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FCNL joined 101 other civil society organizations committed to multilateral cooperation as a means to creating a better, safer world, write to Congressional leadership to urge them to support strong U.S. leadership at the United Nations.

The Honorable Mitch McConnell
Majority Leader
United States Senate
U.S. Capitol Building, Room S-230
Washington, DC 20510


The Honorable Paul Ryan
Speaker of the House of Representatives
United States House of Representatives
U.S. Capitol Building, Room 232
Washington, DC 20510


The Honorable Charles Schumer
Minority Leader
United States Senate
U.S. Capitol Building, Room S-224
Washington, DC 20510


The Honorable Nancy Pelosi
Minority Leader
United States House of Representatives
U.S. Capitol Building, Room 204
Washington, DC 20510

February 28, 2017

Dear Leader McConnell, Leader Schumer, Speaker Ryan, and Leader Pelosi:

As civil society organizations committed to multilateral cooperation as a means to creating a better, safer world, we urge you to support strong U.S. leadership at the United Nations, including by fully meeting our nation’s financial obligations to the organization. Continued engagement with the UN is critical to advancing a number of core U.S. foreign policy objectives, including securing recent gains in international development, delivering lifesaving humanitarian assistance, combating terrorism, encouraging the peaceful resolution of conflict, and promoting universal human rights.

The world is currently facing upheaval on a range of fronts. Devastating conflicts in Syria, Iraq, and South Sudan, among others, have killed hundreds of thousands of people and forced millions more from their homes, climate change and its destabilizing impacts continue to mount, and public health challenges new and old underscore the need for enhanced global cooperation. Given the complex and transnational nature of these challenges, and the finite resources available to address them, it is clear that the UN must rededicate itself to reforming its operations and management practices so it can be more nimble, responsive, and effective. The U.S. has gained an important ally in this effort in the new Secretary-General, António Guterres, who as UN High Commissioner for Refugees from 2005 to 2015 gained a well-deserved reputation for results-oriented and forward-looking leadership.

Now is the time to engage robustly and constructively with Mr. Guterres to achieve these ends, and avoid counterproductive actions, such as withholding financial support for the UN, that will only isolate the U.S. from its international partners and stymie efforts to achieve real and sustainable reform. This viewpoint has been articulated by both Republican and Democratic Administrations for decades. Earlier this month, for example, during her confirmation hearing before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Ambassador Nikki Haley stated repeatedly that she opposed the “slash-and-burn” approach to UN funding advocated by some observers. Furthermore, in 2005, when Congress was considering legislation to tie the payment of U.S. dues to reform, a bipartisan group of eight former U.S. Ambassadors to the UN—including Jeane Kirkpatrick, John Danforth, Richard Holbrooke, and Madeleine Albright—authored a letter opposing the proposal. “Withholding our dues to the UN is the wrong methodology,” the letter argued. “When we last built debt with the UN, the United States isolated ourselves from our allies within the UN and made diplomacy a near impossible task.”

The UN is very often, in conjunction with the U.S., the world’s first responder in times of crisis and need. Each year, UN humanitarian agencies like the World Food Program, UN Children’s Fund, UN Refugee Agency, and UN Population Fund provide food and nutrition assistance, clean water, vaccines, maternal health care, and other critical services to tens of millions of people affected by conflict or natural disasters worldwide; organizations like the UN Development Program work to fight poverty and build more resilient communities; UN peacekeepers stabilize fragile states, protect civilians, and support peaceful transitions of power; and the World Health Organization seeks to ensure global coordination to prevent and respond to disease outbreaks. Through the work of the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the UN also plays a unique role in ensuring a coherent and effective response to emergencies, helping to strengthen and systematize efforts by an array of actors on the ground, including national governments, NGOs, and UN agencies themselves.

By partnering with the UN on these initiatives, the U.S. not only advances its own interests and values, but also helps share the financial burden for responding to global crises and long-standing challenges with other countries, thereby saving U.S. taxpayers money in the long-run. That is why both Republicans and Democrats have recognized the value of various UN activities over the decades, from peacekeeping to humanitarian response to development assistance. It is therefore imperative that the U.S., while pushing for necessary reforms, continues to maintain its seat at the table by fully funding its dues payments and providing robust levels of voluntary contributions to the UN system. To do otherwise risks forfeiting the United States’ long-held position of leadership at the UN, potentially hollowing out UN programs and activities that are squarely in U.S. national interests, ceding control to countries that deny the universality of human rights and liberties, and empowering countries that are not committed to a stronger, more effective, or more accountable United Nations.

Thank you for your consideration.

Sincerely,

Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA)

Alianza Americas

Allard K. Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic, Yale Law School

Amazon Watch

American Jewish World Service

American Public Health Association

American Red Cross

Americans for UNESCO

Amnesty International USA

Athletes for Hope

Baha’is of the United States

Better World Campaign

Bread for the World

CARE USA

Center for Civilians in Conflict

Center for Health and Gender Equity

Center for International Environmental Law

Center for Reproductive Rights

Church and Society – The United Methodist Church

Church World Service

Coalition for Peace Action

Colombia Human Rights Committee

Columban Center for Advocacy and Outreach

Communities in Transition

Disability Rights International

Episcopal Relief & Development

Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Franciscan Action Network

Friends Committee on National Legislation

Friends of the Earth - United States

Friends of UNFPA

Girl Up

Global Health Council

Grieboski Global Strategies

Helen Keller International

HIAS

Human Rights Advocates

Human Rights Campaign

Human Rights Watch

Humanity United

Indian Law Resource Center

InterAction

International Center for Advocates Against Discrimination (ICAAD)

International Center for Research on Women

International Crisis Group

International Human Rights Clinic, University of Chicago Law School

International Justice Network

International Justice Project

International Refugee Rights Initiative

International Rescue Committee

International Women’s Health Coalition

IntraHealth International

Invisible Children

Islamic Relief USA

J Street

Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights

John Snow, Inc. (JSI)

Justice Strategies

Latin America Working Group

Management Sciences for Health

Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns

Mercy Corps

Mercy-USA for Aid and Development

National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd

National Council of Churches, USA

National Religious Campaign Against Torture

Nothing But Nets

Norwegian Refugee Council USA

Oxfam

PATH

Pathfinder International

Peace Direct

Peace is Loud

PEN America

Planned Parenthood Federation of America

Population Council

Presbyterian Church (USA)

Project on Middle East Democracy

Protect the People

Refugees International

Saferworld

Santa Clara Law - International Human Rights Clinic

Save the Children

Shot@Life

Sisters of Mercy of the Americas - Justice Team

STAND: The Student-led Movement to End Mass Atrocities

TB Alliance

The Auschwitz Institute for Peace and Reconciliation

The Hunger Project

The International Corporate Accountability Roundtable

The International Institute on Race, Equality and Human Rights

U.S. Fund for UNICEF

Unitarian Universalist Service Committee

United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries

United Nations Association of the United States of America

United States Pharmacopeial Convention

Universal Access Project

Washington Office on Latin America

WaterAid

White Ribbon Alliance

World Education, Inc.

cc: Secretary of State Rex Tillerson

cc: Ambassador Nikki Haley