile program.



Argentine and U.S. officials have also announced the possibility of

Argentina and the United States signing an accord similar to the North

American Free Trade Agreement being negotiated by Canada, Mexico and the

United States.



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