On June 19, 2018, the United States withdrew from the UN Human Rights Council.Footnote 1 Announcing this decision, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley characterized the Council as “a protector of human rights abusers and a cesspool of political bias.”Footnote 2 U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo observed that while “the United States has no opposition in principle to multilateral bodies working to protect human rights,” nonetheless “when organizations undermine our national interests and our allies, we will not be complicit.”Footnote 3 The withdrawal occurred one day after the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights criticized the United States in a speech at the Human Rights Council for its “unconscionable” practice of forcibly separating undocumented families entering the United States.Footnote 4 In August, U.S. National Security Advisor John Bolton stated that in addition to withdrawing from the Council, the United States would also reduce its assessed contribution to the United Nations by the amount that would ordinarily flow to the Human Rights Council and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.Footnote 5
U.S. involvement with the Human Rights Council has varied in the years since its creation. In April 2005, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan called for the dissolution of its predecessor, the UN Commission on Human Rights, stating that this body had been “undermined by the politicization of its sessions and the selectivity of its work.”Footnote 6 The creation of the Human Rights Council as a replacement for the Commission went to a vote in the General Assembly in March 2006.Footnote 7 The United States under President George W. Bush was one of just four states to vote against the establishment of the new Council, objecting that it needed “‘stronger mechanisms for maintaining credible membership.’”Footnote 8 The United States also declined to seek a seat on the Council in its first round of elections.Footnote 9 After President Obama took office, the United States promptly and successfully sought election to the Human Rights Council “‘because we believe that working from within, we can make the council a more effective forum to promote and protect human rights.’”Footnote 10
Not long after President Trump took office, his administration signaled skepticism about the Council and the extent to which the United States should pursue change from within it. On June 6, 2017, Haley remarked in an address to the Human Rights Council that “the United States is looking carefully at this Council and our participation in it.”Footnote 11 Elaborating in a later speech that same day, she stated that “[i]f [the Council] fails to change, then we must pursue the advancement of human rights outside of the Council.”Footnote 12 She pointed specifically to two “critically necessary changes.”Footnote 13 First, she called on the United Nations to “keep the worst human rights abusers from obtaining seats on the Council,”Footnote 14 a concern reiterated by Trump in his address to the General Assembly that September.Footnote 15 Second, she called for the removal of the Council's Agenda Item Seven, which ensures that the topic of “[h]uman rights violations and implications of the Israeli occupation of Palestine and other occupied Arab territories” and the “[r]ight to self-determination of the Palestinian people” is on the agenda of each Council session.Footnote 16 Haley described Agenda Item Seven as “the scandalous provision that singles out Israel for automatic criticism.”Footnote 17
Haley returned to these themes in announcing the U.S. withdrawal from the Human Rights Council on June 19, 2018:
Regrettably, it is now clear that our call for reform was not heeded. Human rights abusers continue to serve on and be elected to the council. The world's most inhumane regimes continue to escape scrutiny, and the council continues politicizing and scapegoating of countries with positive human rights records in an attempt to distract from the abusers in their ranks.
Therefore, as we said we would do a year ago if we did not see any progress, the United States is officially withdrawing from the UN Human Rights Council. In doing so, I want to make it crystal clear that this step is not a retreat from human rights commitments; on the contrary, we take this step because our commitment does not allow us to remain a part of a hypocritical and self-serving organization that makes a mockery of human rights.
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When a so-called Human Rights Council cannot bring itself to address the massive abuses in Venezuela and Iran, and it welcomes the Democratic Republic of Congo as a new member, the council ceases to be worthy of its name. Such a council, in fact, damages the cause of human rights.
And then, of course, there is the matter of the chronic bias against Israel. Last year, the United States made it clear that we would not accept the continued existence of agenda item seven, which singles out Israel in a way that no other country is singled out. Earlier this year, as it has in previous years, the Human Rights Council passed five resolutions against Israel—more than the number passed against North Korea, Iran, and Syria combined. This disproportionate focus and unending hostility towards Israel is clear proof that the council is motivated by political bias, not by human rights.
For all these reasons, the United States spent the past year engaged in a sincere effort to reform the Human Rights Council. It is worth examining why our efforts didn't succeed. At its core, there are two reasons. First, there are many unfree countries that simply do not want the council to be effective … .
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The second reason our reforms didn't succeed is in some ways even more frustrating. There are several countries on the Human Rights Council who do share our values … .
Ultimately, however, many of these likeminded countries were unwilling to seriously challenge the status quo. We gave them opportunity after opportunity and many months of consultations, and yet they would not take a stand unless it was behind closed doors … .
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Even as we end our membership in the Human Rights Council, we will keep trying to strengthen the entire framework of the UN engagement on human rights issues, and we will continue to strongly advocate for reform of the Human Rights Council. Should it become reformed, we would be happy to rejoin it.Footnote 18
The President of the Human Rights Council, Vojislav Šuc of Slovenia, greeted the news of the U.S. withdrawal from the Council with regret:
In times when the value and strength of multilateralism and human rights are being challenged on a daily basis, it is essential that we uphold a strong and vibrant Council recognizing it as a central part of the United Nations for the 21st century.
Over the past 12 years, the Human Rights Council has tackled numerous human rights situations and issues keeping them in sharp focus. In many senses, the Council serves as an early warning system by sounding the alarm bells ahead of impending or worsening crises. Its actions lead to meaningful results for the countless human rights victims worldwide, those the Council serves.Footnote 19
UN Secretary-General António Guterres stated via a spokesperson that he “would have much preferred for the United States to remain in the Human Rights Council.”Footnote 20
The day before its withdrawal, on June 18, the United States came in for severe criticism in an address delivered to the Human Rights Council by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein.Footnote 21 This criticism concerned the “zero-tolerance” policy for undocumented immigrants crossing the border, which was implemented by the Trump administration in April 2018.Footnote 22 As U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions described the policy in a May 7, 2018 speech in San Diego, “If you cross this border unlawfully, then we will prosecute you. It's that simple. … If you are smuggling a child, then we will prosecute you and that child will be separated from you as required by law.”Footnote 23 As a result of this policy, the Trump administration separated thousands of children from their parents at the border.Footnote 24
At the Human Rights Council, Al Hussein expressed his “deep concern” at the policy, lamenting that in the United States over the course of the preceding six weeks:
… nearly two thousand children have been forcibly separated from their parents. The American Association of Pediatrics has called this cruel practice “government-sanctioned child abuse” which may cause “irreparable harm,” with “lifelong consequences.” The thought that any State would seek to deter parents by inflicting such abuse on children is unconscionable. I call on the United States to immediately end the practice of forcible separation of these children, and I encourage the Government to at last ratify the Convention on the Rights of the Child, in order to ensure that the fundamental rights of all children, whatever their administrative status, will be at the centre of all domestic laws and policies.Footnote 25
In addition to Al Hussein, other world leaders condemned the U.S. policy, including UK Prime Minister Theresa May, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and Pope Francis.Footnote 26 Mexican Secretary of Foreign Affairs Luis Videgaray said that the “‘cruel and inhumane’” policy “‘clearly represents a violation of human rights.’”Footnote 27 The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights also expressed “deep concern” over the policy, with its Rapporteur on the Rights of Migrants Luis Ernesto Vargas Silva stating that “[i]mmigration policies and practices can never be used as mechanisms to cause cruel, inhuman and degrading treatments, to separate families, to attack children and their families, or to place the lives of persons in need of protection at greater risk. This is just inhuman and above any comprehension.”Footnote 28
Faced with domestic and international outrage, Trump officially ended the policy of family separation on June 20, 2018.Footnote 29 As protocols for tracking parents and children concurrently were poor or lacking, however, numerous children already separated from their parents remain in limbo. Having sent hundreds of parents back to countries such as Honduras and Guatemala, the Trump administration has no simple way of locating them or reconnecting them with their children, who remain in government custody. On June 26, a federal district court ruled that the government must reunite separated children under the age of five with their parents by July 10, and all other separated children with their parents by July 26.Footnote 30 The Trump administration met these deadlines for many but far from all of the children.Footnote 31 As of August 27, 2018, the majority of children have experienced family reunification, but 497 children were reported to still be separated from their families.Footnote 32
In announcing the U.S. withdrawal from the Human Rights Council, Trump administration officials did not connect the timing of this withdrawal with the contemporaneous criticism it was receiving regarding family separation. Pompeo did state in general terms that the “United States … will not take lectures from hypocritical bodies and institution[s] as Americans selflessly give their blood and treasure to help the defenseless … .”Footnote 33 The U.S. term on the Human Rights Council was due to expire at the end of 2019, and Iceland has now been elected to fill this seat.Footnote 34 In August 2018, a high-ranked U.S. administration official made clear that, in addition to withdrawing, the United States was also “‘going to de-fund the Human Rights Council’” by decreasing its assessed contribution to the UN budget by the amount that would ordinarily go to the Human Rights Council and the High Commissioner for Human Rights.Footnote 35 As of the end of August, the Trump administration has not addressed whether and to what extent the United States will continue to participate in the Universal Periodic Review, a process under the auspices of the Human Rights Council through which states voluntarily have their human rights practices reviewed every few years. The United States is scheduled for its third cycle of assessment during the Human Rights Council's thirty-sixth session in the spring of 2020.Footnote 36