BREAKING: America Formally Exits the WHO
Why the U.S. Withdrawal from the WHO Forces a Rereading of Power, Sovereignty, and the 2025 National Security Strategy
View and share the official X post dedicated to this announcement.
The United States has formally exited the World Health Organization (WHO), following the completion of the one-year notice period required under international law.¹—and in doing so, affirmed a profound and long-building truth: real power flows upward from the people, not downward from global bureaucracies who were not democratically elected but selected by powerful, often hidden interests.²
This historic moment reflects not merely a policy decision by the White House, but the maturation of a decentralized, citizen-led health sovereignty movement—one that has reshaped national strategy, challenged globalist authorities, and now stands poised to redefine international health governance by returning it to the people themselves.
The Decision—and Why It Matters
On January 20, 2025, the White House issued a Presidential Action formally withdrawing the United States from the World Health Organization, citing the WHO’s failure during COVID-19, entrenched political influence, resistance to reform, and disproportionate financial demands on the American people.¹ The order halted U.S. funding, recalled personnel, terminated negotiations on the WHO Pandemic Agreement and International Health Regulations (IHR) amendments, and directed the identification of alternative, transparent partnerships.¹
This decision was subsequently detailed and operationalized by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the federal agency responsible for public health policy and implementation.
In an official fact sheet, Secretary Kennedy and Secretary Rubio clarified that the withdrawal reflected long-standing concerns over the WHO’s politicization, its failure to enact meaningful reforms, and its continued pursuit of expanded authority through the Pandemic Agreement and IHR amendments. The document confirms that the United States not only ceased funding and participation, but also began transitioning toward alternative global health partnerships grounded in transparency, accountability, and national sovereignty.¹¹
As HHS emphasized, the withdrawal was neither abrupt nor symbolic, but the culmination of a formal process aligned with U.S. law and constitutional governance.¹¹
As of two days ago, that withdrawal has taken full legal effect, completing the one-year notice period required under international law.²
A Telling Signal: Fear Reasserts Itself Immediately
The significance of this shift became apparent in indirect ways almost immediately.
Just one day after the U.S. withdrawal took legal effect, the WHO issued a public declaration asserting—with certainty rather than probabilistic caution—that future influenza pandemics are inevitable.¹⁰ Not as a scenario to be monitored, but as an outcome presented as unavoidable. The historical context is difficult to ignore: the last time the WHO framed a pandemic in terms of certainty, it was preceded by coordinated preparedness exercises, including Event 201, and followed by extraordinary global interventions whose impacts are still being reckoned with.
The WHO’s announcement was not uncertainty being communicated—it was certainty being imposed.
The timing was instructive. As democratic nations reclaim authority and exit centralized control structures, the old system reflexively reasserts relevance through fear, reminding the world why it insists it must remain indispensable.
In that light, the WHO’s declaration serves as an unintended confirmation of why sovereignty matters now more than ever.
Beyond the WHO, the Administration has signaled a far wider realignment. On January 7, 2026, the White House issued a presidential memorandum directing U.S. withdrawal from the international organizations listed in Section 2—66 in total, including 35 non-UN bodies and 31 United Nations–associated entities. This is a massive shift in alignment with the new national strategy posture: participation in global institutions is no longer automatic, but selectively maintained only where it clearly serves U.S. interests, accountability, and democratic sovereignty.
The Larger Strategic Context: The 2025 National Security Strategy
To grasp the full meaning of the WHO exit, it must be read alongside the 2025 U.S. National Security Strategy (NSS), released by the White House in December 2025.³ The Strategy marks a decisive departure from decades of automatic deference to global institutions, explicitly rejecting transnational arrangements that erode sovereignty and democratic self-governance.
The 2025 National Security Strategy (NSS) marks a clear departure from prior globalist frameworks, explicitly re-centering U.S. policy around sovereignty, accountability, and national interest. The Strategy defines the United States as:
“An independent, sovereign republic whose government secures the God-given natural rights of its citizens and prioritizes their well-being and interests.”³
The WHO withdrawal directly reflects three central NSS principles:
Sovereignty is non-negotiable
Engagement must be selective, voluntary, and accountable
Institutions that fail reform must be exited, not endlessly accommodated³
Taken together, these principles project a worldview in which well-being is not a contingent policy outcome, or an optional public good, but an inherent condition of human dignity and national purpose. In other words, the NSS tacitly acknowledges that well-being and wellness are ontologically prescribed rights — inherent to the human condition — and not mere luxuries of wealth or prosperity.
The Grassroots Arc: Citizens Led Before Governments Followed
Long before the White House acted, citizens sounded the alarm.
Organizations such as Stand for Health Freedom (SHF) mobilized millions of Americans through sustained campaigns opposing WHO overreach and the transfer of U.S. health authority to unelected global bodies.⁴⁵ These efforts reframed the debate—from fringe skepticism to mainstream civic demand.
Key initiatives included:
Exit the WHO Campaign, educating the public on sovereignty risks and mobilizing national resistance⁴
Legislative advocacy opposing pandemic governance expansion, including resistance to H.R. 3839 and related mechanisms that would embed WHO authority into U.S. law⁵
This was democracy in motion—bottom-up pressure reshaping top-down policy.
My previous reporting on the exit included Breaking Free: How the WHO Exit Marks a Turning Point⁶ and BREAKING: U.S. Plans WHO Withdrawal on Inauguration Day⁷ where I documented the structural risks of WHO-centric governance and the emerging political momentum toward disengagement.
When Health Sovereignty Goes Global: MAHA, MEHA, and Beyond
The WHO withdrawal also marks the global scaling of the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement—and its international counterpart, Make Europe Healthy Again (MEHA)—from domestic reform efforts into a transnational sovereignty movement capable of challenging intergovernmental organizations (IGOs) themselves.⁸⁹
What began as resistance to medical coercion evolved into a coherent philosophy: health policy must arise from sovereign peoples, transparent science, and democratic consent—not insulated global bureaucracies.
This expansion was publicly articulated in The Day MAHA Went Global, which chronicled the moment MAHA’s principles crossed borders and catalyzed coordinated international alignment, particularly across Europe.⁸ That moment marked a shift from protest to parallel institution-building grounded in sovereignty rather than centralized control.
From Domestic Reform to Global Institutional Challenge
The WHO exit represents a vertical and horizontal scaling of people-power:
Vertically: from individual bodily autonomy → national policy → national security doctrine
Horizontally: from the U.S. → Europe → global civil society networks
MAHA and MEHA helped expose what many sensed but few named: modern global health institutions function as power centers, capable of shaping law and liberty without electoral legitimacy. The proposed WHO Pandemic Agreement and IHR amendments crystallized this concern, transforming diffuse unease into organized resistance.¹³
The Global Wellness Forum and the End of Permission-Based Governance
Further evidence of this shift is found in the rise of the Global Wellness Forum (GWF)—a platform for cross-border collaboration that operates outside traditional IGO frameworks, emphasizing consent, transparency, regenerative culture, and citizen leadership.
As documented in The Year We Stopped Asking Permission, GWF reflects a broader civilizational transition: movements no longer wait for approval from legacy institutions; they build what comes next.⁹
Together, MAHA, MEHA, and GWF signal a new architecture of influence:
Decentralized rather than hierarchical
Voluntary rather than coercive
People-led rather than bureaucracy-driven
Why This Moment Is Worth Celebrating
The U.S. exit from the WHO is not isolationism. It is democratic maturation.
It affirms that:
Health belongs to the people
Sovereignty is compatible with cooperation—but not coercion
Decentralization strengthens resilience
Citizen movements can reshape global reality
This is a rare moment when culture, conscience, and strategy align—when We the People are reflected back in policy.
Conclusion
The United States did not simply leave the World Health Organization.
It validated a new model of power—distributed, participatory, and sovereign.
History will record that the people moved first, movements held the line, and institutions finally followed.
This is democracy at its best—when it honors the Constitutional Republic and the true sovereignty upon which it stands.
References
¹ Withdrawing the United States from the World Health Organization, The White House (Jan. 20, 2025)
https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/withdrawing-the-united-states-from-the-worldhealth-organization/
² U.S. exits WHO after President Trump withdrawal order takes effect, Fox Business (Jan. 22, 2026)
³ 2025 National Security Strategy of the United States, The White House (Dec. 2025)
https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/2025-National-Security-Strategy.pdf
⁴ Stand for Health Freedom, Exit the WHO Campaign
https://standforhealthfreedom.com/actions/exit-the-who/
⁵ Stand for Health Freedom, Opposition to H.R. 3839
https://standforhealthfreedom.com/actions/hr3839/
⁶ Sayer Ji, Breaking Free: How the WHO Exit Marks a Turning Point
https://sayerji.substack.com/p/breaking-free-how-the-who-exit-marks
⁷ Sayer Ji, BREAKING: U.S. Plans WHO Withdrawal
https://sayerji.substack.com/p/breaking-us-plans-who-withdrawal
⁸ Sayer Ji, The Day MAHA Went Global: Our Stand
https://sayerji.substack.com/p/the-day-maha-went-global-our-stand
⁹ Sayer Ji, The Year We Stopped Asking Permission
https://sayerji.substack.com/p/the-year-we-stopped-asking-permission












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