US pulls funding for UN counter-terrorism body headed by Russian

The move is the latest by the Trump administration to use money and influence in a bid to force reform of international bodies

The United States cut a planned $2 million (Dh7.4m) pledge for the United Nations Counter-Terrorism Office on Wednesday and downgraded its presence at a conference, the latest move by the Trump administration to wield its funding to push for reform of the world body.

The funding cut was made over a decision by the UN counter-terrorism chief, a former Russian diplomat with more than 30 years service, to close part of an inaugural conference to non-governmental interest groups, a US official speaking on condition of anonymity said.

When asked if the decision had anything to do with counter-terrorism chief Vladimir Voronkov being Russian, the US official said "it matters" and that Voronkov had come under "tremendous pressure by his home country" on the conference.

Voronkov's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Russian President Vladimir Putin's government has been accused by western countries of cracking down on interest groups known as "civil society" and discouraging independent institutions.

The US official said the United States and other countries had pushed UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and Voronkov, who was appointed a year ago, to include the groups in the whole conference because they have valuable contributions to make.

"Our entreaties seem to have fallen on deaf ears and instead the views of countries like Syria, Venezuela, Iran and Russia seem to have more weight on this matter than do the countries that do the most on counter-terrorism," the US official said.

The US stance on the one-year-old office is the latest salvo in the Trump administration's push for change at the United Nations. Last week, the United States withdrew from the UN Human Rights Council over what it saw as the body's bias against Israel and a lack of reform.

Two sessions at the conference's opening day on Thursday – on the sharing of information and expertise and combating foreign fighters –– will be closed to interest groups and media.

A senior UN official, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said the reason for closing the sessions was the expectation of "a lot of sensitive information shared between the heads of counter-terrorism agencies"

The US official said Washington has downgraded its representation at the two-day conference to an acting deputy coordinator in the State Department Bureau of Counter-Terrorism, instead of a possible ministerial-level official.

Nearly 120 countries were expected to attend, along with 100 civil society groups, the UN official said. Close to 75 per cent of delegations would be led by heads or deputy heads of counter-terrorism agencies or interior ministers, the official said.

Updated: June 27, 2018, 12:00 PM