Untitled Document
State Department
unclassified briefing memorandum, dated February 11, 2003, from Arthur E. Dewey
to Secretary Powell
SUBJECT: Your
Meeting with the President regarding the Mexico City Policy and U.S. funding
for AIDS assistance
The White House
will discuss plans to extend the Mexico City Policy to cover all U.S. funding
through DOS and USAID for "reproductive health" programs. The first
option would be to continue the status quo and have the Mexico City policy (MCP)
apply only to USAID "family planning" programs. The second option,
which we expect the White House to favor, would expand in some manner the Mexico
City policy.
The expanded Mexico
City policy would cover funds expended for HIV/AIDS assistance and family planning
assistance as well as, presumably, other components of reproductive health assistance,
such as those aimed at preventing and treating sexually transmitted diseases
(STDs) and gender-based violence, maternal mortality and morbidity, and providing
reproductive health education. All foreign NGOs would be required to certify,
as a condition of receiving U.S. funds for reproductive health, that they neither
perform nor promote abortion as a method of family planning. There would be
two exceptions:
- Foreign NGOs
that either perform or counsel abortions that also implement discrete HIV/AIDS
projects would be eligible for funding these projects.
- Foreign NGOs
not otherwise compliant that merely serve as a pass-through to a sub-contractor
that is compliant with the Mexico City Policy would be eligible.
Hill conservatives
will not support a policy that provides carve out for HIV/AIDS projects performed
by foreign NGOs who also perform abortions or support abortion policies. Moderate
and liberal members of both sides of the aisle will support such a carve out.
A final decision on this issue before conclusion of the FY 2003 Omnibus Appropriations
Bill (H.J. Res. 2) could cause a delay in final passage. Similarly, we would
also expect such an initiative to generate great controversy and likely cause
a major delay in consideration of the FY 2004 Foreign Operations Bill.
Recommendation
- That you accept
the expansion of Mexico City to all reproductive health programs funded by
DOS and USAID.
- That you accept
the foreign NGO certifications required by the Mexico City Policy, including
the two exceptions to certification.
- While no expansion
of Mexico City requirement is currently envisaged for International Organizations
working with HIV/AIDS or reproductive health (such as UN organizations and
the Global Fund for AIDS), you should oppose any attempt to make such an extension.
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