Trump Cuts UN Down To Size: America's $13 Billion Message To World Leaders
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) President Trump's September 2025 United Nations speech was direct and critical. He repeatedly condemned the UN as bloated, slow, and inefficient, stressing that the world's largest contributor is tired of paying without seeing results.
According to UN and official U.S. government data, America funds 22% of the UN regular budget and 26% of its peacekeeping. In 2024 alone, total U.S. payments reached nearly $13 billion.
Trump argued that the UN wastes money and fails to solve major problems. He singled out climate policies, calling them expensive experiments that raise energy costs and drain business.
He sharply criticized UN migration programs, saying they fuel illegal entries and crime by offering incentives that disrupt economies. Trump said these policies mainly serve global bureaucrats, and make U.S. taxpayers cover the cost of projects with little benefit at home.
Throughout the speech, Trump gave examples of the UN acting like a“talk shop,” writing letters and making speeches while businesses and ordinary people wait for action.
He blamed the UN for lacking results in conflict resolution, climate action, and migration control. He linked its failures to influence from countries like China and blocs in the global south, arguing the UN is no longer neutral or effective.
On the business side, the President underlined America's rapid investment growth. U.S. international investment gains topped $1.9 trillion in the first quarter of 2025, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
He described this as proof that America gets more from local deals and direct leadership than from global institutions. Trump highlighted new tariffs for partners like Brazil, defending these as ways to protect American producers from censorship and unfair trade.
Behind his words is a simple message: America will only back international groups that show real, measurable returns. The story behind Trump 's criticism is as direct as the speech.
He wants taxpayers and business leaders to know exactly where their money goes. For outsiders, Trump's barrage against the UN means global institutions must earn support through results, not talk or tradition. Big donors want value, not vague promises, and the UN faces a test for relevance in a changing world.
According to UN and official U.S. government data, America funds 22% of the UN regular budget and 26% of its peacekeeping. In 2024 alone, total U.S. payments reached nearly $13 billion.
Trump argued that the UN wastes money and fails to solve major problems. He singled out climate policies, calling them expensive experiments that raise energy costs and drain business.
He sharply criticized UN migration programs, saying they fuel illegal entries and crime by offering incentives that disrupt economies. Trump said these policies mainly serve global bureaucrats, and make U.S. taxpayers cover the cost of projects with little benefit at home.
Throughout the speech, Trump gave examples of the UN acting like a“talk shop,” writing letters and making speeches while businesses and ordinary people wait for action.
He blamed the UN for lacking results in conflict resolution, climate action, and migration control. He linked its failures to influence from countries like China and blocs in the global south, arguing the UN is no longer neutral or effective.
On the business side, the President underlined America's rapid investment growth. U.S. international investment gains topped $1.9 trillion in the first quarter of 2025, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
He described this as proof that America gets more from local deals and direct leadership than from global institutions. Trump highlighted new tariffs for partners like Brazil, defending these as ways to protect American producers from censorship and unfair trade.
Behind his words is a simple message: America will only back international groups that show real, measurable returns. The story behind Trump 's criticism is as direct as the speech.
He wants taxpayers and business leaders to know exactly where their money goes. For outsiders, Trump's barrage against the UN means global institutions must earn support through results, not talk or tradition. Big donors want value, not vague promises, and the UN faces a test for relevance in a changing world.

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