US Exits WHO Over COVID Failures, Trump Fulfills Pledge

The United States has formally withdrawn from the World Health Organization, fulfilling a pledge made by President Donald Trump. The administration accused the WHO of critical failures during the COVID-19 pandemic and pursuing a politicized agenda against American interests. All U.S. funding and staffing for WHO initiatives have been terminated. The move ends a founding membership dating to 1948, marking a major shift in U.S. engagement with international health bodies.

Key Points: US Withdraws from WHO Citing Pandemic Failures

  • US cites WHO's COVID-19 failures
  • Withdrawal via Trump executive order
  • Ends all funding and staffing
  • Accuses WHO of politicized agenda
  • Vows bilateral health partnerships
3 min read

US exits WHO, citing COVID failures

The United States formally exits the World Health Organization, accusing it of COVID-19 failures and politicization. Trump administration ends funding and membership.

"Today, the United States withdrew from the WHO, freeing itself from its constraints, as President Trump promised. - Joint Statement"

Washington, Jan 23

The United States announced that it has formally withdrawn from the World Health Organization, ending its membership in the global health body. The move, the Trump administration said, fulfills a promise made on the president's first day in office.

In a joint statement, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said the withdrawal was carried out through an executive order signed by President Donald Trump and was aimed at freeing the United States from what they described as the organization's constraints.

"Today, the United States withdrew from the World Health Organization (WHO), freeing itself from its constraints, as President Trump promised on his first day in office by signing E.O. 14155," the statement said. "This action responds to the WHO's failures during the COVID-19 pandemic and seeks to rectify the harm from those failures inflicted on the American people."

The statement accused the WHO of abandoning its core mission and acting against US interests, despite the United States being a founding member and the organization's largest financial contributor.

According to the administration, the WHO pursued "a politicized, bureaucratic agenda driven by nations hostile to American interests," and failed to ensure the timely and accurate sharing of information during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The statement said those failures may have cost American lives and were later concealed "under the pretext of acting 'in the interest of public health.'"

The administration also criticized the WHO's conduct following the US decision to withdraw, saying the organization refused to hand over the American flag displayed at its headquarters and claimed it had not approved the US withdrawal.

"From our days as its primary founder, primary financial backer, and primary champion until now, our final day, the insults to America continue," the statement said.

The administration said US engagement with the WHO will now be limited strictly to completing the withdrawal process and protecting the health and safety of Americans. All US funding for and staffing of WHO initiatives has ended.

The statement said the United States will continue to lead global public health efforts through direct, bilateral partnerships and cooperation with trusted health institutions.

"We will continue to work with countries and trusted health institutions to share best practices, strengthen preparedness, and protect our communities," the statement said, while criticizing the WHO as a "bloated and inefficient bureaucracy."

The administration said the withdrawal was intended to honor Americans affected by the pandemic, including those who died in nursing homes and businesses harmed by pandemic restrictions.

"Our withdrawal is for them," the statement said.

The United States was a founding member of the WHO in 1948 and has historically been its largest single contributor. The decision marks a major shift in US engagement with international health institutions and follows long-standing criticism of the WHO's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
While the WHO definitely made mistakes early in the pandemic, leaving the table isn't the answer. Reform from within is better. As the largest contributor, the US had a big voice. Now that voice is gone. Interesting times for global health governance.
A
Arjun K
America first, world last? 🤔 This sets a dangerous precedent. If every country pulls out when they're unhappy, how will we tackle pandemics? India should use this moment to advocate for a more equitable and transparent WHO, not follow this isolationist path.
S
Sarah B
Reading this from Delhi. The part about the flag not being handed back sounds so petty! It's like a bad breakup. Focus should be on saving lives, not symbolic gestures. The world needs cool heads, especially after what we all just went through.
V
Vikram M
Honestly, some criticism of WHO is valid. Their initial response was slow and they were too trusting of certain data. But quitting? That's like burning down the hospital because one doctor made a mistake. Now the burden on other donor nations, possibly including India, will increase.
K
Karthik V
This creates a vacuum. China's influence in WHO might grow unchecked now. For India's strategic interests, we need a functional, impartial WHO. Our diplomats must be working overtime. Jai Hind!

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

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50