Booting Putin out of the UN permanent five club is more complicated than you think
A few days after Russia its armed forces into Ukraine, US senators called for Russiaās permanent seat in the UN Security Council (UNSC), citing Putinās āthuggery.. aggressionā and disrespect for international law, reiterating that this should not go .
The irony could not go unnoticed: Republican politicians who were not against US wars, with some even opposing the withdrawal of troops, are going all out for doing the exact same thing. The underlined presumption that respect for international law was the criterion to āgrantā a permanent seat, and veto power, in the UNSC is also ironic.
Irony aside, it seems that it has escaped the senatorsā notice that in order to expel a country, or remove its permanent seat in the UNSC, all the five permanent members (P5) should approve; Russia is one of them.
Regardless of the senators and their intentions, they did bring up a very critical matter that the United Nations, whose absence is felt in this crisis.
"The underlined presumption that respect for international law was the criterion to 'grant'Ģża permanent seat, and veto power, in the UNSC is also ironic"
Attempts to expel
Attempts to get rid of any of the UNSCās P5, particularly Russia and China, is not new. From the UNās formation in 1948 until 1971, when Chinaās seat was held by the Taiwan-based government of the Republic of China (ROC) and the Nixon Administration recognised the Beijing-based communist government as the Government of China and hence the Chinese UNSC seat was given to Beijingās Peopleās Republic of China (PRC). This experience should make it unquestionable for the Chinese government to have a discussion on removing any oneās veto power.
Similarly, Russiaās seat was debated following the collapse of the USSR, revolving around whether the Russian Federation had the right to get the USSRās permanent seat and in the UNSC.
The debate was on if Russia is a āSuccessor Stateā or a āContinuing Stateā under international law in which a successor state is basically a new country that emerged after the collapse of an older one, and hence it would not keep the same rights and liabilities of the older one, and would have to renegotiate them ā this is the current Ukrainian stance.
"There is universal agreement that Russia's war on Ukraine breaches main principles of international law." on how the very fabric of the international legal order is unraveling in the wake of Russia's Ukraine Invasion š
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On the other hand, a continuing state is the larger part of a previous country that lost some of its territory, and therefore it would still maintain its rights and liabilities. This was Russiaās position, and what had eventually happened.
Interestingly enough, the UK is also one country that is uncomfortable about this issue. Imagine if another independence referendum takes place in Scotland and ends with separation, would England and Wales be a continuing or successor state(s)?
On the necessity of reform
Yet, it is vital to talk about the UN Security Council, which has paralysed the whole UN system. Undoubtedly, the chief reason is the veto power held by the P5, those who have this power, simply use it whenever they need to; as seen with Russia recently, and as well the US over time to protect itself and its allies.
Calls for reforming the UNSC date back to the independence of the Global South from colonisation after European powers were exhausted by WWII. Seeing it through the lenses of equal sovereignty among states, the UN was supposed to be the place to manifest and reinforce that equality. But in reality, it was quite obvious that āsome states are more equal than the othersā.
From a realist perspective, France and Britain, both permanent members with veto, has dramatically decreased in power since the formation of the UN, and we can see that certain emerging powers, like Germany, Japan, India and Brazil (the so-called āG4ā), arguing that them are āmore entitledā to be permanent members. No doubt, other emerging powers will soon argue the same.
What could be done?
Russiaās war has clearly shown that the current is on the brink of collapse and reforming the UN is crucial.
"To be able to hold Russia accountable for its conduct requires the same towards the US, China, France and the UK - all of whom have their crimes. So, who is going to hold accountable who?"
There have been many proposals regarding the UNSC; whether increasing permanent membership (the most well-known is Kofi Annanās 2005 proposal), or regulating it in a way that makes the veto harder to use. So far, all these proposals were merely mental exercises since the P5 are comfortable with the status quo.
As it stands, it seems that the most feasible way to fix the UNSC is by re-balancing its relationship with the UN General Assembly; the more democratic and truly representative body of the UN.
Currently, the only mechanism available within the UNās legal regime is UNGA Resolution 377, or āUniting for Peaceā resolution which allows the UNGA, in cases where the UNSC is paralysed by the lack of unanimity among its P5 members, to international peace and security, including, if necessary, the use of force.
Systematically activating āUniting for Peaceā could help redefine the relationship between the UNGA and the UNSC until a significant structural change occurs.
Would expelling Russia fix things?
It is important to remember that the veto power was not negotiated nor rewarded for good conduct, but rather imposed by the logic of gunfire, in which WWIIās victors dictated the terms.
To be able to hold Russia accountable for its conduct requires the same towards the US, China, France and the UK - all of whom have their crimes. So, who is going to hold accountable who? Thatās why serious reform is so important so the UN performs the role it was created for.
Reforming the UNSC is not simply a matter of administrative reform, but rather an international security priority to save the entire institution and increasing the UNGAās authority and mandate could be the first step. Today, the world has a choice to make: peacefully negotiate reform or face another total war, with new victors dictating a new imperfect and unfair regime.
Hassan Ben Imran is a Board Member at Law for Palestine and an analyst and writer on international law in conflict zones, Palestine and Middle Eastern affairs.
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