United Nations – Trump Threat To Cut Aid Faces Credibility Test After UN Vote

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    Dr. Riyad Mansour. Palestine's observer at the United Nations, arrives at the General Assembly prior to a vote, Thursday, Dec. 21, 2017, at United Nations headquarters.  President Donald Trump's threat to cut off U.S. funding to countries that oppose his decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital has raised the stakes in Thursday's U.N. vote and sparked criticism of his tactics, with one Muslim group calling it bullying or blackmail. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)United Nations – After threatening to cut off nations that rebuked him over Jerusalem, President Donald Trump faces a key question about his global credibility: Will he follow through?

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    Most of the world defied the United States on Thursday at the U.N., voting for a resolution that declares Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital to be “null and void.” Only a day earlier, Trump had linked the vote to future U.S. foreign assistance, telling reporters: “Let them vote against us. We’ll save a lot. We don’t care.”

    Trump’s U.N. ambassador, Nikki Haley, upped the ante further in a speech just before the vote. Not only was foreign aid in the crosshairs, but U.S. funding for the United Nations, too, she said. Haley said the United States would “remember this day” when it was singled out for exercising its sovereignty.

    “We will remember it when we are called upon to once again make the world’s largest contribution to the United Nations,” Haley said in the General Assembly.

    Yet the ultimatums from Haley and Trump did not dissuade almost all the top recipients of the billions of dollars Washington gives each year to help with security, development and other needs.

    And within hours of the U.N. vote, the Trump administration started gingerly backing away from its funding threats.

    In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said cuts to countries that opposed the U.S. were not a foregone conclusion.

    “The president’s foreign policy team has been empowered to explore various options going forward with other nations,” Nauert said. “However, no decisions have been made.”

    On U.N. funding, Haley’s office suggested the Jerusalem vote alone would not lead the Trump administration to cut off the global organization. Under Trump, the U.S. has been conducting a broader review of United Nations funding and has already cut money to some specific U.N. agencies over abortion-related concerns.

    “We will use U.N. votes as one factor in our foreign relations,” Haley’s office, known as the U.S. Mission to the United Nations, said in a statement. “It’s not going to be the only factor, or even necessarily the number one factor, but it will no longer be ignored.”

    It was a rare moment of soft-pedaling by the Trump administration, considering the president’s aversion to backing down from a fight or falling short on a promise. To the contrary, Trump has often credited himself with restoring America’s credibility when it issues threats by following through when U.S. adversaries cross “red lines” that he has set.

    In this case, though, there were signs that Trump intended his threat, delivered in a Cabinet meeting Wednesday, more as rhetoric than policy. The warning had appeared to catch the State Department and other agencies off-guard, leading them to seek more details from the White House’s National Security Council on how to proceed.

    A senior Trump administration official said there was no plan as of Thursday for moving ahead with eliminating aid to countries that rebuked the president. The official wasn’t authorized to discuss the issue publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

    In all, 128 countries voted “yes” to rebuke the United States. Nine voted “no,” 35 abstained, and 21 didn’t vote. Although the U.S. lost handily, the tally was better for the U.S. than many had expected.

    Of the top 10 beneficiaries of U.S. assistance this year, only Israel voted “no” — unsurprising, given that Israel’s government is overjoyed by Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem. All the rest defied Trump by voting “yes,” with the exception of Kenya, which didn’t vote. Afghanistan, for which about $4.3 billion in U.S. money was set aside in 2017, voted “yes” to rebuke Trump.

    The “yes” votes included Egypt, which received roughly $1.4 billion in U.S. aid, and Jordan, which received about $1.3 billion. Although both Arab nations are close U.S. security partners that rely on American dollars, both would risk political upheaval at home if they did not voice opposition to the idea of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

    Which raises the question: Would the United States, hoping to make a point about Israel, really cut off Jordan and Egypt, the only two Arab countries that have peace deals with the Jewish state? It would seem a counterintuitive move given Trump needs those countries’ support to succeed in securing the elusive Israeli-Palestinian peace deal his aides are pursuing.

    “The principle of linking bilateral assistance to U.N. votes is a sound one,” said David Makovsky, director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, a think tank focused on the Middle East. “But I wouldn’t unveil it here. I don’t know if I would inaugurate this policy on a vote about Jerusalem, given its religious resonance in the Arab and Muslim worlds.”


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    9 Comments
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    6 years ago

    Trump did the right thing and the United States should not protect or even a single dollar to those countries that are “against” the United States.

    Let them defend themselves and use their own money or the United Nations money to protect them.

    The United States should stop funding the United Nations and all its Arab Nations

    puppydogs
    puppydogs
    6 years ago

    Please do. It’s part of making America Great Again.

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    6 years ago

    Well let’s just take a look at what countries get the most US aid.
    1.) Israel 3 billion a year. Not quite $100M/day. We can’t cut them.
    2.) Egypt $1.5B we can’t cut that due to Camp David
    3.) Afghanistan 1.1B We can’t cut that as there is a war on.
    4.) Pakistan $933 We ought to cut them, but we can’t because of the war.
    5.) Nigeria $703M. Two million a day? Sure we can cut that. I suppose the Nigerians might notice. A little.

    If (say) Mexico really wanted to vote against us, do you think losing $207M in pocket change would prevent them from doing so?

    Teddybear
    Teddybear
    6 years ago

    United states gives money for our own interest, so they would and should cut of for whom they believe its not in our own interest

    BillyBeinu
    BillyBeinu
    6 years ago

    The United States distributes $50 billion of taxpayer money to other countries as foreign aid. It wouldn’t be the end of the world if that money stayed here, where it can actually benefit the taxpayers.

    As for the countries that don’t like us, they are perfectly capable of not liking without having our money.

    Butterfly
    Butterfly
    6 years ago

    Why don’t we just cut some of the aid all over. We need it at home for our own infrastructure!! Subways etc. Every little bit helps! Instead of taxing the American people on every penny they earn!

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    6 years ago

    #6 because I am showing that the United States has not-too-much leverage or flexibility with most of the international assistance budget. (By the way, I left out the billion a year we give to Jordan.)
    .

    The UK, France and Germany voted against us. We cannot cut their aid as they get none. For most other countries, our aid is pocket change.