The Trump
administration has officially moved to withdraw the United States from the
World Health Organization (WHO), in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic.
Trump, left,
tenders one-year notice to withdraw the U.S. from WHO Tedros, WHO DG on right.
Multiple
reports said the U.S. has submitted its withdrawal notification to the United
Nations secretary-general, an official said.
Withdrawal
requires a year’s notice, so it will not go into effect until July 6, 2021,
raising the possibility the decision could be reversed.
The formal
notification of withdrawal concludes months of threats from the Trump
administration to pull the United States out of the WHO, which is affiliated
with the United Nations.
President
Trump has repeatedly assailed the organization for alleged bias toward China
and its slow response to the coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan.
But public
health experts and Democrats have raised alarms that the decision may be short-sighted
and could undercut the global response to the pandemic, which has infected 11.6
million people worldwide.
The U.S. has
the highest number of reported cases in the world at nearly 3 million.
Trump first
froze funding for the WHO in April while his administration conducted a review
of its relationship with the entity.
Weeks later,
he wrote to the WHO demanding reforms but did not specify what those reforms
would be.
Sen. Bob
Menendez (N.J.), the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee,
tweeted that the administration informed Congress of the withdrawal plans.
“To call
Trump’s response to COVID chaotic & incoherent doesn’t do it justice. This
won’t protect American lives or interests — it leaves Americans sick &
America alone,” the senator tweeted.
No comments:
Post a Comment