Ismael Moreno Pino
Ismael Moreno Pino (15 February 1927 – 15 August 2013) was a Mexican lawyer, senior diplomat and author who served as Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and Ambassador of Mexico.[1]
Ismael Moreno Pino | |
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Ambassador of Mexico | |
In office 1964–2013 | |
President | Gustavo Díaz Ordaz Luis Echeverría José López Portillo Miguel de la Madrid Carlos Salinas de Gortari Vicente Fox Felipe Calderón Hinojosa Enrique Peña Nieto |
Personal details | |
Born | Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico | 15 February 1927
Died | 15 August 2013 86) Mexico City | (aged
Nationality | Mexican |
Political party | Independent |
Spouse(s) | Guadalupe Mercedes González de Hermosillo y Quirós |
Children | Patricia Ismael María de Lourdes |
Parent(s) | Aida Pino Cámara (mother) Ramón Moreno Sánchez (father) |
Relatives | María Cámara Vales (grandmother) José María Pino Suárez (grandfather) Alejandro Lecanda Moreno (grandson) |
Education | American School Foundation |
Alma mater | Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (LL.B) Georgetown University (MSFS) |
Profession | Lawyer Statesman Diplomat Author |
Born in Mérida, Yucatán into a socially prominent family that had had a distinguished participation in Liberal politics during most of the 19th century and early 20th century, his grandparents were María Cámara Vales, recipient of the 1969 Belisario Domínguez Medal of Honor, and José María Pino Suárez, the lawyer and statesman who served as Vice President of Mexico between 1911 and his assassination in 1913, during the early years of the Mexican Revolution.
Educated at the American School Foundation in Mexico City, he received his law degree from Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Afterwards, he continued his studies at the Edmund A Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., earning a Bachelor of Science (BS) and a Master of Science (MS) in Foreign Service.
A career diplomat, he was appointed to the rank of Ambassador in 1964, representing his country before various international organizations and countries such as: Germany, The Kingdom of the Netherlands, Chile, Peru, the United Nations in New York, the Organization of American States in Washington, D.C., and the European Offices of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland. It is worth noting that during the seven years that he held office as Ambassador to Chile, he witnessed the rise of Salvador Allende and the lead up to the 1973 Chilean coup d'état. Between 1990 and 1992, he served as a foreign policy adviser to President Carlos Salinas de Gortari. He remained politically independent throughout his career, refusing to ever join any political party.
In the Foreign Office, he served as Assistant Secretary of State for International Organizations (1961–1964) and was Under-Secretary of State for Multilateral Affairs (1964–1965). During his career, he played an important role in the disarmament conference which culminated in the signing of the Treaty of Tlatelolco (1969) which prohibited nuclear weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean, serving as a delegate in the OPANAL conferences and collaborating closely with Alfonso García Robles, who in 1982 won the Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts.
In 1982, President José López Portillo appointed him to the lifetime rank of Eminent Ambassador of Mexico (embajador eminente), a special honour reserved by law for a maximum of ten diplomats who are considered to have rendered a particularly distinguished contribution to Mexico's Foreign Policy. Prior to retiring in 1992, he had the distinction of ranking as the most senior ambassador in Mexico's Foreign Service. The author of several treatises on international relations and international law, he is nowadays particularly remembered for his authorship of Diplomacy (1998) which has educated generations of diplomats in Latin America.
Family
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He was born in a house in the Paseo de Montejo in Merida, Yucatan, on 15 February 1927, the only son of Ramón Moreno Sánchez and Aida Pino Cámara. His maternal grandparents were María Cámara Vales, recipient of the Belisario Domínguez Medal, and José María Pino Suárez a lawyer and statesman who served as governor, cabinet secretary and Vice President of Mexico. Through his mother, Moreno Pino is a descendant of the Cámara family, a distinguished patrician family.[2]
Among his great-uncles are Nicolás Cámara Vales, who was a former Governor of Yucatán and Alfredo Cámara Vales, who was a former Governor of Quintana Roo. Likewise, his great-uncle was Agustín Vales Castillo, industrialist, banker, and political leader of Mérida during the henequen boom.[3]
Moreno Pino is also a descendant of Joaquín Baranda, a long-serving cabinet minister (1882–1901), who was Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Justice and Education. He also descends from Joaquín Casasús, a lawyer, banker and economist who, in addition to being the richest man in Mexico in the early 20th century, was president of the Mexican Academy of the Language and served as the Mexican Ambassador to the United States in the early 20th century.
Among his most remote ancestors, is Pedro Sainz de Baranda y Gorriti, who served as Mayor of Madrid during the Napoleonic invasion of Spain and was responsible for organizing the city's defenses. Likewise, he is a descendant of Pedro Sáinz de Baranda y Borreiro,[4] a Spanish industrialist, politician and naval officer who, having fought in the Battle of Trafalgar and the Siege of San Juan de Ulúa, is widely credited as the founder of the Mexican Navy; he is also believed to have introduced the Industrial Revolution to the country. Moreno Pino is also a descendant of Pedro Moreno González Hermosillo, another hero of the Mexican War of Independence.
Education

A graduate of the American School Foundation in Mexico City, he went on to study at the Faculty of Law at Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, receiving a Bachelor of Laws (LL.B) degree in 1950, with the thesis "el cuerpo consular mexicano al servicio del plan nacional de recuperación económica" (the role of the consular corps in the national economic recovery plan).[5] He subsequently became a fully qualified lawyer.
He completed his education at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, where he earned both a Bachelor of Science (BS) and a Master of Science (MS) in Foreign Service.
Career
"I am not, in general, in favor of concentrating on the past; doing so carries the danger of facing with apathy, disinterest and immobility the daily challenges that make up our human existence. However, the occasion lends itself to stopping along the way and looking back at a past that seems both remote and present depending to the criteria by which it is judged. Let me mention two feelings that motivated me to write this book [...] The first is my intimate satisfaction for having belonged, for more than forty years, to the Foreign Service of my country [...] The second is my eternal gratitude towards those who [...] were generous and understanding mentors. During my tenure in office, I was fortunate enough to work directly and closely with Foreign Secretaries of the stature of Manuel Tello, José Gorostiza, Antonio Carrillo Flores, Alfonso García Robles and Jorge Castañeda, as well as with Ambassadors of the stature of Rafael de la Colina, Antonio Gómez Robledo, Octavio Paz and Luis Quintanilla [...] in sum, some of the greatest diplomats of contemporary Mexico."
Ismael Moreno Pino writing in the foreword of his book Diplomacy: Theoretical and practical aspects of your professional practice (1996).[6]
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Between 1945 and 1950, during his law studies, he was a law clerk for Chief Justice Anastacio López Sánchez of the National Supreme Court of Justice of Mexico.
He joined the Foreign Office in 1951 and the Foreign Service in 1955, after passing the necessary examinations.[7] Originally, he was hired as a legal advisor to the Mexican delegation to the Organization of American States in Washington, D.C.

Returning to Mexico, he served as Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs (1952–58) and, succeeding Jorge Castañeda y Álvarez de la Rosa, he was Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs (1960–64). Between 1964 and 1965, he served as Under-Secretary of State for Multilateral Affairs and Human Rights.
During his time heading the Office of International Organization Affairs, he was a delegate at the Ministerial Conference of the OAS held in Punta del Este in 1962, during which the decision was taken, after the Cuban Revolution and contrary to the wishes of the United States, not to expel Cuba from the OAS. During the ministerial conference, the role of Mexico was crucial in advocating for non-interventionism, according to the Estrada Doctrine.[8]
In 1964, President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz named him to the rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, becoming, at the time of his appointment, the youngest ambassador in the foreign service.
In 1965, he presented his letters credence to President Eduardo Frei Montalva at the La Moneda Palace in Santiago de Chile. In 1970, he was witness to the ascension of Salvador Allende to the presidency, and he left Chile in 1972, only months before the 1973 Chilean coup d'état which overthrew Allende.
During this period, he served on two occasions as the dean of the diplomatic corps in absentia of the Apostolic Nuncio. It was in this role that he received increased pressure to visit and congratulate Allende for his victory in the 1970 Chilean presidential election, in representation of the entire diplomatic corps. Moreno Pino wanted to avoid congratulating the socialist candidate until his victory was official, so as not to appear to be unduly intervening in Chilean politics or in the electoral process. However, as the Christian Democrats, the governing party, increasingly showed their will to avoid new electoral phases, and after certain Ambassadors (mostly from Warsaw Pact countries) bypassed him and congratulated Allende directly, Moreno Pino took the decision to visit Allende and congratulate him in person so as to in order to avoid a loss of his authority as dean.
After Allende was sworn in, Moreno Pino once again found himself in a delicate position, as he had to offer a gala dinner which is traditionally offered by the diplomatic corps for the new president of the republic. However, due to the Marxist ideology of Allende (disapproving of bourgeoisie entertainment) and the lack of enthusiasm that several western nations had regarding his accession, "he had to carry out complex maneuvers to ensure that the event was carried out."[7]
In 1972, Luis Echeverria carried out a prolonged visit to Chile during which he was hosted by Ambassador Moreno Pino and his family in the ambassadorial residence. During the visit, Echeverria communicated to Moreno Pino that he had taken the decision to name him as Ambassador in the Federal Republic of Germany, where Moreno Pino would be responsible, amongst other things, for handing over the Olympics (held in Mexico City in 1968) to Germany, which was set to host the 1972 Summer Olympics held in Munich.
"When there is legitimacy, cohesion and tenacious effort, Latin American states are capable of asserting, even in the face of the hegemonic power of the Western Hemisphere, their presence and their authentic interests in matters that affect their national security."
Ismael Moreno Pino in 1998.[9]

After his initial posting in Santiago, Moreno Pino served in Bonn, Washington, D.C., Geneva, Caracas, Lima, The Hague and briefly in Santo Domingo. In 1990, he was recalled to Mexico in order to act as a senior foreign policy adviser to president Carlos Salinas de Gortari.
During the course of his career, he developed into one of the most eminent policy experts in the Foreign Office on western hemisphere affairs. He was a key advisor and actively participated on the drafting of the amendments which were carried out to the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance (TIAR) under the Buenos Aires Protocol (1967), the San José Protocol (1975) and in the Cartagena de Indias Protocol (1985).
Throughout his career, he was a delegate in over fifty international conferences on various issues ranging from disarmament to reciprocal assistance; on many occasions, he served as a delegate in the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
He was the secretary general of the Mexican Delegation to the First United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea, held in Geneva, Switzerland, between February and April 1958. The conference was important in establishing the modern legal framework of the law of the sea.
He was also a lecturer of international law at Georgetown University, the Mexico City College, Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México and Instituto Matias Romero.
In August 2013, José Antonio Meade, the foreign secretary, informed that Ambassador Moreno Pino had died. After giving his condolences to his family, he declared that Moreno Pino had contributed during his career to strengthen the good name of Mexican diplomacy.[10]
Writings: major books
Moreno Pino wrote numerous hemerographic and bibliographic publications. Among the latter, the following stand out:
- Origins and Evolution of the Inter-American System (1977) (In Spanish: Orígenes y evolución del sistema interamericano);
- Diplomacy: Theoretical and Practical Aspects (1996) (In Spanish: La diplomacia: aspectos teoricos y prácticos de su ejercicio profesional); and
- Law and Diplomacy in Inter-American Relations (1998) (In Spanish: Derecho y diplomacia en las relaciones interamericanas).
José Luis Siqueiros Prieto, commenting on Diplomacy: Theoretical and Practical Aspects opined that:
"It is still somewhat surprising that given the large bibliography available on public international law, the collection of works on Diplomatic Law is rather limited. Leaving aside the already classic texts by Antokoletz, Cahier, Calvo, Nicolson, Pradier-Fodéré and Vidal y Saura, the most recent of them published more than two decades ago, no new work has been published in that discipline ... a work such as the one being discussed, was absent from the national bibliography. It is for this reason, truly satisfying that ... this book – which is not an essay or manual, but a true treatise on the subject – has been published. The author of the work is Ambassador Ismael Moreno Pino, who, in addition to [his] academic credentials, brings to the table a life devoted to Mexican diplomacy ... In this work, written with scientific rigor and the methodology of the academician, Ambassador Moreno Pino analyzes the entire scope and nature of diplomatic relations, not only from a doctrinal perspective, but also with the brushstrokes of his own experiences in the interesting world of diplomatic missions abroad qualifying his teachings with interesting case studies such as that of the so-called Tragic Ten Days... In sum, this work is worthy of being read by all scholars of international and diplomatic law both in Mexico and abroad. It is a valuable addition to the limited bibliography of this important discipline."
José Luis Siqueiros Prieto, Attorney-at-Law, Founding Partner of Hogan Lovells BSTL and former chairman of the Inter-American Judicial Committee of the OAS.[6]
Similarly, commenting on Law and Diplomacy in Inter-American Relations, Bernardo Sepúlveda Amor stated that:
"Ambassador Moreno Pino [...] has written an important work on politics, law, and diplomacy in Inter-American relations. Although the work deals mainly with issues related to the structure and functioning of the Organization of American States (OAS), the text has an even more ambitious content. It presents, with impeccable writing, a historical perspective of the remote origins of the inter-American movement, taking as its source the Spanish School of International Law. It examines, in admirable detail, the evolution of that regional organization, with its successes and frustrations, with its legal talent and political limitations, with its capacity to create institutions and norms, as well as its inability to apply them. For those who intend to learn about the nature of the Inter-American system, the work of Ismael Moreno Pino is required reading [...] it suggests a joint reflection on some of its important issues, to evaluate the role that the OAS should play and the role that Mexico ought to play with other Western Hemisphere countries."
Bernardo Sepúlveda Amor, former Mexican foreign secretary and vice-president of the International Court of Justice[11]
Personal life
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In February 1963, Moreno Pino married Mercedes González de Hermosillo y Quirós, the eldest daughter of Airforce General Bernardo González de Hermosillo y Ríos, a pioneer of aviation in Mexico and a founding member of the Airforce College (Escuela Militar de Aviación). The couple had three children.
U.S. State Department diplomatic cables
On Sunday, 28 November 2010, WikiLeaks began releasing classified cables that had been sent to the U.S. State Department by its diplomatic missions around the world. The leaked documents are dated between December 1966 and February 2010, and contain diplomatic analysis from world leaders, and the diplomats' assessment of host countries and their officials. In a Cold War context, Moreno Pino is mentioned in several of these as a senior figure in the foreign policy establishment of a key non aligned country.
One leaked U.S. Department of State cable described Moreno Pino, as "gracious, friendly and discreet" and noted that, having graduated from the American School and Georgetown, he "displays a favorable attitude to the US" even though he was "a Mexican nationalist who is sensitive to his country's image and interest."[12]
Another leaked document sent by the US Embassy in Mexico to the Secretary of State describes a day-long foreign policy briefing held on 13 May 1976 for President Echeverría at the Los Pinos Presidential Residence. The document mentions that "one after another, senior officials delivered major policy papers on their respective bailiwicks", going on to note that Moreno Pino's presentation was "among the more noteworthy."[13]
Image gallery
- With Eduardo Frei Montalva, President of Chile (1964–70)
- With Salvador Allende, President of Chile (1970–73).
- With General Augusto Pinochet, President of Chile (1973–90)
- At the United Nations General Assembly in New York in 1969.
- Speech during a ceremony, held in August 1972 at the Military Academy in Santiago de Chile, presided by General Carlos Prats, Commander-in-Chief of the Chilean Army.
- With Luis Echeverría, President of México

Foreign honors
Throughout his diplomatic career, Moreno Pino was awarded several honors from foreign nations, including Germany, The Netherlands, The Republic of China, Japan, Brazil, Chile, Peru, Venezuela and Yugoslavia:
Japan:
Order of the Sacred Treasure, Second Class, Gold and Silver Star, awarded by H.I.M. Hirohito, The Emperor of Japan.
The Netherlands:
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Orange-Nassau, awarded by H.R.M Beatrix, The Queen of the Netherlands.
Germany:
Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, Special class of the Grand Cross, awarded by H.E. Gustav Heinemann, The President of Germany.
Chile:
Grand Collar of the Order of Merit (Chile), awarded by H.E. Salvador Allende, The President of Chile.
Brazil:
Grand Officer of the Order of the Southern Cross, awarded by H.E. Juscelino Kubitschek, The President of Brazil.
Peru:
Grand Cross with Diamonds of the Order of the Sun of Peru, awarded by H.E. Alan García, The President of Peru.
Yugoslavia:
Order of the Yugoslav Star, Great Star, awarded by H.E. Marshal Josip Broz Tito, The President of Yugoslavia.
Venezuela:
Order of the Liberator, Grand Cordon (First Class), awarded by H.E. Luis Herrera Campins, The President of Venezuela.
Republic of China:
Order of Brilliant Star, Grand Cordon (First Class), awarded by H.E. Chiang Kai-shek, The President of the Republic of China.
Bibliography
- Moreno Pino, Ismael. Orígenes y evolución del sistema interamericano. Tlatelolco, México: Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, 1977. OCLC 4041498 [14]
- Moreno Pino, Ismael. La diplomacia: aspectos teoricos y prácticos de su ejercicio profesional. México: Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, 2001. ISBN 978-968-16-5234-0 [15]
- Moreno Pino, Ismael. Derecho y diplomacia en las relaciones interamericanas. Mexico, D.F.: Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1999. ISBN 978-968-16-5995-0 [16]
References
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ismael Moreno Pino. |
- Revista mexicana de política exterior, v.59–60
- Valdés Acosta, José María (1979). A Través de las Centurias. Talleres Litográficos de la Impresora Bravo.
- "María Cámara Vales, viuda de Pino Suárez" (PDF).
- "José María Pino Suárez, la errada lealtad". 9 May 2016.
- WorldCat
- La Diplomacia: Aspectos Teóricos y Prácticos de su Práctica Profesional (1996)
- "Ismael Moreno Pino, embajador eminente" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 June 2013.
- "La exclusión de Cuba de la Organización de Estados Americanos: los desacuerdos diplomáticos entre México y Estados Unidos en 1962" (PDF).
- Derecho y Diplomacia en las Relaciones Interamericanas (1998)
- "Muere Embajador Eminente de México". Archived from the original on 16 January 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2014.
- https://revistadigital.sre.gob.mx/images/stories/numeros/n59/sepulveda.pdf
- "Biographic Data on Mexican Ambassador to Venezuela, Ismael Moreno Pino".
- "Oas Reform: Report to Echeverria Outlines Mexico's Achievements and U.S. Impediments".
- WorldCat
- WorldCat
- WorldCat