U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power on Friday warned that cutting U.S. funding to the United Nations would be "extremely detrimental" to American interests, one week before Donald Trump's administration takes office.
Addressing her final news conference, Power told reporters that "countries like Russia and China" would benefit from Washington's reduced standing at the United Nations if funding were withdrawn.
"We lead the world, in part, by leading at the U.N.," said Power, who is stepping down next week after four years as President Barack Obama's ambassador to the United Nations.
"If we were to tie our hands behind our back or strip this organization of programming" to support peace mediation or humanitarian work, "this would be extremely detrimental to U.S. interests," she said.
Power spoke after a bill was introduced in the U.S. Senate that would slash all U.S. funding to the United Nations until a Security Council resolution demanding an end to Israeli settlements is repealed.
The United States refrained from using its veto to block the resolution and instead abstained, allowing the measure to pass by a vote of 14-0 in the council, triggering a furious response from Israel.
U.S. needs U.N.
Much of Power's parting words were in defence of U.S. engagement at the United Nations, saying that while the "U.N. system is flawed" with a bloated bureaucracy, there is a need for a global body to pool common efforts.
"The United States needs the U.N.," Power said.
"The U.N. goes to places that the US will not go," she added, pointing to peace missions in Mali and South Sudan, where African troops are taking the lead.
"If there's less U.S. leadership at the U.N., it will be other countries that step in to fill the void," many of which do not share the U.S. view on fighting terrorism or advancing human rights, she noted.
Power also warned the incoming Trump administration that it would be "very wise" to preserve the Iran nuclear deal that the president-elect has vowed to scrap.
The United States is by far the U.N.'s biggest financial contributor, providing 22 percent of its operating budget and funding 28 percent of peacekeeping missions, which currently cost $8 billion annually.
Trump, who will take office on January 20, has dismissed the United Nations as "just a club for people to get together and have a good time."
After the council voted to demand an end to Israeli settlements in Palestinian territories, Trump warned on Twitter: "As to the U.N., things will be different after Jan. 20th."
Congressional Democrats and Republicans alike fumed over the U.N.'s reprimand of Israel.
The Republican-led US House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly last week to condemn the resolution, noting that the Obama administration's refusal to use its veto power "undermined" Washington's decades-long position of shielding its closest Middle East ally at the United Nations.
The Safeguard Israel Act of 2017 -- introduced by Senate Republicans Ted Cruz and Lindsey Graham -- aims to push back against the U.N. by threatening to pull billions of dollars in funding.
The Senate bill is unlikely to garner major support, sources on Capitol Hill say.
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