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USA will quit UNESCO
Wednesday 23 July 2025

An article by Angelique Chrisafis in Paris and published in The Guardian - 'Trump pulls US out of Unesco in blow for UN culture and education agency' - reports that the White House cites Unesco’s focus on ‘divisive social and cultural causes’ in its latest withdrawal from global bodies.

US quit Unesco United Nations Educational Scientific Cultural Organization designating world heritage sites rock art
The Unesco flag flies at its headquarters in Paris. Trump pulled the US out of Unesco during his first term, and the US rejoined in 2023 under Joe Biden. Image: Abdul Saboor/Reuters.

The US will quit the United Nations’ culture and education agency Unesco, the US state department has said, as Donald Trump continues to pull out of international institutions. “Unesco works to advance divisive social and cultural causes and maintains an outsized focus on the UN’s sustainable development goals, a globalist, ideological agenda for international development at odds with our America First foreign policy,” according to Tammy Bruce, a state department spokesperson.

The move is a blow to the Paris-based global organisation, founded after the second world war to promote peace through international cooperation in education, science and culture. A US withdrawal, to take effect in December 2026, will be a blow to Unesco’s work on education, culture and combating hate speech. But officials at the Unesco headquarters in Paris had been braced for a potential US departure during Trump’s second term. The US provides about 8% of the body’s total budget, making the financial impact of Washington’s departure less severe than for other organisations, such as the WHO, for which the US is by far the biggest financial backer.

Unesco, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, is best known for designating world heritage sites including the Grand Canyon in the US and the ancient city of Palmyra in Syria. It also has a large cultural and education programme to promote intercultural dialogue.

The US was a founding member of Unesco in 1945, but this latest departure will be the third time it has quit.

Washington first withdrew in 1983 under Ronald Reagan, whose administration said the global organisation had anti-western bias and “has extraneously politicised virtually every subject it deals with”. It rejoined under George W Bush in 2003, with the White House saying it was happy with Unesco reforms. Trump pulled the US out of Unesco in 2017, during his first term as president. His administration cited what it called “mounting arrears, the need for fundamental reform in the organisation, and continuing anti-Israel bias”.

The US returned to Unesco in 2023 under Joe Biden. The Biden administration said it was crucial to rejoin in order to counter “Chinese influence”. Beijing had become the organisation’s biggest financial backer in Washington’s absence. As a condition of readmission, the US agreed to pay about $619m in unpaid dues and make contributions to programmes supporting education access initiatives in Africa, Holocaust remembrance and journalists’ safety.

Audrey Azoulay, the director general of Unesco, stated that “However regrettable, this announcement was anticipated and Unesco has prepared for it.” She said the reasons given by the US for leaving were the same as during Trump’s first term, and she disputed them. “These claims contradict the reality of Unesco’s efforts, particularly in the field of Holocaust education and the fight against antisemitism.”

Why is this important? A note from the Director of the Bradshaw Foundation

Among all the World Heritage sites, 51 contain rock art. In most of them, the rock art itself is the World Heritage, while in others it is one of the added values of a landscape or natural area which is also categorised as a World Heritage Site. This large number reflects the fact that rock art is the only universal art form over time and space; it is the oldest art form made from 43,000 years ago until today. This exceptional, universal feature of rock art has gradually been reflected on the List until reaching the current map, which reveals its widespread geographic distribution:

Click here for Rock art on UNESCO’s World Heritage List by Pilar Fatás Monforte, Director, Altamira National Museum and Research Centre, Spain.

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