The State Department said America’s allies ‘can carry the flag forward,’ with the United States slated to run for a seat on the Geneva-based body again in 2028.
The United States won’t seek another term on the U.N. Human Rights Council, the State Department said on Oct. 1.
Miller said three seats are available on the 47-member council, with four countries running for the spots, including Spain, Iceland, and Switzerland.
“All of them are countries with a very strong record of support for human rights. We thought they could carry the flag forward,” Miller stated. “But we will engage—we will continue to remain engaged on human rights issues and are currently slated to run again in 2028.”
It is unclear which allies Miller was referencing. The United States has consistently defended Israel when the council considered resolutions against it over its ongoing war against the Hamas terrorist group in Gaza.
Twenty-eight council members voted in favor of the resolution, and six, including the United States, voted against it, with 13 abstentions.
Meirav Eilon Shahar, Israel’s permanent representative to the United Nations in Geneva at the time, said the resolution was further evidence of the council’s anti-Israel bias.
The United States rejoined the council when the Biden administration took office in 2021, three years after the Trump administration pulled out in mid-2018 over what it termed an excessive negative focus on Israel.
Blinken said that the withdrawal “did nothing to encourage meaningful change, but instead created a vacuum of U.S. leadership, which countries with authoritarian agendas have used to their advantage.”
“To address the council’s deficiencies and ensure it lives up to its mandate, the United States must be at the table using the full weight of our diplomatic leadership,” he said at the time.
The council was created in 2006 to replace a human rights commission discredited because of some members’ poor rights records. But the new council soon faced similar criticism, including that rights abusers won seats to protect themselves and their allies.
Cathy He and The Associated Press contributed to this report.