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| Congressman
takes aim on foreign aid use
Interim special WASHINGTON - A leading pro-life
supporter in the U.S. Congress has signaled a fresh tussle this year over
U.S. funding of the United Nations and International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Congressman Christopher Smith
spoke February 12 after Secretary of State Madeleine Albright accused The administration and Congress
agreed last year to pay back $819 million in arrears to the U.N., but Congress
blocked the payment in November in a dispute over U.S. aid to overseas
family planning groups that perform or promote abortions.
"I hope that when we take
these same issues up later this year, the president's foreign policy advisers
- not his abortion advisers - will decide which is more important to the
administration: the U.N. ... and IMF, or funding the international abortion
industry," he said.
"We've shown our willingness
to compromise. It's time for the administration to do the same," said Smith,
a New Jersey Republican.
Earlier Albright, in her
statement to the committee, said members of the House had taken "valuable
legislation hostage" by insisting the administration agree to their "unrelated
position" on international family planning programs.
"The truth is, Mr Chairman,
that the victims of the current game of legislative blackmail now being
played are our shared constituents - the American people," she said.
Albright said earlier in
February the compromise proposed by Congress was really a "gag rule" that
would disqualify overseas family planning groups from U.S. funding if they
attended gatherings that discussed alleged defects in abortion laws.
Smith accused Albright of
"rhetorical outbursts" with her words on blackmail, and said it was unrealistic
to expect Congress to accept a foreign policy deal if the administration
would not bend on "issues that matter to Congress."
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