WELL, they went ahead and did it. The PACT GIVING THE UNITED NATIONS POWER OVER THE EARTH was signed, sealed and delivered.
This was done in spite of the fact that most of the world’s population and many of the nation’s governmental representatives have been adamantly against it’s implementation. In fact the world in general is very disillusioned with the UNITED NATIONS. Many are calling for the UN to be disbanded, in light of the fact that the United Nations has done very little in it’s history to UNITE the NATIONS. Other than to force pacts, agreements and concordances and burn through the wealth of the Western World with very little to show for it.
We have got to get it in our heads that BIG GOVERNMENT NEVER WORKS FOR THE PEOPLE. If you are looking to Government to resolve your problems, you are making the biggest mistake of your lives. POWER CORRUPTS and ULTIMATE POWER CORRUPTS ULTIMATELY!! Small Government/Local Government, where the people of the community have a voice is the only place where you can address community problems. We the people, need to go back to banding together with out families and neighbors, helping each other and building each other up.
What has happened with this PACT, is the people have gone back into slavery. They don’t know it yet…but they will in a minute.
Before I get to the topic of today’s post, I am providing this list of some of my posts related to this topic. If you have not viewed them yet, you would do well to do so. They will give you a very clear understanding of the UNITED NATIONS and the future they have planned for you:
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SUMMIT FOR THE FUTURE 9/24
GOODNESS GRACIOUS, so many meetings of the minds going on. Every time you turn around the ELITE and/or the “STAKEHOLDERS” are having some kind of GATHERING. Plotting and Planning how they are going to reign in the mindless masses. That is how they see us, I hope you know. In their opinion, they are the … Click Here to Read More
The UN IS NOT YOUR FRIEND – Part 11 – COVID 19 – DEPOPULATION, REWILDING AND CLIMATE RESET
RESTORED: 3/21/22 COVID 19 is everyday manifesting the UN/ELITE/ROYAL Agenda. I hope that you are awake and observant. This year is going to be a very big year for you. YOUR LIFE if you continue to have one, is NEVER GOING TO BE THE SAME AGAIN. THAT IS A PROMISE! Please as you review the … Click Here to Read More
THE UN IS NOT YOUR FRIEND – Part 10 – THE VISION MANIFESTS
RESTORED: 3/21/22 If you are not familiar with the UN Restructuring/Rewilding plans and their Map that lays out how land will be appropriated you need to be. The map is includded in this article as well as my other articles on the topic. If you take a good look at that map, you will be … Click Here to Read More
THE UN IS NOT YOUR FRIEND -Part 6- Your Friendly Neighbor Red
Photo Credit Photo Credit August 9, 2019 by Cynthia Communism The similarity of the USSR emblem and the United Nations emblem is undeniable. A friend tells me a resemblance is also found on products and in commercials for Cadillac automobiles, Lenox china, George Dickel whiskey, Winston cigarettes, and on the design of “wheat” pennies. http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/sociopolitica/codex_magica/codex_magica28.htm Source: http://whale.to/c/united_nations_s.html Let me … Click Here to Read More
THE UN IS NOT YOUR FRIEND – Part 9 – REWILDING – Part 3 – RESOURCES AND Further Information
RESTORED: 3/21/22 This section of the Article is designed to bring you a little more in-depth information on REWILDING…but also to provide you with some excellent resources whether you just want to educate yourself on the topic or you want to actively become involved in the effort to maintain your freedom. Agenda 21 Course Understanding … Click Here to Read More
THE UN IS NOT YOUR FRIEND – Part 8 – ReWILDING Project – Part 2
UN AGENDA TO DEPOPULATE THE WORLD USING WILD BEASTS RESTORED: 3/21/22 Revelation 6:7-8 The Fourth Seal of Judgment “When the Lamb opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of the fourth living creature say, “Come!” I looked, and there before me was a pale horse! Its rider was named Death, and Hades was following … Click Here to Read More
THE UN IS NOT YOUR FRIEND – Part 7 – REWILDING Project – PART 1
You may or may not have heard of the Rewilding Program. They have tried their best to gloss it over at least in the public eye. They have taken to referring to it as Conservation Biology. It sounds more palatable. Don’t be fooled! This the New World Agenda to CONTROL EVERY ASPECT OF YOUR LIFE. … Click Here to Read More
THE UN IS NOT YOUR FRIEND – Part 5 – DISASTERS TO DEPOPULATE
THE MAJORITY OF THIS DOCUMENT WAS WRITTEN/COMPILED BY A MINISTRY CALLED “THE CUTTING EDGE” Kudos to them and many thanks. Please visit their website by clicking. HERE I wish I had an update to this article because there has been an enormous increase in disasters since this article was written. I am sure you can … Click Here to Read More
THE UN IS NOT YOUR FRIEND – PART 4 – RESTRUCTURING EARTH
For those who are not aware of Agenda 21 or The Rewilding, here is a group of old posts that will lay it all out for you and demonstrate how the agendas of the UN and the World Elite have been playing out EXACTLY as they were laid out. There are many brave souls who … Click Here to Read More
THE UN IS NOT YOUR FRIEND – PART 3 – NOAHIDE LAWS Continued
Let me first make it very clear, this is not meant to stir up hatred for the Jewish people. This is meant to make you aware of what is happening in the world. These people do not represent all Hebrew/Jewish people. These are extreme orthodox Talmudic Jews. They are Jews who follow the teachings of … Click Here to Read More
THE UN IS NOT YOUR FRIEND – PART 2 – NOAHIDE LAWS – YOU NEED TO KNOW
RESTORED 2/20/22 I first read about the Noahide Laws way back in the early 1990s. When I tried to share the information with friends and family, they thought I lost my mind. The topic seemed to go underground for a while. No one was covering it publicly, but there was plenty going on down low. … Click Here to Read More
THE UN IS NOT YOUR FRIEND! Part 1 of 11 – The Real Story
RESTORED: 08/28/2021 – RESTORED 3/8/22 My brother, father, grandfather and yours went willingly into battle, sacrificing everything, for many of them even their lives, for our rights. Including the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness and many more. I shudder to think how we have squandered so precious a gift. May God … Click Here to Read More
ORANGE THE WORLD
There is a plot to ORANGE THE WORLD. It is deeper than ANY OF US really comprehends. Orange is not just about homosexuality, not just about sexual perversion, not just about pedophilia, vampirism and cannibalism, it is not just about greed, or bloodlines. IT is about all of that and so much more. It all … Click Here to Read More
THE CONCORDIA IS ORANGE
The world today is screaming out for a concordance. For a world where everyone and everything is embraced. Whatever the belief, whatever the desire, whatever the fantasy…its all good. Love is for everyone. We can all get along if we just choose to do so. What a lovely notion, but childish and extremely naïve. For … Click Here to Read More
WHOSE NEW WORLD ORDER IS IT, ANYWAY?
I have been telling people for years that the USA is the ROMAN EMPIRE. Most people think we are Babylon…but there is a real Babylon that will fall as foretold in the Bible. Everything about the USA is ROMAN, our language, our laws, our government, our political structure, our holidays, our calendar, our numbering system. … Click Here to Read More
ORANGE – It’s about much more than Citrus
spacer RESTORED: 3/21/22 This is a series that has been in the works for a very long time. It has been ever on my mind, put on the back burner off and on for a few years now. It is a very important topic. I have touched on it in some of my other posts, … Click Here to Read More
DAVOS – World Economic Forum – WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW!
Photo Credit: The Economist We have put our faith and trust in leadership. Leadership of our nations and the world. We thought that the people we elected were actually making the decisions and taking action. We were so wrong. The people who make the decisions regarding our lives, our resources, our future, are not elected. … Click Here to Read More
Their NEW WORLD ORDER is Literally Built on Sand
RESTORED: 3/11/22 Wow, the more research I do, the more I find that EVERYTHING is related. Follow along with me, it is a wild ride. God is revealing EVERYTHING that has been hidden. Line upon line, a little here, a little there. There are several things that are getting clearer as I go. One is … Click Here to Read More
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The UN “Pact For The Future”
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In tonight’s podcast, we discuss the escalating conflict in the Middle East between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon that experts warned could spill into further regions and become a major war. We then discuss how the UN recently adopted what is being called the “Pact for the Future” on September 22nd, which the mainstream media kept us in the dark about.
The U.S. Must Oppose the U.N. Pact for the Future
Summary
Key Takeaways
The Pact for the Future is an unwise effort to bestow additional responsibilities on an organization that is unable to manage its current responsibilities.
Instead of attempting to restore the U.N. to centrality in world affairs, the Secretary-General should be calling for reassessment, retrenchment, and refocus.
Hubristic efforts like the unrealistic Pact for the Future merely divert the U.N. and, as it falls short of promised goals, further erode its reputation.
Select a Section 1/0
Each September, world leaders travel to New York to attend the United Nations General Debate. While the speeches garner the most attention, more substantive work is conducted in side meetings and high-level meetings where governments finalize and agree to various statements and agreements.1
In 2023, for example, the U.N. organized the Sustainable Development Goals Summit, the Climate Ambition Summit, and other high-level meetings. United Nations, Civil Society Unit, “General Assembly High-level Week 2023,” https://www.un.org/en/civil-society/general-assembly-high-level-week-2023 (accessed September 5, 2024).
The resulting political statements are generally non-binding, but they serve as member state endorsements of the agendas, which are then interpreted as instructions to the United Nations system and used to guide budgetary and policy plans. On September 22–23, 2024, the 79th session of the General Assembly will feature the Summit of the Future at which governments are expected to endorse the Pact for the Future, which includes a Global Digital Compact and a Declaration on Future Generations.2
United Nations, “Pact for the Future: Rev.3,” August 27, 2024, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/sotf-pact-for-the-future-rev.3.pdf (accessed September 5, 2024); United Nations, “REV3 Declaration on Future Generations,” August 13, 2024, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/sotf-declaration-on-future-generations-rev3.pdf (accessed September 5, 2024); United Nations, “GDC Rev 3—Draft Under Silence Procedure,” July 11, 2024, https://www.un.org/techenvoy/sites/www.un.org.techenvoy/files/general/GDC_Rev_3_silence_procedure.pdf (accessed September 5, 2024). For the release date for “REV3 Declaration on Future Generations,’ see Eliane El Haber, lead author, “August 24—Declaration on Future Generations—Comparison—REV 2 vs REV 3,” Coalition for the UN We Need, https://sotf-ichbulletin.org/1005-2/ (accessed September 5, 2024).
Proposed by Secretary-General António Guterres, the Summit of the Future aims to “reinvigorate the structures and the trust necessary for effective global governance.”3
United Nations, Summit of the Future: Our Common Agenda, “Summit of the Future 2024: What Will It Deliver?” https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/our-common-agenda-summit-of-the-future-what-would-it-deliver.pdf (accessed September 5, 2024).
The scope of this effort is extraordinary: for example, a huge development aid “stimulus;” increased climate finance; endorsement of government censorship of misinformation and disinformation; establishment of rules and norms governing the use of artificial intelligence; and negotiation of legally binding instruments on autonomous weapons, arms in outer space, and plastic pollution. Predictably, the text is replete with affirmations of the leading role of the United Nations in addressing these issues and requests for the Secretary-General to develop plans to implement the commitments outlined in the Pact.
In short, the Pact for the Future is an overt effort by the Secretary-General to affirm that the United Nations should be the primary venue for addressing international development, international peace and security, and emerging technologies and innovations under its global governance. It is clear why the Secretary-General would have an interest in bolstering the power and influence of the United Nations. It is far less clear why governments would be so inclined given the organization’s failure to address the very responsibilities that the Pact would charge it with resolving. The Pact is an unwise effort to bestow additional responsibilities on an organization that is unable to manage its current remit.
The Pact for the Future
The Pact is the culmination of a multi-year initiative launched in 2021 by the Secretary-General in his Our Common Agenda report to “address the triple crisis of climate disruption, biodiversity loss and pollution destroying our planet,” overhaul governance arrangements to deliver universal social protections and benefits, assert new basic human rights like access to the Internet, establish a global code of conduct for information integrity, and strengthen the multilateral system under the leadership of the United Nations, among other goals.4
United Nations, Our Common Agenda: Report of the Secretary-General, 2021, pp. 3 and 4, https://www.un.org/en/content/common-agenda-report/assets/pdf/Common_Agenda_Report_English.pdf (accessed September 5, 2024).
Echoing President Franklin Roosevelt, the Secretary-General called for a New Global Deal for a renewed social contract to govern the global commons (“the high seas, the atmosphere, Antarctica and outer space”) and global public goods (such as “global aspirations for peace”) “that are shared by and benefit us all” under the auspices of the United Nations.5
Ibid., p. 48.
The report was fleshed out in 11 policy briefs released in 2023.6
United Nations, Common Agenda, “Policy Briefs,” https://www.un.org/en/common-agenda/policy-briefs (accessed September 6, 2024).
The scope of these reports was very broad, encompassing everything from addressing the needs of future generations, spelling out a new vision for peace and security, and reforming the international financial architecture to combatting misinformation, disinformation, and hate speech. In many instances, they involve an expansion of authority for the United Nations. For example:
- The first policy brief calls for governments to consider the impact of current decisions on future generations and to create “a Special Envoy for Future Generations to serve as a voice for future generations” in the U.N. system to promote “fair and equitable distribution of opportunities and resources” and “prevent developments that could threaten the survival of future generations” such as “climate change, conflict and new technologies.”7
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 1: To Think and Act for Future Generations,” March 2023, pp. 5 and 13, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/our-common-agenda-policy-brief-future-generations-en.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
- The second policy brief on responding to complex global shocks proposes granting the Secretary-General, with minimal consultation from governments,8
Brett D. Schaefer and Steven Groves, “The UN’s Latest Proposals Would Undermine U.S. Sovereignty,” The National Interest, The Buzz Blog, July 15, 2023, https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/un%E2%80%99s-latest-proposals-would-undermine-us-sovereignty-206643 (accessed September 9, 2024).
standing authority to convene and operationalize an Emergency Platform in the event of crises of sufficient “scale, severity, and reach” that might include climatic or environmental events, pandemics, “disruptive activity in cyberspace or disruptions to global digital connectivity,” or “disruptions to global flows of goods, people or finance.”9
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 2: Strengthening the International Response to Complex Global Shocks—An Emergency Platform,” March 2023, pp. 5 and 12, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/our-common-agenda-policy-brief-emergency-platform-en.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
- The third policy brief urges that youth be engaged in policy and decision-making because they are “a driving force for societal change through social mobilization—pushing for climate action, seeking racial justice, promoting gender equality and demanding dignity for all.”10
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 3: Meaningful Youth Engagement in Policy and Decision-making Processes,” April 2023, pp. 2 and 9, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/our-common-agenda-policy-brief-youth-engagement-en.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
The brief recommends that youth—defined by the U.N. as people who are 15 to 24 years of age11
Fact Sheet, “Definition of Youth,” United Nations, Department if Economic and Social Affairs, https://www.un.org/esa/socdev/documents/youth/fact-sheets/youth-definition.pdf (accessed September 9, 2024).
—be accorded preferential status and access to decision making at local, national, regional, and global levels, including establishing arrangements for direct youth participation in the General Assembly and Security Council.
- The fourth policy brief proposes the development of new measures beyond gross domestic product, which is characterized as a “harmful anachronism” that places “disproportionate value on activities that deplete the planet.” The proposal’s new metrics would be designed to achieve such outcomes as respect for the planet, reduction of inequities, and promotion of “ethical economies.”12
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 4: Valuing What Counts: Framework to Progress Beyond Gross Domestic Product,” May 2023, pp. 2 and 9, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/our-common-agenda-policy-brief-beyond-gross-domestic-product-en.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
- The fifth policy brief proposes adoption of a Global Digital Compact to set “principles, objectives and actions” to “to achieve the governance required for a sustainable digital future.” The brief laments that technology-related innovation and income are not equitably distributed and complains about the lack of sufficient guardrails and regulatory oversight of new technologies. It recommends billions of dollars in financial commitments for digital connectivity and public infrastructure and services, U.N.-supported digital transformation initiatives, and numerous government commitments to, among other things, “promote meaningful and equitable employment opportunities through innovative regulation, social protection and investment policies.”13
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 5: A Global Digital Compact—An Open, Free and Secure Digital Future for All,” May 2023, pp. 2, 3, 6, and 15, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/our-common-agenda-policy-brief-gobal-digi-compact-en.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
- The sixth policy brief proposes significant changes in the international financial architecture, which it characterizes as “entirely unfit for [its] purpose” and “unable to support the mobilization of stable and long-term financing at scale for investments needed to combat the climate crisis” and social challenges like “extreme inequality” and “entrenched gender bias.” The brief advocates shifting more governing authority to developing countries, delinking voting power from contributions to the IMF and World Bank, removing limits on and lowering the cost of borrowing for developing countries, phasing out financing for fossil fuel projects, a “massive” scaling up of development and climate financing, adopting a global minimum corporate tax rate, and redesigning the “[g]lobal tax architecture for equitable and inclusive sustainable development.”14
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 6: Reforms to the International Financial Architecture,” May 2023, pp. 2, 3, 6, 11, 14, 16, and 29, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/our-common-agenda-policy-brief-international-finance-architecture-en.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
- The seventh policy brief proposes “strengthening global governance of outer space” and developing “normative frameworks” over traffic coordination, space debris, weaponization of space, and exploitation of resources, all under the auspices of the U.N.15
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 7: For All Humanity—The Future of Outer Space Governance,” May 2023, pp. 3, 9, 14, and 17, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/our-common-agenda-policy-brief-outer-space-en.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
- The eighth policy brief proposes a “Code of Conduct for Information Integrity on Digital Platforms” that would promote “measures that limit the impact of mis- and disinformation and hate speech.” The brief expresses particular concern about “weakening trust” in news media, hate speech, “greenwashing” by fossil fuel companies, “mis- and disinformation about the climate emergency [that] are delaying urgently needed action,” and misinformation and disinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic. The brief proposes that these concerns be addressed through a combination of national and private-sector initiatives to combat misinformation, disinformation, and hate speech.16
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 8: Information Integrity on Digital Platforms,” June 2023, pp. 2, 3, 11, 12, 22, and 25, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/our-common-agenda-policy-brief-information-integrity-en.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
- The ninth policy brief calls on governments to “uphold and strengthen the multilateral system as the only viable means to address an interlocking set of global threats” such as conflicts, civil wars, and violence from non-state actors that drive migration, suffering, and violations of human rights. It also calls for the elimination of nuclear weapons, “more sustainable and predictable financing” for U.N. peacebuilding initiatives, recognition of the links between climate change and conflict, universal ratification of “treaties banning inhumane and indiscriminate weapons” and new treaties on autonomous weapons and arms in space, reduction of military expenditures, and reform to make the Security Council more “just and representative.”17
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 9: A New Agenda for Peace,” July 2023, pp. 2, 3, 15, 19, 22, 23, 27, 30, and 32, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/our-common-agenda-policy-brief-new-agenda-for-peace-en.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
- The tenth policy brief notes that millions of children are not being schooled, that teaching remains “rooted in rote learning,” and that “education systems may even be working against our common goals by reinforcing harmful stereotypes and practices that drive inequality, division and environmental degradation.” The brief proposes making “curricula relevant for today and for the future” by focusing on sustainable development and “fostering a culture of civic responsibility, peace and respect for human diversity.” It recommends allocating “at least 6 per cent of gross domestic product and 20 per cent of total government spending to education,” increasing development assistance to “0.7 per cent of gross national income,” and “increasing the share of aid for education to 20 per cent of all official development assistance.”18
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 10: Transforming Education,” July 2023, pp. 3, 12, 13, and 14, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/our-common-agenda-policy-brief-transforming-education-en.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
- The final policy brief focuses on reforming the U.N. system with the goal of “[p]lacing gender equality, women’s rights and equitable geographical representation front and centre” and nurturing a “United Nations ecosystem that champions global diversity, inclusion, human rights, young people and environmental sustainability.”19
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 11: UN 2.0—Forward-thinking Culture and Cutting-edge Skills for Better United Nations System Impact,” September 2023, p. 11, https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/our-common-agenda-policy-brief-un-2.0-en.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
Collectively, these policy briefs recommend empowering the U.N., allocating more resources to and through the organization, shifting power and authority away from the United States and other developed countries to developing countries, and promoting leftist ideology and policy objectives, particularly with respect to climate change.
The Summit of the Future
The Summit of the Future, scheduled for September 22–23, is the capstone of the Pact for the Future.20
See, for example, United Nations, Summit of the Future: Our Common Agenda, “Summit of the Future Explainer,” https://www.un.org/en/summit-of-the-future (accessed September 6, 2024).
Preceding the annual U.N. General Debate, the Summit will capitalize on the presence of roughly two-thirds of the world’s heads of state and government to announce global endorsement of the Secretary-General’s policy objectives. Although the Pact for the Future will not be legally binding, it will subsequently be referenced and characterized in U.N. documents and resolutions as a commitment that all governments will be pressed to honor just as the similarly non-binding 2015 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the related Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) are treated as holy writ in Turtle Bay. Significantly, the Pact uses terms like “affirm,” “commit,” “decide,” “obligation,” “pledge,” and “will,” which are often used in binding treaties, and asserts those commitments sweepingly.
The Pact in several instances asserts positions that conflict with U.S. policy. For example, it “reaffirm[s] the obligation of all States to comply with the decisions of the International Court of Justice in cases to which they are parties”21
United Nations, “Pact for the Future: Rev.3,” p. 10.
even though the U.S. and other nations have withdrawn their consent to compulsory jurisdiction of the Court. Similarly, the Pact states that:
[W]e remain committed to actively promoting and protecting all human rights and fundamental freedoms, including civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights. This includes the right to development. We recommit to realize our respective obligations to respect, protect and fulfill human rights and to implement all relevant international human rights instruments. All human rights are universal, indivisible, interdependent and interrelated. Human rights are mutually reinforcing and must be treated in a fair and equal manner, on the same footing, and with the same emphasis.22
Ibid., pp. 23–24.
The U.S., however, has not ratified the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and other U.N. human rights treaties and does not recognize many of the “rights” promulgated by those agreements or various U.N. resolutions, including the “right to development.”23
Dylan Lang, U.S. Adviser to the Third Committee, “Explanation of Vote on a Third Committee Resolution on the Right to Development,” U.S. Mission to the United Nations, November 10, 2022, https://usun.usmission.gov/explanation-of-vote-on-a-third-committee-resolution-on-the-right-to-development/#:~:text=However%2C%20we%20note%20that%20the,individuals%20and%20which%20every%20individual (accessed September 9, 2024).
Some will argue that the Pact is non-binding and therefore of little concern. History says otherwise. Should the U.S. join the consensus in approving the Pact at the September Summit, U.N. officials and other governments will contend that the U.S. supported this language and will accuse America of violating its commitments if it fails to heed the action items included in the Pact.24
One need only look at the habitual criticism, earnest or politically motivated, received by the U.S. for failing to meet the 0.7 percent of national income development assistance target adopted by the General Assembly in 1970 even though the U.S. opposed the target at the time and has never endorsed it.
See Michael A. Clemens and Todd J. Moss, “Ghost of 0.7%: Origins and Relevance of the International Aid Target,” Center for Global Development Working Paper No. 68, September 2005, https://www.cgdev.org/sites/default/files/3822_file_WP68.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024); Lydia Swart, “The Voice of the Majority: The Group of 77’s Role in the UN General Assembly,” UN Chronicle, Vol. LI, No. 1 (May 2014), https://www.un.org/en/chronicle/article/voice-majority-group-77s-role-un-general-assembly (accessed September 6, 2024); U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres, “Secretary-General’s Remarks to the Closing of the High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development [as Delivered],” September 19, 2023, https://www.un.org/sg/en/content/sg/statement/2023-09-19/secretary-generals-remarks-the-closing-of-the-high-level-political-forum-sustainable-development-delivered (accessed September 6, 2024); and Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China, “The Hypocrisy and Facts of the United States Foreign Aid,” updated April 19, 2024, https://www.mfa.gov.cn/mfa_eng/xw/wjbxw/202405/t20240530_11344003.html (accessed September 6, 2024).
Eroding Legitimacy
The concerns highlighted within the Pact for the Future often have merit. Great-power rivalries, emerging technologies, outer space competition, development failures, instability, terrorism, migration, and other matters need to be addressed. In some cases, they will need to be addressed multilaterally to be addressed effectively, but the Pact focuses myopically on the U.N. as the sole, best solution. According to the Secretary-General, “Enhanced international cooperation is the only way we can adequately respond to these shocks, and the United Nations is the only organization with the reach and legitimacy to convene at the highest level and galvanize global action.”25
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 2: Strengthening the International Response to Complex Global Shocks—An Emergency Platform,” p. 24.
However, the U.N.’s history and recent events cast serious doubts on the Secretary-General’s assumptions regarding the organization’s ability to respond effectively to these concerns.
Most prominently, the U.N. Security Council is increasingly gridlocked due to the opposing interests of its veto-wielding members. This gridlock has prevented action on a host of critical issues like Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, but it has also impeded efforts to address other matters, including applying tighter sanctions and international pressure on North Korea and Iran, which flout the Pact’s goals of “strengthening the disarmament and non-proliferation architecture” and “total elimination of nuclear weapons.”26
United Nations, “Pact for the Future: Rev.3,” p. 14.
Although the current revision of the Pact is rather vague on Security Council reform, it endorses enlargement of the Council.27
Ibid., p. 21.
Most current proposals involve significant expansion of membership and, possibly, the veto, which would only exacerbate the current gridlock.28
Brett D. Schaefer, “A Narrow Path to Reforming the UN Security Council,” Geopolitical Intelligence Services, November 18, 2022, https://www.gisreportsonline.com/r/security-council-reform/ (accessed September 6, 2024), and Nile Gardiner and Brett D. Schaefer, “U.N. Security Council Expansion Is Not in the U.S. Interest,” Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 1876, August 18, 2005, https://www.heritage.org/report/un-security-council-expansion-not-the-us-interest.
In some instances, the Pact is a solution in search of a problem. For example, the draft Global Digital Compact, to be appended to the Pact, laments a digital divide that keeps many people from being able to access the Internet, but the Secretary-General’s Policy Brief notes that since 2002, access to the Internet has increased fivefold from 1 billion to 5.3 billion.29
United Nations, “Our Common Agenda Policy Brief 5: A Global Digital Compact—An Open, Free and Secure Digital Future for All,” p. 2.
This is evidence that the divide is being bridged, not evidence of the need for U.N. intervention.
In other instances, the Pact seeks to double down on ill-conceived efforts like the Sustainable Development Goals30
Brett D. Schaefer, “The United Nations’ Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals Fall Flat,” Heritage Foundation Commentary, January 31, 2023, https://www.heritage.org/global-politics/commentary/the-united-nations-agenda-2030-and-the-sustainable-development-goals, and Brett D. Schaefer, “The U.N. Sustainable Development Goals Are Beyond Saving,” Heritage Foundation Commentary, September 26, 2023, https://www.heritage.org/global-politics/commentary/the-un-sustainable-development-goals-are-beyond-saving.
that even the Secretary-General admits are “woefully off-track.”31
UN News, “Halfway to 2030, World ‘Nowhere Near’ Reaching Global Goals, UN Warns,” July 17, 2023, https://news.un.org/en/story/2023/07/1138777 (accessed September 6, 2024).
In typical U.N. fashion, getting them back on track supposedly requires a massive funding surge financed by huge increases in foreign assistance by the U.S. and other developed nations and “reform of the international financial architecture”32
United Nations, “Pact for the Future: Rev.3,” p. 24.
to lessen the voting power of the U.S. and developed countries and loosen restrictions on developing countries’ access to concessional finance.33
Ibid., pp. 25–27.
It is doubtful that an SDG stimulus or redistribution of voting power in international financial institutions would result in development advances—but both would advance the intense desire of many developing-country governments to secure more power and funding.
The Pact also jabs at the U.S. by including a commitment to finance the U.N. budgets “in full, on time and without conditions”34
Ibid., p. 21.
and calls for support for binding agreements to regulate or ban small arms and light weapons, autonomous weapons, land mines, ammunition, plastics, international taxation, and other matters about which the U.S. has voiced concerns.35
Ibid., pp. 4, 7, 11, and 15.
The most egregious problem with the Pact, however, is its failure to grapple with the fact that the U.N. has not fulfilled the purposes outlined in the U.N. Charter—maintaining international peace and security, respecting self-determination, coordinating governments to work toward common ends, and promoting human rights and fundamental freedoms—for the simple reason that most member states themselves oppose them. The following are some glaring examples.
Human Rights Bias. The Pact reiterates the need for U.N. human rights mechanisms to act with “impartiality, objectivity and non-selectivity.”36
Ibid., p. 24.
Yet the U.N. violates this impartiality with regularity. The most obvious example of bias is the U.N.’s treatment of Israel.37
Brett D. Schaefer, “The UN Human Rights Council Is Broken,” Geopolitical Intelligence Services, July 26, 2023, https://www.gisreportsonline.com/r/human-rights-council/ (accessed September 5, 2024).
In 2023, the General Assembly passed 21 resolutions condemning countries for human rights violations; of these, 14 focused on Israel. Contrast this with Russia (two resolutions) and Burma, Iran, North Korea, and Syria (one resolution each). The Human Rights Council similarly has a separate agenda item focused on Israel and one for all other nations, and more than one-third of the 301 condemnatory resolutions adopted by that body have targeted Israel.38
Statistics derived from UN Watch Database, country information last updated August 5, 2024; resolution database last updated August 5, 2024, https://unwatch.org/database/ (accessed September 6, 2024).
Of course, it is not just which countries are targeted, but which are not. For instance, China, Cuba, and Saudi Arabia have not been condemned by the U.N. General Assembly or the Human Rights Council in nearly two decades at least, according to a UN Watch database that tracks the record of such actions from 2006 to the present.39
Ibid.
Although self-determination is among the primary purposes and principles in the U.N. Charter, the majority of U.N. member states are not politically free according to Freedom House.40
Freedom House, Freedom in the World 2024: The Mounting Damage of Flawed Elections and Armed Conflict, February 2024, pp. 22–23, https://freedomhouse.org/sites/default/files/2024-02/FIW_2024_DigitalBooklet.pdf (accessed September 10, 2024).
It is therefore hardly surprising that they elect their peers to the Human Rights Council and vote for their values in the General Assembly.
But not even the Secretary-General “walks the walk” on human rights. His partiality to restrictions on freedom of expression is well established41
Joel Griffith, Emilie Kao, Thomas L. Jipping, and Brett D. Schaefer, “Combatting Hate with Freedom, Not Censorship: The Example of Anti-Semitism,” Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 3572, December 10, 2020, https://www.heritage.org/civil-society/report/combatting-hate-freedom-not-censorship-the-example-anti-semitism.
and is reflected in the Pact. The Pact states, “We will respect, protect, promote, and fulfill all human rights, recognizing their universality, indivisibility, interdependence and interrelatedness,” but the preference for economic, social, and cultural rights is clear. The only “rights” specifically endorsed in the Pact are the right to development (twice) and the “inalienable right of all countries to develop research, production and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes without discrimination.”42
United Nations, “Pact for the Future: Rev.3,” pp. 5, 14, and 24.
Civil and political rights are given short shrift, lumped into the catchall pledge to “respect, protect and fulfil all human rights and fundamental freedoms.”43
Ibid., p. 23.
Meanwhile, the right to freedom of expression is specifically under assault in the Pact, which calls on states to address “the risks to sustaining peace posed by disinformation, misinformation, hate speech and content inciting harm, including content disseminated through digital platforms.…”44
Ibid., p. 11.
The definitions of misinformation, disinformation, hate speech, and harmful content are highly subjective and are frequently used for political purposes as illustrated by the U.N. and individual governments during the COVID-19 pandemic.45
See Brett D. Schaefer and Steven Groves, “WHO Pandemic Treaty Remains Fatally Flawed,” Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 3810, February 5, 2024, https://www.heritage.org/global-politics/report/who-pandemic-treaty-remains-fatally-flawed.
Peacekeeping Failure. The Pact asserts that U.N. peace operations are “critical tools to maintain international peace and security.”46
United Nations, “Pact for the Future: Rev.3,” p. 12.
The truth is that the record of U.N. peacekeeping is mixed. There have been successful operations, such as those in the Ivory Coast (Côte d’Ivoire) and Liberia, but there also have been disasters in Somalia and Rwanda. Currently:
- South Sudan has been beset by violence despite robust U.N. peacekeeping operations in the country since before it became independent in 2011.
- Haiti remains a failed nation even after six peacekeeping operations.
- Some missions, such as the U.N. Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus (UNFICYP), remain in perpetual stasis with no progress decades after their deployment.
- The U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) operation allows Hezbollah to arm and launch attacks from an area that is supposed to be disarmed except for U.N. and Lebanese armed forces.47
United Nations, United Nations Peacekeeping, United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, “UNIFIL Mandate,” last updated December 2, 2019, https://unifil.unmissions.org/unifil-mandate (accessed September 6, 2024). The United Nations Completely Failed in Lebanon
Then there are disturbing, repeated incidences of sexual exploitation and abuse by U.N. peacekeepers, disastrous missteps like the introduction of cholera to Haiti, and failures to protect civilians even in the face of genocide.48
Camila Domonoske, “U.N. Admits Role in Haiti Cholera Outbreak That Has Killed Thousands,” NPR, August 18, 2016, https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/08/18/490468640/u-n-admits-role-in-haiti-cholera-outbreak-that-has-killed-thousands (accessed September 6, 2024); Child Rights International Network, “Sexual Abuse by UN Peacekeepers—Timeline,” https://home.crin.org/un-peacekeepers-timeline (accessed September 6, 2024); and David Rohde, “The United Nations Still Can’t Stop Civilian Slaughter,” The Atlantic, July 9, 2015, https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2015/07/bosnia-srebenica-united-nations-peacekeeping/398078/ (accessed September 6, 2024).
Recent trends indicate that U.N. member states see diminishing value in U.N. peacekeeping operations. There were 20 active peacekeeping operations during several years in the 1990s with nearly 70,000 uniformed personnel deployed in those operations. In 2015, more than 106,000 uniformed personnel were deployed on 16 operations.49
Brett D. Schaefer, “Peacekeeping Sunset,” Geopolitical Intelligence Services, September 6, 2023, https://www.gisreportsonline.com/r/un-peacekeeping/ (accessed September 6, 2024).
Currently, however, there are only 11 peacekeeping operations with less than 63,000 uniformed personnel.50
United Nations, United Nations Peacekeeping, “Peacekeeping Operations Fact Sheet,” March 31, 2024, https://peacekeeping.un.org/sites/default/files/peacekeeping_fact_sheet_march_2024_english_revision_2.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
Despite recent instability in Ethiopia, Sudan, Haiti, and elsewhere, the Security Council has declined to deploy new operations, and in 2023, the international community elected to support a non-U.N. operation for Haiti.51
UN News, “Haiti: Multinational Mission and the ‘Inexorable Requirement to Restore Security Conditions,’” May 20, 2024, https://news.un.org/en/story/2024/05/1149831 (accessed September 6, 2024).
Undefined Terrorism. The Pact condemns terrorism “in all its forms and manifestations” and reaffirms that “all terrorist acts are criminal and unjustifiable regardless of their motivation or how their perpetrators may justify them.”52
United Nations, “Pact for the Future: Rev.3,” p. 13.
Terrorism is indeed a threat to international peace and security, but the U.N. has never been able to agree on a definition of terrorism, which begs the question of how it proposes to fight something that it cannot identify.
True, the Security Council has a Counter-Terrorism Committee,53
United Nations, “Security Council—Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC): Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate (CTED),” https://www.un.org/securitycouncil/ctc/ (accessed September 6, 2024).
the U.N. has an Office of Counter-Terrorism,54
United Nations, “Office of Counter-Terrorism,” https://www.un.org/counterterrorism/ (accessed September 6, 2024).
and U.N. officials often condemn specific acts as terrorism, but these condemnations and categorizations of terrorism by the U.N. are inconsistent and politicized. For instance, two of the largest, most dangerous terrorist organizations—Hamas and Hezbollah—are not listed by the U.N.,55
United Nations, Security Council, “United Nations Security Council Consolidated List,” https://main.un.org/securitycouncil/en/content/un-sc-consolidated-list (accessed September 6, 2024).
and their acts of terrorism are enabled by some U.N. member states.56
Clayton Thomas, “Iran-Supported Groups in the Middle East and U.S. Policy,” Congressional Research Service In Focus No. IF12587, updated August 1, 2024, https://sgp.fas.org/crs/mideast/IF12587.pdf (accessed September 6, 2024).
Climate Scare. The Pact commits member states to enhancing their addressing of climate change by adopting ambitious emissions reductions that supposedly are necessary to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius and enhancing their funding of efforts to combat and adapt to climate change. The Secretary-General has been traversing the globe to issue dire warnings of the threat,57
See UN News, “From Tonga, Guterres Appeals for ‘a Surge in Funds to Deal with Surging Seas,’” August 16, 2024, https://news.un.org/en/story/2024/08/1153606 (accessed September 6, 2024); UN News, “Hopes for a Sustainable Planet Must Not ‘Melt Away’: Guterres,” November 27, 2023, https://news.un.org/en/story/2023/11/1144007 (accessed September 6, 2024); and Bjorn Lomborg, “Polar Bears, Dead Coral and Other Climate Fictions,” The Wall Street Journal, July 31, 2024, https://www.wsj.com/articles/polar-bears-dead-coral-and-other-climate-fictions-528b18ea (accessed September 6, 2024).
claiming that by failing to act, “humanity has opened the gates to hell” and unleashed extreme weather events.58
UN News, “‘Humanity Has Opened the Gates to Hell’ Warns Guterres as Climate Coalition Demands Action,” September 20, 2023, https://news.un.org/en/story/2023/09/1141082 (accessed September 6, 2024).
These hyperbolic declarations are not supported by the U.N.’s own reports,59
Roger Pielke Jr., “What the IPCC Actually Says About Extreme Weather,” The Honest Broker, July 19, 2023, https://rogerpielkejr.substack.com/p/what-the-ipcc-actually-says-about (accessed September 6, 2024).
but they do follow in a long line of proclamations of climate catastrophe that have failed to materialize.60
Post Editorial Board, “50 Years of Predictions that the Climate Apocalypse Is Nigh,” New York Post, November 12, 2021, https://nypost.com/2021/11/12/50-years-of-predictions-that-the-climate-apocalypse-is-nigh/ (accessed September 6, 2024).
More fundamentally, the U.N. plan to address this threat is fatally flawed. Even if every nation fully complied with its Paris commitments—a highly dubious prospect—the 1.5 degree goal is not achievable according to the U.N.’s own projections.61
Press release, “Nations Must Go Further than Current Paris Pledges or Face Global Warming of 2.5–2.9°C,” U.N. Environment Programme, November 20, 2023, https://www.unep.org/news-and-stories/press-release/nations-must-go-further-current-paris-pledges-or-face-global-warming (accessed September 6, 2024).
In a tacit admission, the Secretary-General recently stated that “[g]lobal leaders must step up” and do more by, among other things, “cutting global emissions by 43 percent compared to 2019 levels by 2030, and 60 percent by 2035” and “put[ting] the world on track to phase out fossil fuels…including [by] ending new coal projects and new oil and gas expansion now.”62
United Nations, “Secretary-General’s Press Conference on Sea Level Rise,” August 27, 2024, https://www.un.org/sg/en/content/sg/press-encounter/2024-08-27/secretary-generals-press-conference-sea-level-rise (accessed September 6, 2024).
These actions would be hugely disruptive and economically prohibitive, and their adoption would be extremely unlikely. Moreover, drastic steps seem to be at odds with recent projections indicating that extreme climate scenarios are less and less likely under current trends.63
Roger Pielke Jr., “The Good News About Climate Change,” The Honest Broker, April 20, 2023, https://rogerpielkejr.substack.com/p/the-good-news-about-climate-change (accessed September 6, 2024).
The U.N. should be an honest broker in its attempts to coordinate governments’ efforts to work toward common ends.
Policy Recommendations
In the words of the Secretary-General, the Summit of the Future “is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reinvigorate global action, recommit to fundamental principles, and further develop the frameworks of multilateralism so they are fit for the future.”64
Press release, “At ‘Our Common Agenda’ Talks, Secretary-General Says Summits on Future, Sustainable Development Goals ‘Last, Best Chance’ to Manage, Solve Global Challenges,” United Nations, August 4, 2022, https://press.un.org/en/2022/sgsm21399.doc.htm (accessed September 6, 2024).
The Pact for the Future does the opposite, positing unrealistic responsibilities for the U.N. as its influence and reputation fade. Making the U.N. fit for the future must include the prospect of retrenchment or alternative avenues. Instead, the Pact contemplates only doubling down in terms of scope, resources, and additional authority for the United Nations.
At the Summit of the Future, the assembled governments will dutifully state their support for the Pact, but the prospects for implementation and fidelity are dim. The Pact will join a long list of U.N. declarations that are honored generally in the breach and whose most practical use is to serve as a diplomatic and rhetorical cudgel to attack the U.S. when it does not provide the financial resources demanded by developing countries or ratify agreements or adopt policies sought by left-wing activists.
The prudent path for the U.S. would be not to join the consensus in supporting the Pact for the Future in the upcoming Summit. While many governments think little of violating pledges at these conferences, and while fewer still will be called to account for failing to honor the pledges, the U.S. will face constant pressure and criticism if it does not follow through on the Pact’s action items. Nonetheless, the Biden–Harris Administration will almost certainly support it—a mistake that the next Administration should correct. In the meantime, Congress can help to protect U.S. interests by:
- Declaring that the U.S. is not obliged to honor non-binding agreements like the Pact for the Future even if the Administration supports them. The U.S. is a constitutional republic that has three co-equal branches of government, and the Congress is not bound by political statements made by the President. This includes commitments to climate funding, such as the Paris Agreement, and obligations and commitments within the Sustainable Development Goals and development assistance targets, such as the 0.7 percent of gross national income that the U.N. would have developed countries devote to official development assistance.
- Affirming support for the long-standing U.S. practice of withholding or conditioning U.S. funding for the U.N. and other international organizations. The Constitution grants Congress the power of the purse, and it is within Congress’s authority to authorize and provide funding as it deems appropriate and to restrict access to funds contingent on specified conditions regardless of the commitments made by the President. In addition, Congress should explicitly reject calls in the Pact to refrain from “economic coercion,”65
United Nations, “Pact for the Future: Rev.3,” p. 3.
which is a vital tool to advance and protect U.S. foreign policy interests and objectives.
- Protecting U.S. authority in the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. As the largest financier, the U.S. has the largest share of voting power at 15.49 percent in the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development66
World Bank Group, “Voting Powers,” https://www.worldbank.org/en/about/leadership/votingpowers (accessed September 6, 2024), and Rebecca M. Nelson, “The World Bank,” Congressional Research Service In Focus No. IF11361, updated May 31, 2024, https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/IF/IF11361 (accessed September 6, 2024).
and 16.5 percent in the IMF.67
International Monetary Fund, “IMF Members’ Quotas and Voting Power, and IMF Board of Governors,” last updated September 6, 2024, https://www.imf.org/en/About/executive-board/members-quotas (accessed September 6, 2024), and Martin A. Weiss, “The International Monetary Fund,” Congressional Research Service In Focus No. IF10676, updated March 7, 2022, https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/IF/IF10676/10 (accessed September 6, 2024).
Blocking amendments to the organization’s respective Articles of Agreement requires more than 85 percent of the voting stock. Through legislative instruction and its power of the purse, Congress should oppose any changes that would reduce U.S. votes below this threshold.
- Recognizing the U.N.’s limitations on human rights. Most of the U.N. membership is neither politically nor economically free. Unfortunately, this majority holds sway over the human rights mechanisms in the U.N. system, which manifests as disproportionate action against Israel; the ability of repressive governments like Algeria, China, Cuba, Qatar, Russia, and Sudan to win election to the Human Rights Council;68
United Nations Human Rights Council, “Membership of the Human Rights Council for the 18th cycle (1 January–31 December 2024),” https://www.ohchr.org/en/hr-bodies/hrc/current-members (accessed September 6, 2024).
and the inability to gather enough support to dismiss individuals like Francesca Albanese, who retains her position as U.N. Special Rapporteur despite “antisemitic” statements.69
U.S. Department of State, “Department Press Briefing—March 27, 2024,” https://www.state.gov/briefings/department-press-briefing-march-27-2024/ (accessed September 6, 2024).
The U.S. should not fund or participate in such flawed bodies, nor should it fund treaty bodies or human rights mandates based on human rights treaties that the U.S. has not ratified.
- Opposing excessive expansion of the U.N. Security Council or new veto-wielding permanent members. The Biden–Harris Administration has supported significant expansion of the Security Council for several years and recently endorsed an even larger expansion, including six new permanent members.70
Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield, U.S. Representative to the United Nations, “Remarks by Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield at the Council on Foreign Relations on the Future of Multilateralism and UN Reform,” September 12, 2024, https://usun.usmission.gov/remarks-by-ambassador-linda-thomas-greenfield-at-the-council-on-foreign-relations-on-the-future-of-multilateralism-and-un-reform/ (accessed September 13, 2024).
This is a mistake. The U.S. has supported minor expansion of the Security Council’s membership to include major economic powers like Japan or rising powers like India for many years but historically has opposed significant expansion, especially if new permanent members are to be granted veto power, out of concern that it would exacerbate gridlock, thereby undermining the Council’s already limited ability to respond to threats to international peace and security.71
See, for example, R. Nicholas Burns, Under Secretary for Political Affairs, U.S. Department of State, “On-the-Record Briefing on UN Reform,” June 16, 2005, https://2001-2009.state.gov/p/us/rm/2005/48186.htm (accessed September 13, 2024).
Changes in the composition of the Security Council require amendment of the U.N. Charter, which must be adopted according to the ratification process by two-thirds of the member states and all permanent members of the Security Council. The Senate should reject amendments proposing significant expansion of the Council if they are submitted for its advice and consent.
Conclusion
The U.N. assumed great prominence in the post–Cold War era. With support from the world’s sole superpower, the U.N. was tasked with handling numerous peace and security matters and for a time deployed more armed forces as peacekeepers than were deployed by any nation other than the U.S. It assumed a mantle of moral judgement on human rights and international law. It placed itself at the center of international development efforts through the Millennium Development Goals and successor Sustainable Development Goals. Its budget and staff expanded significantly to manage these new mandates.
Its fall from grace has been steep. The international response to COVID-19, led by the World Health Organization, was inept and politicized. Treaty negotiations flounder on divergent interests and disagreements. Conflicts in Ukraine and between Israel and Iranian proxies in the Middle East reveal the U.N.’s impotence in addressing serious security crises. Even in Africa, where it historically has exerted significant influence, the U.N. has proven wanting, unable to address civil wars in Sudan, Ethiopia, and elsewhere. Governments are increasingly asking U.N. peacekeeping operations to leave.
The Pact for the Future is an attempt by the Secretary-General to restore the U.N. to prominence and centrality in world affairs. He should instead be calling for reassessment, retrenchment, and refocus. There are areas and activities, such as humanitarian assistance, where the U.N. can provide unique contributions. Hubristic efforts like the unrealistic Pact for the Future merely divert the U.N. and, as they fall short of achieving their promised goals, further erode its reputation.
Brett D. Schaefer is the Jay Kingham Senior Research Fellow in International Regulatory Affairs in the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom at The Heritage Foundation.
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The UN’s [Death] Pact for the [Globalist] Future
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The UN Voted To Have Jews Forced Out Of Their Biblical Homeland | The 700 Club
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Electronic devices belonging to Hezbollah members have exploded for a second day, leaving Lebanon in a Panic. As continuous conflict between Israel and Palestine grow exceedingly worse, the UN unanimously votes that Israel leave their biblical lands of Judea and Samaria and turn it over to the Palestinians. Thousands of Israelis have been displaced from their homes since the Hamas attack. Little ones especially lived in fear and confusion. See how you lightened the hearts of these suffering children and what it meant to their parents. September 19th, 2024
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