Stephane Dujarric told reporters yesterday the UN will wait to see what the US Congress does with the proposed budget, "but we will need resources to deliver on our mandates."
Republicans who control both houses of Congress are skeptical about the administration's math and Democrats are opposed to the blueprint.
The United States is the largest contributor to the U.N. budget, reflecting its position as the world's largest economy. It currently pays 25 per cent of the United Nations' USD 5.4 billion regular operating budget and over 28 per cent of the separate USD 7.8 billion peacekeeping budget.
Contributions to international organisations, including the United Nations, would drop by USD 447 million, a 31 per cent decrease. Among other cuts are total funding for the UN children's agency UNICEF and, as previously announced, the UN population agency UNFPA.
During a visit to the White House by the UN Security Council last month, Trump described the US contributions to the United Nations as "peanuts compared to the important work."
Dujarric said UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres "has been very vocal on the need to reform and is engaged, and is committed and will continue to work on reform ensuring the UN ... Delivers what it is meant to deliver."
Atul Khare, the UN undersecretary-general for peacekeeping support, said at a news conference that peacekeeping "is effective," pointing to nearly 70 missions that have wrapped up and "left a legacy of stability in countries spanning from El Salvador to Namibia to East Timor."
Khare said "peacekeeping is cost effective," saying the current USD 7.8 billion budget supports 16 missions, a regional centre and logistics base and the deployment of over 113,000 personnel. In addition, he said, the UN supports 22,000 African Union peacekeepers and 595 civilians in Somalia.
Adjusting for inflation, Khare said, "the cost of UN peacekeeping to member states today is 17 per cent lower in 2016-17 than it was in 2008-09 when measured as cost per capita of deployed uniformed personnel."
The budget proposal says Trump wants to cap the US peacekeeping contribution at 25 per cent but notes that the UN General Assembly only revises assessment rates every three year, and the next negotiation isn't due until 2018.
"The request assumes greater burden sharing by other countries and a US assessed contribution at or below the statutory cap of 25 per cent.
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