International
Trump withdraws from UNESCO again, citing same woke bias — and worse
Quick Hit:
President Trump is withdrawing the United States from UNESCO, citing the agency’s “woke” initiatives, anti-Israel actions, and increasing Chinese influence. The move follows a 90-day review launched in February to evaluate the organization’s alignment with American interests.
Key Details:
- A White House official said the administration identified UNESCO’s diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives as “divisive,” pointing to pro-Palestinian rhetoric, anti-Israel resolutions, and programs that promote left-wing cultural norms.
- UNESCO’s recent projects — including an “anti-racism toolkit,” a report on “Transforming MEN’talities,” and research on video games promoting “gender equality” — were cited as examples of the agency pushing a radical social agenda.
- China, now UNESCO’s second-largest funder, has used its growing power within the agency to advance pro-Beijing narratives, including minimizing the historical significance of oppressed groups like the Uyghur Muslims, according to U.S. officials.
Diving Deeper:
President Donald Trump has decided to pull the United States out of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), citing the agency’s embrace of a globalist, anti-American agenda, according to White House officials who spoke with the New York Post and MxM News. The decision follows a 90-day review Trump ordered earlier this year to assess the organization’s alignment with U.S. values and interests.
“President Trump has decided to withdraw the United States from UNESCO — which supports woke, divisive cultural and social causes that are totally out-of-step with the commonsense policies that Americans voted for in November,” said White House deputy spokesperson Anna Kelly. “This President will always put America First and ensure our country’s membership in all international organizations aligns with our national interests.”
Administration officials flagged several initiatives as troubling, including a 2023 “anti-racism toolkit” that encouraged member states to adopt social justice-oriented policies and promote “equity,” and a 2024 campaign titled “Transforming MEN’talities,” aimed at reshaping male attitudes on gender. A related UNESCO report also suggested using video games to promote “antidiscriminatory behaviors.”
In addition to concerns over ideological overreach, Trump officials pointed to UNESCO’s repeated condemnation of Israel and its support for reclassifying Jewish holy sites as “Palestinian World Heritage” locations. The agency’s Executive Board has adopted resolutions that refer to Israel as an occupying power and regularly criticizes its military actions, while remaining largely silent on Hamas’s terrorist activities in Gaza.
UNESCO’s growing ties with China also weighed heavily in the administration’s decision. The Chinese Communist Party is now the organization’s second-largest financial backer, and Chinese nationals hold senior leadership roles, including deputy director-general Xing Qu. “China has leveraged its influence over UNESCO to advance global standards that are favorable to Beijing’s interests,” the White House told the Post, adding that Chinese influence has been used to downplay the role of minorities like Uyghur Muslims in China’s historical narrative.
This is not the first time Trump has taken issue with the organization. In 2017, his administration initiated a prior withdrawal over similar concerns related to anti-Israel bias. The U.S. had also previously withdrawn from UNESCO under President Ronald Reagan in 1983, citing the agency’s politicization, hostility toward free markets and press freedoms, and rampant budget expansion.
President Joe Biden reversed Trump’s decision in 2023, bringing the U.S. back into UNESCO and pledging to repay more than $600 million in back dues, an effort he claimed would help counter China’s growing clout within the agency. The Trump administration now says that rejoining was a mistake and that staying in UNESCO only lent credibility to an institution increasingly at odds with American principles.
Crime
The Uncomfortable Demographics of Islamist Bloodshed—and Why “Islamophobia” Deflection Increases the Threat

Addressing realities directly is the only path toward protecting communities, confronting extremism, and preventing further loss of life, Canadian national security expert argues.
After attacks by Islamic extremists, a familiar pattern follows. Debate erupts. Commentary and interviews flood the media. Op-eds, narratives, talking points, and competing interpretations proliferate in the immediate aftermath of bloodshed. The brief interval since the Bondi beach attack is no exception.
Many of these responses condemn the violence and call for solidarity between Muslims and non-Muslims, as well as for broader societal unity. Their core message is commendable, and I support it: extremist violence is horrific, societies must stand united, and communities most commonly targeted by Islamic extremists—Jews, Christians, non-Muslim minorities, and moderate Muslims—deserve to live in safety and be protected.
Yet many of these info-space engagements miss the mark or cater to a narrow audience of wonks. A recurring concern is that, at some point, many of these engagements suggest, infer, or outright insinuate that non-Muslims, or predominantly non-Muslim societies, are somehow expected or obligated to interpret these attacks through an Islamic or Muslim-impact lens. This framing is frequently reinforced by a familiar “not a true Muslim” narrative regarding the perpetrators, alongside warnings about the risks of Islamophobia.
These misaligned expectations collide with a number of uncomfortable but unavoidable truths. Extremist groups such as ISIS, Al-Qaeda, Hamas, Hezbollah, and decentralized attackers with no formal affiliations have repeatedly and explicitly justified their violence through interpretations of Islamic texts and Islamic history. While most Muslims reject these interpretations, it remains equally true that large, dynamic groups of Muslims worldwide do not—and that these groups are well prepared to, and regularly do, use violence to advance their version of Islam.
Islamic extremist movements do not, and did not, emerge in a vacuum. They draw from the broader Islamic context. This fact is observable, persistent, and cannot be wished or washed away, no matter how hard some may try or many may wish otherwise.
Given this reality, it follows that for most non-Muslims—many of whom do not have detailed knowledge of Islam, its internal theological debates, historical divisions, or political evolution—and for a considerable number of Muslims as well, Islamic extremist violence is perceived as connected to Islam as it manifests globally. This perception persists regardless of nuance, disclaimers, or internal distinctions within the faith and among its followers.
THE COST OF DENIAL AND DEFLECTION
Denying or deflecting from these observable connections prevents society from addressing the central issues following an Islamic extremist attack in a Western country: the fatalities and injuries, how the violence is perceived and experienced by surviving victims, how it is experienced and understood by the majority non-Muslim population, how it is interpreted by non-Muslim governments responsible for public safety, and how it is received by allied nations. Worse, refusing to confront these difficult truths—or branding legitimate concerns as Islamophobia—creates a vacuum, one readily filled by extremist voices and adversarial actors eager to poison and pollute the discussion.
Following such attacks, in addition to thinking first of the direct victims, I sympathize with my Muslim family, friends, colleagues, moderate Muslims worldwide, and Muslim victims of Islamic extremism, particularly given that anti-Muslim bigotry is a real problem they face. For Muslim victims of Islamic extremism, that bigotry constitutes a second blow they must endure. Personal sympathy, however, does not translate into an obligation to center Muslim communal concerns when they were not the targets of the attack. Nor does it impose a public obligation or override how societies can, do, or should process and respond to violence directed at them by Islamic extremists.
As it applies to the general public in Western nations, the principle is simple: there should be no expectation that non-Muslims consider Islam, inter-Islamic identity conflicts, internal theological disputes, or the broader impact on the global Muslim community, when responding to attacks carried out by Islamic extremists. That is, unless Muslims were the victims, in which case some consideration is appropriate.
Quite bluntly, non-Muslims are not required to do so and are entitled to reject and push back against any suggestion that they must or should. Pointedly, they are not Muslims, a fact far too many now seem to overlook.
The arguments presented here will be uncomfortable for many and will likely provoke polarizing discussion. Nonetheless, they articulate an important, human-centered position regarding how Islamic extremist attacks in Western nations are commonly interpreted and understood by non-Muslim majority populations.
Non-Muslims are free to give no consideration to Muslim interests at any time, particularly following an Islamic extremist attack against non-Muslims in a non-Muslim country. The sole exception is that governments retain an obligation to ensure the safety and protection of their Muslim citizens, who face real and heightened threats during these periods. This does not suggest that non-Muslims cannot consider Muslim community members; it simply affirms that they are under no obligation to do so.
The impulse for Muslims to distance moderate Muslims and Islam from extremist attacks—such as the targeting of Jews in Australia or foiled Christmas market plots in Poland and Germany—is understandable.
Muslims do so to protect their own interests, the interests of fellow Muslims, and the reputation of Islam itself. Yet this impulse frequently collapses into the “No True Scotsman” fallacy, pointing to peaceful Muslims as the baseline while asserting that the attackers were not “true Muslims.”
Such claims oversimplify the reality of Islam as it manifests globally and fail to address the legitimate political and social consequences that follow Islamic extremist attacks in predominantly non-Muslim Western societies. These deflections frequently produce unintended effects, such as strengthening anti-Muslim extremist sentiments and movements and undermining efforts to diminish them.
The central issue for public discourse after an Islamic extremist attack is not debating whether the perpetrators were “true” or “false” Muslims, nor assessing downstream impacts on Muslim communities—unless they were the targets.
It is a societal effort to understand why radical ideologies continue to emerge from varying—yet often overlapping—interpretations of Islam, how political struggles within the Muslim world contribute to these ideologies, and how non-Muslim-majority Western countries can realistically and effectively confront and mitigate threats related to Islamic extremism before the next attack occurs and more non-Muslim and Muslim lives are lost.
Addressing these realities directly is the only path toward protecting communities, confronting extremism, and preventing further loss of life.
Ian Bradbury, a global security specialist with over 25 years experience, transitioned from Defence and NatSec roles to found Terra Nova Strategic Management (2009) and 1NAEF (2014). A TEDx, UN, NATO, and Parliament speaker, he focuses on terrorism, hybrid warfare, conflict aid, stability operations, and geo-strategy.
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International
Bondi Beach Shows Why Self-Defense Is a Vital Right
By
Individuals and communities must take responsibility for their own safety.
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