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Politics : Clinton -- doomed & wagging, Japan collapses, Y2K bug, etc

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To: Fred Ragan who wrote (707)10/29/1998 12:55:00 PM
From: Sidney Reilly  Read Replies (1) of 1151
 
My Headline would be:
American Taxpayers are paying for the New World Order

theamericancause.org

TAC Files on IMF

Ominous Omnibus: A UN Payoff?

As we alerted to you last week, "they" are going to cram as
much as possible into the omnibus appropriations bill. Now it
appears that a $1 BILLION DOLLAR payoff to the UN has
been added to the pot:

Our contact on the Hill reported on Friday an attempt to slip
nearly $1 billion into the final omnibus spending bill to pay
alleged U.S. "debts" to the United Nations. Senate Foreign
Relations chair Jesse Helms (!) has reportedly joined
Democratic Minority Leader Tom Daschle in backing this high
priority request from the Clinton Administration. Sen. Helms
justifies his support for the $1 billion payoff by linking it to
internal U.N. reforms. Yet, critics wonder if any "reforms"
carried out by the U.N. bureaucracy can be effective or would
do anything to reduce the desires of U.N. officials to expand
the organization in ways dangerous to American interests and
sovereignty. U.N. General Secretary Kofi Annan has been
pushing initiatives to "solve" the organization's financial
problems by imposing global taxes and to bolster its
"peacekeeping" mission by creating its own standing army.

While the U.S. has supposedly been withholding dues
payments from the U.N. as a lever for reforms, it has not been
starving the U.N. for funds from other American sources. A
March 1996 General Accounting Office report entitled Peace
Operations details that the United States has provided $6.6
billion during fiscal years 1992 through 1995 in support of
military and peacekeeping operations of the United Nations.
Only about $1.8 billion was credited against assessed
contributions to the United Nations and only $79 million was
reimbursed to the U.S. by the U. N. This, in effect, provided
$4.7 billion gift to the U.N. from American taxpayers.

These practices have continued, as the U.S. provides a wide
array of logistical and other support to U.N. operations around
the world. President Clinton has acknowledged this, but refuses
to request reimbursement or a credit, calling these expenditures
of American money are "voluntary contributions." Much of this
money has come from the Pentagon budget, reducing the funds
available to maintain American forces for American defense.

Even if a deal is cut between alleged back dues and internal
reform, this larger issue of extra contributions to the U.N. will
have been swept under the rug.

Yet, the U.N. claims the U.S. owes it even more: $1.3 billion.
It's not in the best interest of the United States to pay phony
debts to the U.N. that do not take into account all of the other
assistance the U.S. has provided to an ungrateful United
Nations.

There is a chance that this $1 billion payoff is not be a done
deal.

House Appropriations chair Bob Livingston is reported to be
opposed to including this money in the omnibus bill. This is
because in order to get the White House to accept the money
(!), it must be stripped of any restrictions on the use of
abortions in international family planning aid. In the House, the
anti-abortion movement is very strong and Livingston does not
want to provoke a fight with them over the U.N. (This is not a
problem in the Senate which has a comfortable pro-abortion
majority). Livingston is thus the pressure point for stopping this
$1 billion payout to the U.N. Unfortunately, given that
Livingston endorsed the grant of $18 billion to the IMF, the
odds of stopping the U.N. money are not encouraging.

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