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Stephen Pollard

ByStephen Pollard, Stephen Pollard

Opinion

UN has been captured by enemies of democracy

The worst autocracies tend to hate Israel the most. Unfortunately, they are in the majority

March 5, 2024 15:18
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A picture taken on November 27, 2023 shows a heavily damaged UNWRA school after Israeli strikes in the village of Khuzaa, near Abasan east of Khan Yunis near the border fence between Israel and the southern Gaza Strip (Photo by SAID KHATIB / AFP) (Photo by SAID KHATIB/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

There’s not much that UN secretary-general António Guterres has said since October 7 that is worth paying attention to. This is the man who could not bring himself to use the words Jew or antisemitism in his message for Holocaust Memorial Day in January.

But last week he made a rather profound point — albeit unintentionally. Speaking in Geneva, Guterres said that the UN Security Council’s deadlock over Gaza and Ukraine risked “fatally” undermining its authority. The impasse meant it had been “unable to act” and so needs “serious reform to its composition and working methods”.

Well, yes. His reference to the Security Council being “unable to act” over Gaza was about the US’s veto meaning that the council was prevented from demanding that Israel stop its military action against Hamas. Thanks to Russia’s veto, however, the UN has also been stymied over Ukraine. A classic example, one might say, of two wrongs definitely not making a right.

When he speaks of “serious reform”, Guterres means that the Security Council’s “working methods” need to be changed to give it the freedom to do what he and many other UN members always want to do: give Israel a good kicking with the imprimatur of a Security Council resolution. That the veto prevents them from doing so is unconscionable to them.

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UN