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- NATION, Page 28Treaty? What Treaty?
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- The 1961 Vienna Convention is unambiguous: it says all
- diplomatic missions, residences, vehicles and personnel are
- "inviolable" and cannot be interfered with. Yet American forces
- in Panama persist in violating the treaty's strictures. In
- addition to mounting an armed surveillance of the Peruvian
- Ambassador's residence, soldiers demanded to search a car
- containing Cuba's Ambassador to Panama as he left the Cuban
- embassy last week. After a 90-minute shouting match, the G.I.s
- settled for a cursory look inside the vehicle before letting the
- ambassador drive away.
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- Such incidents "put in jeopardy American diplomatic
- missions all over the world," complained Perry Shankle, a
- former president of the American Foreign Service Association.
- Meanwhile, the U.S. vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution
- censuring Washington for allowing soldiers to sift through the
- Nicaraguan Ambassador's residence in Panama City on Dec. 29. The
- U.S.'s chief U.N. delegate, Thomas Pickering, called the action
- an "honest mistake." Perhaps. But one might think that the U.S.,
- whose embassies in Tehran and Islamabad have been sacked, would
- take more care to avoid such a mistake.
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