China Flexes
Muscles at UNESCO, Just as Trump Walks Away
Washington had been a buffer against China’s efforts to use
UNESCO to influence education, historical designations and even artificial intelligence.
Context:
·
UNESCO,
the U.N.’s cultural agency, is known for World Heritage designations and influence
on global education and tech policy.
·
China
has intensified efforts to expand soft power via UNESCO—shaping narratives
around history, education, and artificial intelligence.
U.S. Withdrawal:
·
President
Trump pulled the U.S. out of UNESCO, citing ideological concerns and a dim view
of soft power.
·
The
move strips China of a major counterbalance; the U.S. had been UNESCO’s top funder.
·
Previously,
U.S. diplomats worked to counter Chinese and Brazilian influence on internet policy
and preserve Holocaust education.
China's Expansion:
·
A
Chinese official is now UNESCO’s deputy director general.
·
China’s
Belt and Road Initiative and Xi Jinping’s Global Civilization Initiative are supported
via UNESCO channels.
·
Beijing
pushes for World Heritage designations, even in oppressed regions like Tibet
and Xinjiang, sparking accusations of cultural appropriation.
AI & Education Influence:
·
UNESCO
partners with China’s iFlytek on higher education in Africa
and Asia.
·
China
dominates "intangible cultural heritage" listings, elevating its global
cultural prominence.
Human Rights Tensions:
·
UNESCO
ignored calls to classify a Tibetan site as “in danger” after unauthorized Chinese
construction.
·
A
Uyghur linguist was silenced at a UNESCO conference after criticizing China,
underscoring Beijing’s grip on sensitive discourse.
Consequences:
|
Factor |
Impact |
|
U.S. Exit |
Weakens oversight, emboldens Chinese soft power |
|
China’s Funding Role |
Expands sway over UNESCO decisions |
|
Cultural Designation Use |
Seen as rebranding, erasing minority histories |
|
Tech/AI Partnerships |
Positions China as educator and innovator in Africa & Asia |
[ABS News Service/25.07.2025]
Any traveler who has picked up an
international guidebook knows the UNESCO World Heritage site designation as shorthand
for a must-see cultural destination that’s worthy of a detour.
But the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization has also become the target of an intense Chinese influence campaign
in recent years as Beijing has sought to increase its reach over educational curriculums,
historical designations and even artificial intelligence.
President Trump’s decision Tuesday to withdraw the United States from the group removes a powerful check
on China’s effort, in the latest example of how the White House retreat from international
institutions offers an opening for China to advance its soft power.
The United States was once the largest UNESCO backer, accounting
for nearly 25 cents of every dollar. But Washington has had an on-again-off-again relationship with it for years, especially since Mr.
Trump first took office in 2017, and China has stepped up to take its place. A Chinese
official is now UNESCO’s deputy director general, a post that diplomats said is
often awarded in exchange for political or monetary favors.
UNESCO has lent support to major priorities for China’s top
leader, Xi Jinping, including the global infrastructure program known as the Belt
and Road Initiative. Beijing has also lobbied heavily for World Heritage designations
and is jockeying to surpass Italy as the country with the most culturally significant
sites. Some of those sites are in oppressed regions like Tibet and Xinjiang, where
many local residents view them as an attempt to appropriate and control their culture
and history.
And while UNESCO wields tremendous clout over what counts as
history, it is also the U.N. agency in charge of setting artificial intelligence
guidelines. UNESCO has an agreement with iFlytek, a major Chinese A.I. company, to cooperate
on higher education in Asia and Africa, according to Chinese state media. (UNESCO
said it has partnerships with many artificial intelligence companies worldwide.)
“UNESCO is a battleground for cultural and intellectual power
and influence,” said David Killion, who was an ambassador to UNESCO under President
Barack Obama. “We are conceding the soft power realm to an expansionist, authoritarian
great power.”
The Chinese Embassy in Washington, in a response to a request
for comment on its influence in UNESCO, said that international organizations are
“not arenas for geopolitical games.”
“China never intends to challenge or replace the U.S.,” the
embassy said. “We hope that all parties could see China’s positive role in UNESCO
objectively.”
UNESCO said that, while China will soon be the biggest funder,
it is underrepresented on the agency’s staff. “We are not in a position to comment
on the diplomatic strategy of one member state or another,” an agency spokeswoman
said in a statement.
The State Department did not respond to a request for comment
but issued a statement saying that UNESCO advanced “a globalist, ideological
agenda for international development at odds with our America First foreign policy.”
The pullback reflects a broader American retreat from international
bodies and Mr. Trump’s dim view of soft power, the longstanding idea that America’s
cultural and economic influence abroad strengthens its hand in foreign affairs.
Mr. Trump has announced America’s departure from the World Health
Organization and gutted the United States Agency for International Development.
A White House review of U.N. agencies is due in early August, and experts expect
the White House to defund others.
“The United States is no longer reliable,” said Wu Xinbo, dean of the Institute of International Studies at Fudan
University in Shanghai. “China’s status and influence in the United Nations will
definitely increase accordingly. This is certain.”
UNESCO was the first U.N. agency that Mr. Xi visited after becoming
China’s leader in 2012. The United States had withdrawn funding under 1990s legislation
requiring a cutoff of American financing to U.N. agencies that accepted Palestine
as a full member.
That provided an opening for China.
Beijing got Mr. Xi’s wife, Peng Liyuan, appointed as a special envoy and sent money to Paris that it earmarked
for its foreign policy goals.
Tang Qian, a former UNESCO assistant director general from China,
recalled in his 2020 memoir that his government viewed financing the agency as a
way to expand Chinese influence, particularly in Africa.
Washington was not on the sidelines during this period, despite
the funding cuts. The Obama administration kept its diplomats, like Mr. Killion,
in Paris to work on issues like Holocaust education and countering Brazil and China
on internet regulation.
But in 2017, the Trump administration announced it would withdraw
from the organization completely, citing anti-Israel bias. After President Joseph
R. Biden took office in 2021, Mr. Killion and others campaigned to get the United
States to return.
“The void left by the U.S. is being filled by other major powers,
like China, who understand the immense soft power opportunity that exists at UNESCO,”
read a document that they circulated within the Biden administration.
Congress authorized a funding waiver and the United States rejoined
UNESCO. The waiver explicitly mentioned concerns about Chinese influence.
The new ambassador set about trying to restore American influence,
securing partnerships for tech companies like Microsoft and Netflix and leading
a group, with the Ghanaian ambassador, that worked on artificial intelligence and
digital learning in Africa, where Chinese companies had been making inroads.
Mr. Trump is hardly eager to empower China. He has launched
a trade war and imposed export restrictions on American technology. But Mr. Trump
favors economic and military might over foreign aid and
cultural programs.
China views soft power as essential to expanding its global
influence and UNESCO as key to establishing its culture and history as prominent
on the world stage. China leads the world in the number of “intangible cultural
heritages” — humanity’s most worthy creations, like the Spanish flamenco dancing,
the Thai prawn soup known as tom yum kung and Jamaican reggae.
World Heritage sites attract so many tourists that a UNESCO
designation can transform economies. Sites in Western countries have historically
dominated this list, and Asian countries have lobbied heavily in recent years to
have their history acknowledged, too. But persecuted ethnic minorities say that
in the hands of Beijing, the sites become tools of appropriation and are not protected.
At a UNESCO-designated palace complex in Lhasa that includes
the residence of Tibetan Dalai Lamas as well as Tibet’s holiest temple, the Chinese
government erected two pavilions in 2020. The pavilions, built in a distinctly Chinese
style, surround sacred stone columns that commemorate Tibetan history. UNESCO regulations
require that countries alert the organization before making major changes to sites.
The Chinese government did not do that.
Advocacy groups called on UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee to designate
the palace as a site in danger at its meeting this month. It did not.
Chinese officials have described the country’s efforts to get its historical
and cultural sites designated by UNESCO as a key part of Mr. Xi’s Global Civilization
Initiative. That initiative holds that each region has its own values and should
not face pressure from countries with different values. Critics have described this as an attempt to undermine human rights
and democracy.
U.S. defunding of UNESCO will mean less oversight of the heritage
process, said Stephan Dömpke, chair of the Berlin-based
nonprofit group World Heritage Watch. “Even now,” he said, “UNESCO cannot monitor
about one-third of the sites on the World Heritage List. The withdrawal of the United
States will only accelerate this process.”
The American ambassador to UNESCO stepped down in January as
Mr. Trump took office. Shortly afterward, a Uyghur linguist, Abduweli Ayup, discovered the risk of offending China at UNESCO.
The Uyghurs are a persecuted ethnic group in northwestern China
who have been interned in camps, forced into labor and
barred from using their native language in schools. The Chinese government works
aggressively to censor and beat back discussion of this repression.
In February, Mr. Ayup traveled to Paris with his family, expecting to make a presentation
at a UNESCO conference on Indigenous languages. He had been invited to speak about
how smartphones have contributed to a decline in Uyghurs’ using their native language.
On the first day of the conference, Mr. Ayup
asked a Chinese state media anchor a question that was critical of Beijing. The
next day, a few hours before he was scheduled to present, organizers abruptly rescinded
the invitation.
Mr. Ayup’s question was the reason,
according to three members of the conference’s academic committee, who spoke on
the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. The Chinese language learning
company Talkmate was a major sponsor, and staff members
feared offending the executives, one of the committee members said.
UNESCO, in its statement, said that its management was not involved
in canceling Mr. Ayup’s presentation
and that the agency had not received a request from China about it.
Before he left the conference, Mr. Ayup
angrily scrawled on a sheet of paper and taped it to the wall of the conference
venue. “UNESCO,” the sign read. “My presentation cancelled. Why? Why?”