How much does the U.S. government spend on NATO
and on the United Nations?
Ask Dr. Dollar by Arthur MacEwan
Dollars and Sense magazine, Nov/Dec 1999
How much does the U.S. government spend on NATO
and on the United Nations?
The U.S. government pursues its international policy through
various strategies, and its budget data suggests that it far prefers
a military strategy to a diplomatic one.
This may be hard to see at first glance at the U.N. and NATO
figures because the U.S. budget line for NATO does not include
much of the government's actual spending on the military alliance-it
ignores the cost of actual fighting under NATO auspices, most
recently in Kosovo, as well as the long-term maintenance of military
forces and assets. This long-term spending is not separated within
the overall U.S. military budget.
What the budget does show is how much the U.S. spends on NATO's
administrative operations C~ (both civilian and military) and
its investment in infrastructure, totaling $450 million in 1999.
At $643 million, U.S. budget outlays for the U.N. in 1999 are
actually larger than this figure. The spending goes not just toward
the U.N., but to its affiliated agencies, including the Food and
Agriculture Organization, the World Health Organization, the International
Atomic Energy Agency, the International Labor Organization
and some smaller such operations. In addition to the $643 million,
before the Kosovo War, U.N. peacekeepers got $231 million from
the United States. Finally, "overseas assistance programs"-which
are largely U.N. operations like the U.N. High Commission for
Refugees, but also groups like the Red Cross-got $455 million.
A better guide to U.S. strategic priorities comes from comparing
U.S. spending on all its military and diplomatic programs, not
just NATO and the U.N. Here a great deal of information can be
found in Robert L. Borosage's recent analysis, "Money Talks:
The Implications of U.S. Budget Priorities," available on
the Web through the "Foreign Policy in Focus" series:
(www.foreignpolicy-infocus. org/papers/money/index. htmI).
Borosage points out that the military accounts for about 94%
of all U.S. government spending on national security and international
activities. What's more, much of the nonmilitary international
affairs spending goes to support military operations. "In
Fiscal Year 1999," Borosage reports, "the United States
spent over $276 billion on its military. This figure includes
outlays of the Pentagon and the Department of Energy nuclear weapons
programs plus more than $27 billion spent on intelligence agencies.
He goes on to note: "In sharp contrast to its military
spending, the U.S. devotes comparatively few dollars to foreign
diplomacy, international assistance, and support for international
institutions. The total net outlays in Fiscal Year 1999 will be
around $ 15 billion."
Although U.S. military spending has declined since the end
of the Cold War, it remains at 85% of levels in the 1976 to 1990
period. But those years span Ronald Reagan's presidency, a period
of exceptionally high military budgets. The United States still
spends "more on its military than it did during the Cold
War under Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford," says Borosage.
In any case, nonmilitary spending in international affairs
has also fallen off substantially. After adjusting for inflation,
the average U.S. expenditures on international affairs in the
1990s have been about 82% of those in the 1980s Likewise, the
U.S. government's international aid-giving programs are in long-term
decline. Today, the U.S. spends less than one-tenth of 1% of its
national income on official development assistance-that's a smaller
share going to aid the world's impoverished peoples than is provided
by any other industrial nation. (Also, the U.S. government owes
$1.6 billion in back dues to the U.N.)
Priorities are revealed by spending, and the military versus
diplomatic priorities of the U.S. government are fairly clear.
Its choice of strategy suggests that our government is far more
concerned with imposing U.S. interests on the world than in pursuing
a set of policies that would be more widely accepted, that would
involve compromise and would be based on diplomacy more than military
might.
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