U.N. funding an early target for House Republicans

By Bridget Johnson –

Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.), chairwoman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told The Hill that oversight would be a key function of the panel, particularly funding to the U.N. Human Rights Council (HRC) that is “a waste of taxpayer dollars.”

“I’d like to make sure that we once and for all kill all U.S. funding for that beast,” she said last month. “Because I don’t think that it advances U.S. interests, I don’t think that that’s a pro-democracy group, it’s a rogue’s gallery, pariah states, they belong there because they don’t want to be sanctioned.”

Supporters of continued U.S. support of and participation on the HRC say that it’s essential that Washington have leverage on the panel, renowned for including countries that have their own records of human-rights violations.

On Tuesday, Ros-Lehtinen will host a panel of U.N. critics and advocates that was originally scheduled for the week that the House suspended most activity in the wake of the shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.).

The 10 a.m. briefing before the full committee is titled, “The United Nations: Urgent Problems that Need Congressional Action.”

One of those scheduled to testify, Peter Yeo, represents the United Nations Foundation/Better World Campaign, which at the start of President Obama’s term urged the commander in chief to “mount a campaign” to secure a place on the HRC, which the Bush administration had boycotted.

    “Support of our UN commitments is more than an obligation, it is a smart investment in America’s strategic, economic and political interests,” Yeo told The Hill. “Continued American engagement and diplomacy at the UN will only advance our goals for democracy, human rights and world prosperity.”

U.N. critics set to appear include Claudia Rosett, who unveiled the oil-for-food scandal in 2004 and 2005 in The Wall Street Journal; Brett Schaefer, who regularly takes on the U.N. at the conservative Heritage Foundation; and Hillel Neuer, executive director of Geneva-based UN Watch, which monitors the controversial HRC.

Neuer told The Hill that UN Watch is going to release new data at the briefing on how the HRC has been run since then-U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan dissolved the Human Rights Commission in 2006. Annan called the commission “politicized” at the time, but the commission’s replacement, the HRC, has attracted many critics as well.

“We will commend the efforts of the U.S. delegation here in Geneva, including [Ambassador] Eileen Donohoe” in briefing the Foreign Affairs Committee, Neuer said, saying the team is “working hard to minimize the damage of the council,” but is often in the minority to powerful, controversial members such as Libya, Cuba, China, Pakistan, Russia and Saudi Arabia.

“They’re the ones who run the shop,” he said, adding of Obama’s initiative to place a U.S. representative on the council with the intention of reforming from within that it was “naive for anyone to have thought it would change significantly.”

Ros-Lehtinen, one of many lawmakers critical of Obama for that 2009 decision, led the charge against the United Nations in the 111th Congress, introducing bills urging transparency and accountability as well as the withholding of funding.

But the first bill in this Congress taking on the U.N., introduced on the first day the House was in session, came from a member of the Energy and Commerce Committee, not from Ros-Lehtinen’s panel.

Rep. Cliff Stearns (R-Fla.) introduced a measure to ensure that no federal funds may be used for the “design, renovation, construction, or rental of any headquarters for the United Nations in any location in the United States” unless Obama “transmits to Congress a certification that the United Nations has adopted internationally recognized best practices in contracting and procurement.”

“During the Bush administration, it was learned from internal U.N. auditors that 43 percent of $1.4 billion in procurement contracts investigated involved fraud,” Stearns said in a statement to The Hill.

“In addition, U.N. peacekeeping operations are plagued with numerous cases of abuse and sexual exploitation,” he added. “The U.N. is in desperate need of reform from top to bottom, and my bill is designed to have the world body take the simple step of adopting internationally recognized best practices in contracting and procurement, which includes taking the bid representing the best value.”

The U.N. is also included in a broad-reaching budget-slashing bill by Ways and Means Committee member Kevin Brady (R-Texas).

The Cut Unsustainable and Top-Heavy Spending Act of 2011, introduced Jan. 7, calls for a 10 percent reduction in voluntary contributions to the United Nations — monies the U.S. is not required to give by law — for fiscal year 2011.

Total U.S. contributions to the U.N. system were more than $6.347 billion in FY 2009, an all-time high. Brady said his bill targets $3.5 billion in voluntary funds, slashing that in line with the recommendation of the president’s deficit-reduction commission.

“There are constituencies for every spending item in the federal budget, but I believe there can be no sacred cows if Congress is to prove itself to be serious about reducing our deficit,” Brady told The Hill, adding he thinks the proposals should attract bipartisan support.

“America can fulfill its generous financial obligations to the U.N., but will set priorities within the voluntary funding areas,” he said. “A financially and economically sound United States is in the U.N.’s best interest.”

Ros-Lehtinen sounded another warning shot at the U.N. on Friday, criticizing the “irony” of the director of the investigations division of the U.N.’s internal oversight office, Michael Dudley, being investigated for retaliating against whistleblowers.

“The fact that the U.S. continues to contribute billions of taxpayer dollars every year to an unaccountable, unreformed U.N. is no laughing matter,” she said in a statement. “These allegations reinforce the need for expanded and effective oversight of the U.N. Next week, our committee will lead the way by holding the first of several briefings and hearings on UN reform.”

Also addressing the committee at the briefing will be former federal prosecutor Robert Appleton, who headed the U.N.’s Procurement Task Force and whose nomination to the position currently held by Dudley in an acting capacity was blocked by the U.N. Secretariat.

Neuer said he’ll be advocating at the briefing that the U.S. use its position on the U.N. Human Rights Council to take advantage of the tools at its disposal to call out offenders.

Over the past five years, the council has produced about 45 resolutions, he said, 35 which are “one-sided measures against Israel.”

“One of the most significant tools has been used to wallop Israel over the head and not to promote peace,” Neuer said, lamenting that the U.S. and allied nations haven’t pulled together to trigger emergency sessions on crises such as the crackdown on democracy demonstrators in Iran or abuses against Tibetans or Uighurs by China.

As to why the U.S. hasn’t acted in that capacity at the council, “I know there’s political answers to that but I don’t know the human rights answers to that,” he said.

Source:
http://thehill.com/news-by-subject/foreign-policy/139563-the-world-from-the-hill-un-funding-an-early-target-for-house-republicans

* Human Rights Advisers Are UN-Fit to Serve – Hillel Neuer

* Why does the UN Human Rights Council turn a blind eye to systematic repression in countries such as Cuba, Iran and Zimbabwe? Here’s one reason: Its Advisory Committee is dominated by apologists for the world’s worst dictators. First is Halima Warzazi, a former Moroccan diplomat, chosen by her peers last year as chairwoman. In 1988, the precursor to the Advisory Committee was considering a resolution to condemn Saddam Hussein for having gassed thousands of Kurds in Halabja. Warzazi initiated a “no action” motion to kill the resolution – and won the vote. Saddam went on to murder thousands more.
*
* Then there is Jean Ziegler, who served last year as Warzazi’s vice-chair. In 1989, as reported by Time magazine, Ziegler co-founded the Moammar Khadafy International Prize for Human Rights, with $10 million from the Libyan regime. Awardees have included Castro, Hugo Chavez and Louis Farrakhan. In 2002, the prize was given to convicted French Holocaust denier Roger Garaudy – and to Ziegler himself.

The writer is an international lawyer and executive director of UN Watch in Geneva. (New York Daily News)

January 24, 2011 | 7 Comments »

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7 Comments / 7 Comments

  1. “The Cut Unsustainable and Top-Heavy Spending Act of 2011, introduced Jan. 7, calls for a 10 percent reduction in voluntary contributions to the United Nations — monies the U.S. is not required to give by law — for fiscal year 2011.”

    And just why is it that VOLUNTARY funding of the UN being cut 10 percent? It should be 100 percent with a minimum of 10 percent of REQUIRED funding. As to the procurement bill – well they over looked repairs. I would let that building fall to the ground from lack of maintenance. We should not be funding the UN at all.

    Don’t forget the United Nations was created in San Francisco at the Conference on International Organizations which was chaired by Alger Hiss, a man Franklin Roosevelt refused to believe was working for Communist Russia. See the Venona Project (proving Hiss guilt.)

  2. Palestinians killed several hundred Americans, and yet US Department of State provides financial support them, including Hamas in violation of US Law. The bellow is a table showing how much Americans’ taxpayers pay for killing their fellow Americans:

    U.S. Assistance to the Palestinian Authority (PA)
    US DOS
    Office of the Spokesman
    Washington, DC
    November 10, 2010
    http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2010/11/150812.htm
    Support for West Bank and Gaza programs in FY 2010 is as follows:
    PA Direct Budget Support $150M (2 tranches of $75M each)
    Security/Rule of Law Programs $102.5M
    USAID and MEPI WBG Programs/Projects $250.4M
    UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) WBG Emergency Appeal $75M
    FY09 Supp provided in FY 2010 for the construction of five UNRWA schools in Gaza $10M
    Total WBG Aid for FY 2010 = $587.9M
    With the full UNRWA contribution = $739.9M
    Total Contributions to UNRWA in FY 2010, include:
    for General Fund core expenses in the West Bank, Gaza, Syria, Jordan and Lebanon $130M
    for WBG Emergency Appeal $75M
    for Palestinian refugees in Lebanon $20M
    for construction of five UNRWA schools in Gaza $10M
    for Palestinian refugees from Iraq $2M
    subtotal: $237m—

  3. She should even go a step further, and evict this corrupt charlatan, and chleptocrats. They have never anyting for the USA, only against, and accruing lots of debt everywhere.

    Let them move to Eiurope, Middle East-anywhere but here, and establish a new ‘Democracy of Nations’.

  4. “About as smart as fighting crime and corruption by investing in the Crips, Bloods, Latin Kings, and Mafia.” Bill Levinson

    So true. The reason this continues is very frightening. There is a poignant UNICEF commercial I recently saw which talks about giving dollars to crying starving children across the world. Indeed they need our help but if the UN and their appeasers would be truly affective if they would call for the ousting of every evil dictatorial leader across the world which torture, oppress and represses the human spirit to where small children must starve in the year 2011 as a consequence of a world who allows such brutality to begin with.

    So simple but that will never happen while the bleeding hearts who as an ineffective band-aid will send the money to the starving kids who will never benefit from it anyway. The UN is here to stay not out of indifference but out of placating evil.

  5. Ros-Lehtinen funding to the U.N. Human Rights Council (HRC) is “a waste of taxpayer dollars.”

    In the end, no one will stand by her and others with similar views. Ask then Senator Norm Coleman. G-d Bless him. He was the voice of reason who dared question the validity of the HRC. In the end he became a lone voice betrayed by most in his party. Last time I look they were all wearing duct tape across their mouths. While this sounds completely negative, when push comes to shove talk of facing off with any body of the United Nation will end up just that, talk.

  6. This travesty has been in force for too many years and this funding has been enforced by Democrat and Republican administrations. Congress would be doing the free world a blessing by defunding it. Furthermore, defund the whole UN.

  7. American congressional support for Israel:

    There appear to be two very strong supporters of Israel in the American government.

    One is Eric Cantor, a Jewish Republican form Virgina, who is second-in-command in the House of Representatives.

    The second is Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, who took over the House Foreign Affairs Committe when the Republicans took control of the House. She is part-Jewish, and is an anti-Castro refugee from Cuba who moved to Florida.

    Apparently, her familiarity with communism led her to take a strong stand against liberalism and socialism. She seems to be grateful that America saved her from Castro, and does not like the direction where Obama and the liberals are now taking America. She recognizes that the UN is an iconic sacred-cow to the liberals, who defend it fanatically no matter how disgusting it has turned out to be in reality.

    And she recognizes that the liberals demonize Jewish Israel as a surrogate for the liberals’ real target: decent, intelligent, hard-working, conservative Americans whom they find guilty of the “sins” of being white and believing in God.

    I pray they do well.

    (And note that neither of them is a “christian zionist”. I am starting to wonder how much influence christian zionists really have, and whether they are just blowhards who exaggerate their own importance.)