Seventy-five years after its founding, the United Nations (UN) — the world’s foremost intergovernmental organisation — stands at a crossroads. Conceived in 1945 with the noble mission of maintaining international peace and security, fostering cooperation, and harmonising global action, the UN today faces growing skepticism about its effectiveness.
Repeated failures in preventing or resolving crises in Ukraine, Gaza, Sudan, and Syria, coupled with Security Council paralysis, have raised fundamental questions—Has the UN lost its relevance in the 21st century?
Why the UN Is Losing Relevance?
1. Veto Paralysis in the Security Council
The veto power of the five permanent members — the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Russia, and China — has become the single biggest obstacle to decisive action.
For example, Russia has blocked UN resolutions against its actions in Crimea (2014) and Ukraine (2022), while the United States has repeatedly vetoed resolutions criticising Israel’s actions in Gaza.
Similar vetoes have stalled UN action in Syria, Sudan, and Tibet, showing how an outdated system created in 1945 allows a few powerful nations to stop collective action.
2. Failure to Prevent Conflicts and Protect Civilians
From Rwanda (1994) and Bosnia (1990s) to Iraq (2003) and Gaza (2023), the UN’s record in conflict prevention has been marred by inaction and indecision.
Peacekeeping missions have often been undermined by weak mandates and delayed responses, reducing the UN to a platform for symbolic resolutions rather than effective intervention.
3. Selective Humanitarianism and Double Standards
The UN’s interventions have often reflected geopolitical selectivity. It swiftly authorized NATO’s intervention in Libya (2011) but failed to ensure post-conflict reconstruction.
Meanwhile, humanitarian crises in Africa and Asia receive far less attention compared to those in geopolitically significant regions — feeding perceptions of Western bias and moral inconsistency.
4. Financial Dependence and Fragility
The UN’s financial health remains precarious. The United States contributes nearly 22% of its regular budget, giving Washington disproportionate influence.
During the Trump administration, threats to slash UN funding by up to 83% revealed the fragility of its financing model. Moreover, around 40 member states default annually on their dues, while humanitarian funding remains heavily donor-dependent — undermining the UN’s independence and capacity to implement ambitious goals like the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda.
5. Bureaucratic Inefficiency and Weak Enforcement
A bloated bureaucracy and slow-moving decision processes have earned the UN a reputation for inefficiency.
Even landmark agreements such as the Paris Climate Accord (2015) lack robust enforcement mechanisms. As a result, the UN often issues declarations rather than delivers solutions on pressing global issues like climate change, terrorism, and pandemics.
6. Geopolitical Capture and Location Bias
The location of the UN headquarters in New York symbolically and practically tilts its power dynamics toward the United States and Western bloc.
Critics propose rotating or relocating the headquarters to conflict-prone or Global South regions — such as Kigali, Kyiv, or Khartoum — to make it more representative, grounded, and globally legitimate.
7. Leadership Deficit and Crisis of Courage
Once a beacon of moral authority, the UN is now seen as “toothless and clawless.”
Analysts argue it has lost the courage to challenge great powers or act decisively in humanitarian crises. The absence of bold, principled leadership has eroded its credibility and global influence.
8. Rise of Multipolar Alternatives
The rise of regional and global groupings like the G20, BRICS, SCO, AU, and ASEAN reflects a shift toward multipolar cooperation.
Nations increasingly rely on these platforms for diplomacy, crisis management, and economic coordination — mechanisms perceived as more flexible, inclusive, and responsive than the UN’s outdated structures.
Why the UN Still Matters
Despite its flaws, the UN remains indispensable. It provides a universal platform for dialogue, coordinates humanitarian aid, and drives global agendas such as climate action, sustainable development, and human rights.
As former Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld aptly observed, “The UN was not created to take mankind to heaven, but to save humanity from hell.”
Without it, the world might indeed be hungrier, poorer, and more violent.
Key Reforms to Revive the UN
- Reform the Security Council
- Expand membership to reflect current global power realities and ensure equitable regional representation.
- Limit or suspend veto use in cases involving genocide, war crimes, or humanitarian crises.
- Ensure Financial Sustainability
- Broaden the funding base and reduce dependence on a few major donors.
- Encourage predictable, mandatory contributions from all members.
- Strengthen Peacekeeping and Enforcement
- Equip missions with clear mandates, rapid deployment capability, and adequate resources.
- Enhance enforcement of international treaties, including those on climate and arms control.
- Enhance Global Representation
- Consider rotating or decentralizing the UN headquarters to bring the institution closer to regions most affected by conflict and poverty.
- Promote Synergy with Regional Platforms
- Collaborate with organizations like G20, BRICS, AU, and ASEAN to strengthen multilateralism and global governance.
The United Nations stands at a defining moment. If it continues on its current path, it risks becoming a symbolic relic rather than a functional guardian of global peace and security.
For the UN to reclaim its relevance, it must reform its structure, revive its moral courage, and rebuild trust in multilateralism. Only then can it fulfill its founding promise — to “save succeeding generations from the scourge of war.”





























