Time to Pay Our Dues
EDITORIAL Time to Pay Our Dues Republicans took a courageous and principled stand when they defeated the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty three weeks ago. Now they need to show some political smarts,...
...And congressional Republicans would be doing a big favor for their party's nominee, whether it's George W. Bush or John McCain, by lifting the U.N...
...In June the Senate passed legislation sponsored by Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman Jesse Helms that would make funds available for paying U.S...
...For House Republicans to reject the Helms plan now would be snatching defeat from the jaws of victory...
...It's up to the House Republican leadership to display some, well, leadership...
...And Helms's plan is clever as well as principled...
...Meanwhile, by seeming to be too cheap to pay our U.N...
...bureaucracy to implement the required reforms...
...Congressman Chris Smith, who has been a noble warrior for the cause of human rights around the world, is trying once again to condition U.N...
...ambassador to the U.N., Richard C. Holbrooke, is committed to Helms's proposals, which include reducing the overall U.S...
...share in the U.N...
...budget...
...We are a year away from a presidential election that may again put a Republican in the White House...
...Now they need to show some political smarts, too...
...That president will be able to restore the pro-life Mexico City policy with the stroke of a pen...
...By approving the Helms plan, House Republicans can make it clear that they are not the party of Pat Buchanan, now safely and appropriately relegated to the fringes of national politics, but the party of Teddy Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan, of real and principled global leadership...
...programs and management...
...If House Republicans now throw their support to the Helms legislation, they can go a long way toward removing any taint of isolationism that would make Americans question the party's fitness to govern...
...He should relent...
...We'll still have to wait until January 2001 for a change in policy...
...The charge that Republicans refuse to pay American bills at the U.N.—unfair though it may be— gives superficial credibility to the charge...
...dues albatross from his neck...
...With the 2000 election campaign fast approaching, they should deprive the Clinton administration of one cheap, but sometimes effective, foreign policy debating point: the issue of U.S...
...was, after all, established under American leadership after World War II...
...The U.S...
...Instead of letting Republicans get blamed for refusing to pay our bills, Helms's strategy would shift the burden back to the Clinton administration...
...Nothing Congress can do will bring that day any closer, for even if Smith succeeds in attaching his language to the Helms legislation, President Clinton will then veto it...
...William Kri^tol and Robert Kagan, fair the Ediths The real choice is between the Carteresque internationalism oof the Clinton administration and the more robust internationalism of Ronald Reagan...
...dues, Republicans will have needlessly handed the Democrats an issue for the 2000 campaign...
...dues to the United Nations...
...The real choice is not between internationalism and isolationism, but between the Carteresque internationalism of the Clinton administration and the more robust internationalism of Ronald Reagan...
...In order to get the funding, the administration will have to battle secretary general Kofi Annan and the rest of the U.N...
...Republicans need to clarify the foreign policy debate for the 2000 election...
...The U.N...
...in exchange for implementation of stringent reforms in U.N...
...arrears to the U.N...
...funding on a restoration of the so-called Mexico City language concerning abortion...
...The entire foreign policy message of Bill Clinton and Al Gore is that Republicans are isolationists, pure and simple...
...The Helms legislation passed 97-2, and for good reason...
...For all the faults of the U.N., and for all the gamesmanship that has surrounded the issue of how to force reforms on it, Republicans and Democrats in fact agree that America should pay its bills...
Vol. 5 • November 1999 • No. 8