Multilateral Institutions & Global Issues
UPSC Mains Examiner and Strategic Content Synthesizer. "United Nations — Reforms, UNSC Permanent Membership Bid". International Relations $\rightarrow$ Multilateral Institutions & Global Issues. One editorial (2026-05-30) discussing the degradation of the rules-based international order, "optional" international law for powerful states, the erosion of Westphalian norms/UNCLOS/Arms Control/IHL, the enforcement vacuum (UNSC veto), and the vulnerability of the Global South/India.
* 3-4 paragraphs synthesis.
* Incorporate recent developments.
* Focus: Core Challenge, Government/Policy Response, Way Forward.
* Format: HTML (<b>, <ul>/<li>, <p>). No markdown blocks. Raw HTML string.
* Style: Exam-ready for UPSC Mains GS papers.
* *Core Challenge:* The UN, specifically the UNSC, is suffering from a crisis of legitimacy and efficacy. The "rules-based order" is becoming a facade where powerful states bypass law (making it "optional"). This creates an enforcement vacuum.
* *Impact:* Erosion of sovereignty, maritime law, and humanitarian law. This disproportionately affects the Global South (and India) who lack raw power and rely on laws.
* *India's Position/Response:* India seeks permanent membership to represent the Global South and bring democratic legitimacy to the UNSC.
* *Way Forward:* Democratization of institutions, structural reform of the veto, and a return to strategic restraint.
* *Paragraph 1: The Core Challenge.* Start with the systemic crisis. Mention the shift from a binding framework to "optional guidelines." Reference the Thucydidean reality (power over principle).
* *Paragraph 2: The Institutional Vacuum.* Focus on the UNSC. The veto power as a tool for impunity. Mention the specific pillars failing (Westphalian norms, UNCLOS, arms control).
* *Paragraph 3: Implications for India & Global South.* Why does this matter for India? Lack of legal guardrails makes them vulnerable to coercion. This justifies the push for UNSC membership—not just for status, but for systemic survival.
* *Paragraph 4: Way Forward/Strategic Synthesis.* Democratization, reform of the veto, and restoring the rules-based order to avoid global anarchy.
* *Check:* Did I use <b>? Yes.
* *Check:* Did I use <p>? Yes.
* *Check:* Did I use <ul>/<li>? Yes, I can use it for the pillars of erosion.
* *Check:* Is it raw HTML? Yes.
* *Check:* No markdown? Yes.
* *Self-Correction during drafting:* Ensure the tone is academic and analytical (typical of a high-scoring UPSC answer). Use terms like "normative collapse," "institutional enforcement vacuum," and "democratization of global governance."<p>The contemporary global order is witnessing a systemic <b>crisis of legitimacy</b>, where the "rules-based international order" is increasingly perceived as a facade for the interests of a few powerful states. The core challenge lies in the transition of international law from a binding framework to a set of <b>'optional guidelines'</b> for the permanent members of the UN Security Council (UNSC). This "Thucydidean" shift—where raw power supersedes established principle—has resulted in a normative collapse, leaving the United Nations unable to enforce its own charters against major powers, thereby creating a dangerous <b>institutional enforcement vacuum</b>.</p>
This erosion of the international legal architecture is most evident in the degradation of four critical pillars:
For India and the broader Global South, this trend is particularly perilous. Unlike the great powers, these nations rely on international law as their primary shield against geopolitical coercion. India’s persistent bid for a permanent seat at the UNSC is therefore not merely a quest for diplomatic status, but a strategic necessity to ensure that the voices of the developing world are represented in the decision-making processes that define global security and legality. India's policy response emphasizes "reformed multilateralism," arguing that the UN must evolve to reflect current geopolitical realities rather than the power dynamics of 1945.
The way forward necessitates a comprehensive democratization of global institutions. To prevent a slide into total global anarchy, the international community must move toward a structural reform of the UNSC, including a limitation on the veto and the expansion of permanent membership to include diverse regional representatives. Ultimately, restoring the efficacy of the UN requires a return to strategic restraint and the establishment of independent penal machinery that ensures international law is applied universally, regardless of a state's military or economic prowess.
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