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ARREARS TO INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS ON THE RISE
When President Bush first took office he was able to end years of the United
States being derided as a "deadbeat" at the United Nations. In 2001 he made the
final arrears payments of the "Helms-Biden" plan, which paid back dues to the UN
in return for a lower U.S. assessment rate and a laundry list of managerial
reforms. Now it looks like the U.S. is once again going in debt with the UN and
other international institutions.
The Senate's Commerce Justice State (CJS) appropriations FY05 mark-up reduced
the Administrations request for dues to international organizations by $174
million and for UN peacekeeping by $76 million. This may not seem like a huge
number considering the strains on this year's appropriations. But when added to
a $90 million dollar shortfall in FY04 funding, an expected billion dollar plus
peacekeeping bill, and Congress's inability to authorize the removal of a cap on
peacekeeping assessments - the U.S. could easily become a billion dollar
deadbeat once again.
FY04 Short Fall
The State Department is planning to reallocate FY04 funds to International
Organizations, primarily because of a $90 million dollar shortfall created
primarily by exchange rate losses. Congress had appropriated $999,830,000 but
U.S. obligations for the period totaled $1,090,187,000. The organizations
expected to receive the short end of the stick include the International Labor
Organization, the UN War Crimes Tribunals (both the former Yugoslavia and
Rwanda), UNESCO (which the US just rejoined), NATO, and the OECD.
FY05 Problems
It is not yet known how the weakened dollar will affect the Administration's
request for $1.194 billion for contributions to international organizations, but
the House CJS bill did meet this request. The Senate bill, which has not yet
come to the floor for a vote, only asks for 1.02 billion - with no clear
guidance in the Committee's report as to which international organization should
receive less.
Although this may be worked out in Conference, the larger problem lies with the
Peacekeeping account. Of the $650 million requested by the State Department and
agreed to by the House, the Senate has so far only agreed to $574 million. This
comes at time when demands on UN peacekeeping are at an all time high and the
U.S. share of upcoming expenses are expected to be in excess of $1.2 billion due
to new missions or expanded missions in Haiti, Burundi, the Democratic Republic
of the Congo, Liberia, and the Sudan. Although UN missions are typically
under-resourced, the Senate committee report demands that in "light of the
explosive growth in the number of peacekeeping missions and the skyrocketing
costs of providing troops and logistical support to those missions, the United
Nations must identify ways to do more with less funding." The Committee believes
that "private companies can carry out effective peacekeeping missions . At a
minimum, such companies should be utilized to supplement the number of blue
berets and blue helmets which, in these turbulent times, the United Nations is
having a difficult time recruiting." We've seen how well private contractors
have worked as security force in Iraq. Who will hold them accountable in the DRC
or Sudan?
Peacekeeping Cap
During the Clinton Administration the US assessment for peacekeeping was reduced
from about 31% to 27%. However, Congress had previously passed a law that capped
US contributions at 25%. The legislation that was passed in 2000 to raise the
limit to 27% expires at the end of September 2004. Secretary of State Powell has
asked Congress to permanently remove this cap. The Senate Foreign Relations
Committee did so in its State Department Authorization. But for unrelated
reasons this bill has not been allowed to come to the floor for a vote. Although
the Senate CJS Committee report notes that the "United States currently pays
approximately 27 percent of the assessed costs of U.N. peacekeeping operations"
there does not seem to be any authorization language in the pipeline to make
this a reality.
Updated September 29, 2004
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