With the subsequent failures of the Internationale Resolution, pertaining to another two sessions of voting, other options were being considered by the DeWitt Administration to at least permit the Confederacy in a capacity as a non-voting, observer nation. The CS Senate, after days of debate, had successfully invoked cloture after the first round of counts regarding the Resolution. The next voting session set about a further defeat of the Resolution even with reservations on the terms of the treaty, and the final blow finally incurring with a third vote, by which the two-thirds majority was not reached. After discussions with his Anercian counterpart, President DeWitt opened channels with the other Internationale members on the discussion of allowing the Confederacy as a non-voting and non-member observer, and in a limited capacity, will congregate with Internationale conferences while adhering a non-interference stance.
The communique with the Anercian government concerning the temporary use of Columbian airship cradles for transportation of goods was accepted, as provided by the CAFTA agreement.