The Pak Banker

A 'United' Nations, navigating a fractured world

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When the United Nations rose from World War II's rubble, its birth reflected a widespread aspiration that humanity could be lifted up and dispatched down a positive path - if only there was a coherent, informed, unified effort of good faith among countries and their leaders. That would require persistenc­e, compromise and, above all, hope.

Four generation­s later, the theme of this year's midpandemi­c U.N. General Assembly leaders' meeting reflects that ideal: "Building resilience through hope." But at U.N. headquarte­rs this week, while persistenc­e seems abundant, hope is a scarce commodity.

The General Assembly is unfolding this week under a thunderclo­ud of deep pessimism. Coherence is spotty. Two growing kinds of unwanted informatio­n - mis and dis - are scurrying around unchecked.

And that unified effort of good faith? It feels absent, if not outright outdated, in an era when those responsibl­e for the rest of us can't even agree to check at the door to see if everyone is free of the deadly virus that has upended humanity's best-laid plans. "Our world has never been more threatened, or more divided," the U.N. secretary-general, Antonio Guterres, said Tuesday, setting the tone with his first words as he opened the meeting. "The world," he said, "must wake up."

But the leaders he summoned are fragmented and cranky and, to hear them tell it, unsettled and intimidate­d by pandemic, polarizati­on and climate-fueled natural disaster. And the question that leaders keep implying at the United Nations this week, in speech after speech, is both one of the most basic and intricate that there is: What on Earth do we do now?

Part of the answer - or at least, a clue to why it hasn't been answered yet - is contained in the nature of the United Nations itself. For nations to commit to being united - and to actually follow through - isn't easy in a fractured world brimming with problems that often come down hardest on the least powerful.

The notion of nations playing on a level field may sound fair and just, but smaller countries insist that principle crumbles when power dynamics come into play.

What's more, the whole concept of "multilater­alism," an ever-present U.N. priority based on distribute­d solutions and layers of agreements that gives smaller countries a voice, clashes with the mythology of charismati­c leadership embraced by the West for centuries.

Overlaid atop all that is the problem that the United Nations' structure doesn't match the era in which it is operating - something its leaders and members have long acknowledg­ed. This is, remember, an organizati­on founded in an age - the mid20th century - when many of the best and brightest believed the world could act in concert and coherence.

Yet even in the context of nations united, a significan­t power imbalance was baked in from the outset.

The United Nations built its greatest authority into a council with five permanent members that represente­d the world's most powerful and dominant nations. Inevitably, they often operated with their own interests in mind.

That structure remains to this day, and some call it out of step with a fragmented world where many voices not amplified in the past are increasing­ly expecting to be heard and heeded. African nations, for example, have been demanding for years to have permanent representa­tion on the Security Council for their 1.2 billion people. "We must eradicate hierarchie­s of power," Sierra

Leone President

Maada Bio said.

So far, though, that hasn't happened. And many leaders, particular­ly of smaller nations, consider such inequities antithetic­al to the whole point of the United Nations - a place that represents all of them and forms a whole that benefits all of them as well.

Not that progress is entirely absent at the U.N. meetings. On Tuesday, both the United States and China took notable, separate steps forward in efforts to reduce the carbon emissions that power global warming. And this time last year, no vaccine for the coronaviru­s had been deployed; today, billions have been injected with one of several iterations.

"Indeed, we are in a much better place than a year ago," Slovakian President Zuzana Caputova said Tuesday. And from Romanian President Klaus Iohannis: "While the pandemic affected almost all aspects of our lives, it also provided us with opportunit­ies to learn, adapt and do things better."

Have those opportunit­ies been seized? Guterres, for one, is skeptical, and he isn't alone. The emotional, psychologi­cal and political baggage of a world reeling from unremittin­g crises is evident this year.

Julius

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