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Blog Post - Smart Global Health
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U.S. Global Health Policy in Palestinian Hands?

March 8, 2012

J. Stephen Morrison, Senior Vice President and Director, Global Health Policy Center, CSIS & Haim Malka, Deputy Director and Senior Fellow, Middle East Program, CSIS

Palestinians, Israelis, Americans and others are engaged in high-stakes brinkmanship over recognition of a Palestinian state at the United Nations. For the Palestinian leadership, pursuing UN statehood and membership in UN bodies holds out the prospect of greater international recognition and rare diplomatic leverage over both the United States and Israel. Membership may bring a visible political victory at a time when Palestinian victories are scarce. 
Yet, the consequences could reach beyond the Israeli-Palestinian conflict if the Palestinians seek membership in specialized UN agencies—including, specifically, the World Health Organization (WHO). Under current U.S. laws, such a decision by the Palestinians would trigger an automatic disruption to U.S. assessed and voluntary contributions to the WHO, with no waiver provisions. That would seriously set back global health gains that matter to U.S. national interests, Israel, Palestine, the interests of many other UN member states, and millions of vulnerable people in low and lower middle income countries. As Secretary of State Hillary Clinton laid out in testimony in late February 2012 before both the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate, one possible solution is a limited waiver. 

Palestinians, Israelis, Americans and others are engaged in high-stakes brinkmanship over recognition of a Palestinian state at the United Nations. For the Palestinian leadership, pursuing UN statehood and membership in UN bodies holds out the prospect of greater international recognition and rare diplomatic leverage over both the United States and Israel. Membership may bring a visible political victory at a time when Palestinian victories are scarce. 

Yet, the consequences could reach beyond the Israeli-Palestinian conflict if the Palestinians seek membership in specialized UN agencies—including, specifically, the World Health Organization (WHO). Under current U.S. laws, such a decision by the Palestinians would trigger an automatic disruption to U.S. assessed and voluntary contributions to the WHO, with no waiver provisions. That would seriously set back global health gains that matter to U.S. national interests, Israel, Palestine, the interests of many other UN member states, and millions of vulnerable people in low and lower middle income countries. As Secretary of State Hillary Clinton laid out in testimony in late February 2012 before both the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate, one possible solution is a limited waiver. 

 


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Contact H. Andrew Schwartz
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