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United Nations Security Council – All You Need To Know



The United Nations Security Council is one of the six important organs of The United Nations. This wing is entrusted with the task of ensuring international peace and security. This organ of the United Nations has 15 members and each of them has one vote. As per the charter of the United Nations all the remaining nations are expected to follow the decision taken by the members of the council.

This council primarily is a principal organ of United Nations and is empowered to take obligatory decisions for the member nations. It has powers of international peace keeping and authorizing military action. This organ of the UN is considered the most crucial of all of the six other principal organs.

History of United Security Council

Motto of UNSC and its Members

What Does UNSC Do?

 The Security Council has some detailed functions laid out to perform in the charter. As mentioned in the United Nations website some of the powers and functions are:

  1. To ensure peace and security by following the rules those are laid out in the charter of United Nations.
  2. It also investigate and examine situations are ma potentially lead to failure of diplomatic talks.
  3. After detailed investigation it recommends procedures for peaceful resolution of the dispute.
  4. It also has the authority to call upon other member nations which have an edge in the trade with those countries to partially interrupt economic relations with the disputing country.
  5. It can formulate plans to regulate the enrichment and testing of arms especially the nuclear arms.
  6. It can authorise member countries to take military action against the aggressive nation.
  7. It can recommend new member into the council
  8. It has he powers to debate and discuss issues that are a threat to international peace and security.

India and Unit Nations Security Council:

India has been demanding permanent membership of quite some years now. It has justified its demand by mentioning factors like India’s high population, world’s largest liberal democracy. It is fifth largest economy in the world and third largest in terms of purchasing power parity in the world. It participated in as many as 40 peacekeeping missions since the formation of United Nations. All these factors make India’s demand for permanent membership a legitimate one.

The Bottom Line

Security Council though has been successful in many mission in these decades it has been a failure in peacekeeping missions in Rwanda and Bosnia which raised many questions on the effectiveness of the United Nations.  The permanent members of the Security Council should work towards charting pout better peace missions and also expanding the membership of the council to other deserving nations. This makes the global organisation more democratic and one that is worth turning towards in times of dispute and diplomatic failure.