A deadline has come and quietly gone for the US State Department’s mandated review of American overseas commitments. Presumably a report will be forthcoming soon. SIG’s view is that the report will be mild in substance, for two main reasons: the political force of the Trump administration’s January attack on the “globalist” agenda within the US government and in multilateral organizations has reached a limit; and the lack of pushback against that attack (by allies and foreign partners, the Democratic Party, or the American people) has revealed the lack of any effective pro-globalist or even internationalist lobby.
Within days of taking office, the Trump administration issued several executive orders withdrawing from certain international bodies (the World Health Organization, Unesco, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights) and putting the whole of US commitments to international organizations under review with a report from State due Aug. 4. Some of this was less dramatic than it sounded. Withdrawing from the WHO is a year-long process and funding remains through the end of the fiscal year (Sept. 30). President Trump in his first term also withdrew from the WHO but the clock ran out before it happened and President Biden reversed the order. Unesco withdrawal would not be effective until July 2026. But the White House’s intentions are crystal clear and were reflected in its fiscal-year 2026 proposal to Congress, submitted at the end of May. This is the “National Security, Department of State, and Related Programs” bill, known as the NSRP. The House Appropriations Committee’s markup of it in mid-July was consistent with the president’s priorities and reduced the previous year’s total spend by 22%.
De-funding of international organizations was consistent with the de-funding of the State Department and the elimination of the US Agency for International Development. The handling of the World Trade Organization is interestingly different. President Trump in his first term wanted to withdraw from the WTO as he believed it unfairly favored China. He embraced and escalated the Obama administration’s blocking of appointments to the WTO’s appellate body. (The Biden administration also did nothing to get the appellate-body issue out of deadlock.) But the EU initiated a workaround, the Multi-Party Interim Appeal Arbitration Arrangement (MPIA), which effectively could do the work of the old appellate body. By June 2025, when Britain joined, the MPIA included 57 WTO members (out of 166) covering 57.6% of world trade. All of the US’s traditional allies are in the MPIA, including Canada and Mexico, as is China. The most important countries staying outside the MPIA are the US, with about 15% of world trade, and, as a political actor, India. (India has long taken a special interest in global trade negotiations.) The WTO provides a valuable measure of stability and rule of law to international trade. The success of the MPIA in attracting most of the world’s biggest national economies is striking, as it is a very curious and jerry-rigged body.
The second Trump administration, rather than attacking the WTO, has sent one of its leading economic advisors, Jennifer Nordquist, to serve as one of four deputy directors-general. (She has been a counselor to the White House Council of Economic Advisors and was Trump’s appointee in his first administration as US executive director at the World Bank.) Trump has also nominated Joseph Barloon, general counsel for the US Trade Representative in his first administration and a former law partner at Skadden, Arps, as ambassador to the WTO in Geneva. In his confirmation testimony to the Senate, Barloon stressed the importance of not accepting large non-market economies, by which he means China, as equal players at the WTO.
President Trump’s tariff policies have been advanced in both his administrations without much reference to WTO rules and practices. They go against the basic idea of the WTO and before it the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which began chipping away at tariff barriers in 1947. Nonetheless the WTO, as seen in the strange career of the WPIA, does have a purpose in the estimation of most of the world’s industrialized economies. IT also has a place in the struggle between the US and China. And it cannot be accused of wokeness (as was the case in White House criticism of USAID), “ideological” manipulation of science (WHO), or enmity toward Israel (as is the case with the UN Human Rights Council and other UN bodies facing defunding). Of course in one sense the WTO can certainly be described as “globalist” — theorists of neoliberal globalization often root it in economic policy more than politics — but it is not, in the Trump perspective, ideologically or culturally globalist. It is not part of the America First global culture war. And it serves a purpose for US corporations as well as for every other nation’s corporations.
The WTO (along with the International Telecommunications Union and some others) may simply be the exception that proves the rule: the US is nonetheless withdrawing from and de-funding previous long-term commitments to the institutions of multilateral diplomacy and international governance. But the leisurely pace of State’s mandated review, the compliance of the House Appropriations Committee, the uninterest of Democratic leaders, and the almost complete lack of any public or media attention to this US withdrawal suggest that the administration’s anti-globalist fervor has weakened. It might return in the fall for the UN General Assembly, an occasion Trump has used before to attack globalization and defend economic nationalism. But he might also take the moment to declare victory and seize some credit for the reform and whittling down of the UN, which has been going on for many years now but quickened after January. Either way, the anti-internationalist momentum is likely to wane after UNGA closes shop in October. On the US political scene, it is an issue that no one is motivated to fight over. This will leave the next moves in multilateral diplomacy and governance up to other actors.