date:2009-03-26T19:00:00
source:Embassy Wellington
origin:09WELLINGTON86
destination:VZCZCXRO1157 PP RUEHSR DE RUEHWL #0086/01 0851900 ZNY
CCCCC ZZH P 261900Z MAR 09 FM AMEMBASSY WELLINGTON TO RUEHC/SECSTATE
WASHDC PRIORITY 5816 INFO RUEHXP/ALL NATO POST COLLECTIVE
RUEHBY/AMEMBASSY CANBERRA 5481 RUEHBUL/AMEMBASSY KABUL 0077
RUEHGP/AMEMBASSY SINGAPORE 0538 RUEHSV/AMEMBASSY SUVA 0855
RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO 0731 RUEHBN/AMCONSUL MELBOURNE 0134
RUEHDN/AMCONSUL SYDNEY 0820 RHHMUNA/CDR USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RHHMHBA/COMPACFLT PEARL HARBOR HI RUEKJCS/OSD WASHINGTON DC

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 WELLINGTON 000086

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/26/2019
TAGS: MARR, PREL, AF, NZ
SUBJECT: IS NEW ZEALAND OPEN OR OPPOSED TO ADDED AFGHAN
DEPLOYMENTS?

Classified By: Embassy Wellington Charge David J. Keegan. Reasons E.O.
12958, 1.4 (b) and (d)

1. (U) March 25, New Zealand Foreign Minister Murray McCully
gave his first public speech on the bilateral relationship
with the United States (full text emailed to EAP/ANP). He
started with his overall assessment:
"Relations are, in my judgment, in better shape than we have
seen in 25 years. That has been the result of careful and
constructive effort on both sides over recent years."

Reviewing parallel efforts to address economic recovery and
free trade, he added: "In time, it is my hope that the new
administration will reaffirm the US commitment to the
(TransPacific Partnership) agreement."

2. (U) He then turned to Afghanistan. He noted New Zealand's
decision to extend current deployment of a PRT to Bamyan
Province to September 2010. Regarding additional deployments,
McCully said:

"The new (U.S.) Administration has made no secret of the fact
that they would like others to do more. And I expect other
contributors to the International Security Assistance Force
will also want to discuss the way ahead with us. While, of
course, we will give consideration to the views expressed by
our friends, it is important to note that New Zealand has
already made, continues to make, and has just extended, what
in our terms is a very significant commitment to the
Afghanistan effort. . . So we will keep the situation under
review and monitor developments carefully as we move forward"

3. (C) Immediately before presenting his speech, McCully told
me that his statement on Afghanistan had been crafted to be
"open." No decision has been made. None is being signaled.
Prime Minister John Key has been thoroughly briefed on this
issue and discussed it with McCully several times. The
purpose of the statement, McCully insisted, is to give the PM
"head room" to enable him to make a decision either to commit
additional resources or not.

4. (C) As McCully heads to Washington for meetings April 6
and 7, he said that New Zealand fully understands it will be
asked by the U.S. to make an additional commitment. Before
deciding on its response, New Zealand will wait to see what
commitments NATO countries agree to make. He made it clear
that New Zealand believes the first responsibility for making
additional commitments lies with them. At the same time, New
Zealand will be completing its own defense and Afghanistan
review, and Foreign Affairs and Defence will prepare a
recommendation to the PM.

5. (C) After the speech, David Taylor, Director of the
Americas Division at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
Trade (MFAT) repeated to me that the statement on Afghanistan
was designed to give the Government "head room." That meant
not only keeping the Government's deployment options open, he
said. It also meant allowing for an orderly withdrawal from
Afghanistan if the mission there fails, a possibility he
asserted everyone acknowledged.

6. (C) While McCully insisted that no decision was being
signaled, a banker who attended the speech and a noted
academic who read the speech have both told me that they
clearly understood McCully to be saying that New Zealand
would commit no more troops to Afghanistan. The senior
political writer at the Dominion Post, Tracy Watkins,
headlined the same conclusion.

7. (C) Comment. Which should we believe - McCully's
assurances or commentators' negative conclusions? The key may
lie in a recent Australian opinion poll. In another aside,
McCully asked if I had noted a poll published that morning
showing that two-thirds of Australians oppose additional
deployments to Afghanistan. If that same mood begins to
appear here, it could undermine the interest of the avowedly
pro-American National Government in New Zealand to make
additional commitments to Afghanistan. If we want to
encourage a New Zealand deployment, we will need to find
public diplomacy opportunities to explain the choices in
Afghanistan to New Zealand media. We will also need to work
directly to encourage PM Key and FM McCully.
KEEGAN