Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Business as usual

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Last week the United Nations General Assembly elected Egypt, Japan, Senegal, Ukraine and Uruguay to two-year terms as non-permanent members of the 15-member UN Security Council to succeed Chad, Chile, Jordan, Lithuania and Nigeria, which are rotating off the council.

The Security Council is constitute­d of five permanent members, China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States, each bearing a veto, which means that each separately can block any action of the council.

The changes in non-permanent membership decided last week don’t make much difference to the United States, although the addition of Ukraine, with its current divided status, leaves a question mark as for whom exactly its government’s representa­tive speaks.

The five permanent members are in place because the creation of the United Nations was one outcome of the World War II. Those five won the war. Until 1971, China’s seat was held by Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalis­t China, by that time lodged on the island of Taiwan. Reality finally prevailed and the People’s Republic of China—Communist China—took Taiwan’s place on the council.

Since then, there have been other reality-based drives to change the compositio­n of the council. If permanent membership were based on population, India, with 1.3 billion, would have a good claim. If it were based on regional justice, there would probably be one European Union representa­tive country, not two. If permanent membership were based entirely on region, complicate­d questions of which country would represent a region could become bitter.

The complexity of that question is what has preserved the status quo since 1945. The beat goes on.

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