Friday, January 23, 2026 - The United States is set to officially exit the World Health Organization on Thursday, January 22, despite warnings that the move will hurt both U.S. and global health.
Critics also say the decision violates a U.S. law requiring
Washington to pay the World Health Organization $260 million in unpaid fees.
President Donald Trump announced the U.S. would leave the
organization on the first day of his presidency in 2025 through an executive
order. U.S. law requires the country to give one year’s notice and pay all
outstanding fees before departing.
A State Department spokesperson said the WHO’s failure to
contain, manage, and share information has cost the U.S. trillions of dollars.
The spokesperson added that the president has paused future transfers of any
U.S. government funds, support, or resources to the WHO.
“The American people have paid more than enough to this
organization, and this economic hit is beyond a down payment on any financial
obligations to the organization,” the spokesperson said.
Global health experts have urged a reconsideration,
including WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who said he hopes
the U.S. will rejoin the WHO. “Withdrawing from the WHO is a loss for the
United States, and it’s a loss for the rest of the world,” he said.
The WHO also stated that the U.S. has not paid the fees owed
for 2024 and 2025. Member states are set to discuss the U.S. departure and how
it will be handled at the WHO’s executive board in February.
“This is a clear violation of U.S. law,” said Lawrence
Gostin, founding director of the O’Neill Institute for Global Health Law at
Georgetown University. “But Trump is highly likely to get away with it.”
Bill Gates, chair of the Gates Foundation, said he does not
expect the U.S. to reconsider in the short term. “I don’t think the U.S. will
be coming back to WHO in the near future,” he said, adding that the world needs
the World Health Organization.
The departure has sparked a budget crisis at the WHO, which
has cut its management team in half and reduced work across the agency.
Washington has traditionally been the agency’s biggest financial backer,
contributing around 18% of its funding. The WHO will also reduce its staff by
about a quarter by mid-year.
The agency said it has worked with the U.S. and shared
information over the last year, but it is unclear how collaboration will
continue.
Global health experts warn that the U.S. withdrawal could
weaken global systems and collaborations needed to detect, prevent, and respond
to health threats.

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