UN Defiant After Trump Cuts Ties With 31 Entities, Vows to Continue Work

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has vowed that the organization will continue all its mandated activities despite President Donald Trump's order to cut US ties and funding to 31 UN-related entities. The US action targets organizations working on climate change, development, trade, and gender issues, including UNCTAD and the UNFCCC. A UN spokesperson emphasized that the US is legally obligated to pay its assessed dues, which total 22% of the regular budget, and risks losing its General Assembly vote if arrears accumulate. However, the UN asserts it will continue its critical work on climate, child protection, and gender with determination.

Key Points: UN Vows to Continue Mandates Despite US Funding Cuts

  • US cuts ties to 31 UN entities
  • UN vows to continue mandated work
  • Action targets climate, gender, trade groups
  • US risks losing General Assembly vote
  • Cuts part of 'America First' campaign
3 min read

UN chief vows to continue all mandated activities despite Trump's cuts

UN chief Antonio Guterres vows to continue all mandated activities after Trump cuts US ties and funding to 31 UN-related entities and organizations.

"all United Nations entities will go on with the implementation of their mandates - Stephane Dujarric"

United Nations, Jan 9

Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is defiant that the world organisation will continue all its mandated activities despite US President Donald Trump's announcement that the US was cutting ties to 31 UN-related entities and ending funding.

While he regretted the US decision, "all United Nations entities will go on with the implementation of their mandates as given to us by member states", Guterres's Spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said on Thursday.

The US was legally obligated by the UN Charter to pay its assessed dues for the regular and peacekeeping budgets approved by the General Assembly, he said.

"The United Nations has a responsibility to deliver for all those who depend on us, and we will continue to carry out our mandates with determination", he added.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio accused the targeted groups of seeking "to constrain US sovereignty" and working with "elite networks" that he called the "multilateral 'NGO-plex'".

As part of his America First campaign, Trump ordered his administration on Wednesday to end participation in and funding for 31 UN entities and 35 other organisations, including the India-headquartered International Solar Alliance.

The ideologically-driven action targeted entities working in climate change, development, economy, trade, environment, and gender areas.

Important among them were the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), International Trade Centre, UN Framework Conference on Climate Change, UN Population Fund, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, and the secretary-general's special representatives dealing with children in armed conflict, violence against children, and sexual violence in armed conflict.

Dujarric said, "Whether it's on climate, whether it's on the protection of children from violence, whether it's on the agenda on gender issues, we continue our work with determination".

He said that for entities covered by the UN's regular budget, a country cannot pick and choose which to contribute to, as its obligation is to pay the entire dues.

Washington's share of the regular budget is 22 per cent, amounting to $820 million last year.

Although that was approved by Congress, Trump has not paid the UN.

His administration has proposed cutting this year's contribution by $610 million.

The Charter says a country will lose its vote in the General Assembly if its arrears equals or are more than dues for the past two full years.

However, even if the US reaches that threshold, it will continue to have its veto power in the Security Council.

Some of the entities targeted by Trump like UNCTAD, receive dues directly from members and not through the UN budget.

Before Wednesday's salvo against the UN, Trump had ordered the US out of the cultural, educational and scientific institution UNESCO, the Palestinian refugee organisation UNRWA, and the UN Human Rights Council.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
While I understand the UN's stance, there is a valid point about accountability. Some of these entities have become bloated and inefficient. The UN should use this as an opportunity for reform and to demonstrate clearer results to its funders, including the largest one.
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Priyanka N
Cutting ties with the International Solar Alliance is shocking! It's headquartered in India and is vital for our solar energy goals. This "America First" policy is hurting global initiatives that benefit everyone, including the US. The UN must stand firm.
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Aman W
Good on Guterres for showing spine. The UN Charter is clear about obligations. You can't be a permanent member of the Security Council and then pick and choose which rules to follow. This sets a terrible precedent for other nations.
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Kavitha C
The work on protecting children in conflict zones and gender issues cannot stop because one country withdraws. This is where other nations, including India, must step up their contributions and leadership. Global problems need global solutions, not isolation.
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Michael C
The veto power loophole is the problem. A country can withhold massive dues, technically lose its General Assembly vote, but still wield ultimate power in the Security Council. The system needs rebalancing. Maybe this crisis will finally force that conversation.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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