New: Former Model Claims Eric Swalwell Drugged and Raped Her in 2018
You'll Roll Your Eyes When You Find Out What New York Democrats Want...
This Is What Marjorie Taylor Greene Said When Asked Whether Trump Should Be...
Midterm Polling Gives Senate Republicans a Path to Victory
Tom Tiffany Blew the Whistle on Tony Evers' Soft-on-Crime Executive Order That Puts...
Podcaster Gives Hasan Piker an Out on His Radical Views, and Piker Doubles...
Here's How the Biden Administration Weaponized the FACE Act Against Pro-Life Americans
Abby Phillip Lied About Illegals Getting Medicaid, and Scott Jennings Didn't Let Her...
'We're Not Walking Away From This Fight.' Two of Swalwell Accusers Speak Out,...
Spanberger Kicks Can Down the Road on Gun Bills
Trump's Immigration Crackdown Delivers a Historic Drop in Both Legal and Illegal Immigrati...
With The Strait of Hormuz Closed, Europe's Plan is to Simply Not Use...
Marco Rubio to Head Peace Talks Between Israel and Lebanon
JD Vance Says He Backs Trump's Iran Strategy '100 Percent'
Prediction Market Madness Heightens Americans’ Concerns
Tipsheet

UN Warns Members About Its 'Troubling Financial Situation'

UN Warns Members About Its 'Troubling Financial Situation'

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres is sounding the alarm to members about the world body’s “troubling financial situation,” urging them to pay up.

Advertisement

“Our cash flow has never been this low so early in the calendar year, and the broader trend is also concerning; we are running out of cash sooner and staying in the red longer,” he said in a letter to staff, reports FoxNews.com. 

Guterres went on to say that the organization will be taking measures to look at reducing costs, in a way that won’t affect their mission. He said he also will be proposing to states various steps to strengthen financial stability at the U.N. 

Trump administration threats to cut funding do not appear to be directly linked to the cash crunch. 

While the administration has been eyeing carefully its payments to various U.N. funds and agencies, the U.S. has not yet reduced or delayed its payments to the budget, though due to the fall start of the U.S. fiscal year, payments usually come later in the year. (Fox News)

Late payments are reportedly a big problem for the organization, Secretary-General spokesman Stephane Dujarric said Thursday. 

Advertisement

“Late payment has an impact obviously on our cash flow. It may have an impact on our ability to deliver mandates,” he told reporters. 

One former U.S. diplomat at the U.N. suggested other member states may be dragging their feet on payments over the perception that the U.S. has backed away from its commitments.  

“A look at the record shows that Trump has continued to fund it at historic levels, chose it to sanction North Korea, and uses it as a platform to defend Israel. However, there is a wide misperception fed by Trump detractors and a combative media that his Administration has walked away from the U.N.,” Hugh Dugan told FoxNews.com.

 “Other countries mimic the U.S., and what they hear has led them to go slow on support and check writing,” he added.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos