Syllabus: GS2/ International Relations
Context
- The need to make the UNSC more representative of contemporary geopolitical realities has brought renewed focus to India’s candidature for permanent membership.
Need for the Reforms in the UNSC
- Non-representative Council membership: When the UN was founded in 1945, the Council consisted of 11 members out of 51 members of UN; around 22%.
- Today, there are 193 member-states of the UN, and only 15 members of the Council — fewer than 8%.
- Inability to Address Conflicts: The current composition of the council has an inability to address critical conflicts and maintain international peace and security.
- Changes in World Order: The world has undergone significant changes since 1945 and the new realities need to be reflected in the permanent membership.
- Veto Power: Currently, only the five permanent members hold veto powers and through its use have stalled action in the Council to address global challenges and conflicts such as in Ukraine and Gaza.
- The remaining 10 nations in the Council are elected to sit as non-permanent members for two-year terms and do not have veto powers.
- Im-balance of Power: The composition of the Council also gives undue weightage to the balance of power of those days.
- Europe, accounting for 5% of the world’s population, controls 33% of the seats in any given year (and that does not count Russia, another European power).
- Legitimacy: The disproportionate power held by the five permanent members, particularly their veto power lead to a perception of unfairness and lack of legitimacy.
United Nations Security Council (UNSC)
- It is one of the UN’s six main organs and is aimed at maintaining international peace and security.
- It held its first session on 17th January 1946 in Westminster, London.
- Headquarters: New York City.
- Membership: The Council is composed of 15 Members.
- Five Permanent members with veto power: China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States.
- Ten Non Permanent members
Election of Non Permanent members
- Each year the General Assembly elects five non-permanent members (out of 10 in total) for a two-year term.
- The 10 non-permanent seats are distributed on a regional basis as follows:
- Five for African and Asian States;
- One for the Eastern European States;
- Two for the Latin American and Caribbean States;
- Two for Western European and other States.
- To be elected to the Council, candidate countries need a two-thirds majority of ballots of the Member States that are present and voting in the Assembly.
- The elections were held with each of the 193 member states casting its vote in a secret ballot.
- More than 50 United Nations Member States have never been Members of the Security Council.
- India last sat at the UN high table as a non-permanent member in 2021-22.
Factors Strengthening India’s Bid for a Permanent Seat
- Demographic Weight: India, as the world’s largest democracy, represents one-sixth of its total population.
- Economic Powerhouse: India ranks among the top three in purchasing power parity, with estimates placing its 2026 GDP PPP around $20 trillion.
- It influences global trade flows, technology supply chains, energy markets, and developmental finance.
- Military advancement: India’s armed forces are among the world’s largest, and it is among the top defence spenders, with its 2026 defence budget reaching a record $86 billion.
- India is currently among the few countries with a credible nuclear triad.
- Contribution to international peace and security: Its troop contribution has been one of the largest since 1948, despite suffering one of the highest numbers of fatalities among UN peacekeeping contributors.
- This reflects India’s commitment to multilateralism and its willingness to support UN mandates at all costs.
- Voice of the Global South: India demonstrated its leadership in the International Solar Alliance, Global Biofuels Alliance, G20 presidency, and the AI Impact Summit in the Global South etc.
- On maritime security, its role in the Indian Ocean shows a strong commitment to freedom of navigation and adherence to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and its institutions, such as the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea.
Challenges to India’s Bid
- Complex Amendment Process: Any reform requires approval by two-thirds of the UN General Assembly and ratification by all five permanent members. This makes institutional reform extremely difficult.
- Chinese Opposition: China remains cautious about India’s elevation to permanent-member status and has often avoided explicit support for India’s permanent seat aspirations.
- Coffee Club:Uniting for Consensus (UfC) or Coffee Club, is a movement that developed in the 1990s in opposition to the possible expansion of permanent seats in the United Nations Security Council.
- Under the leadership of Italy, it aims to counter the bids for permanent seats proposed by G4 nations (Brazil, Germany, India, and Japan).
Concluding remarks
- A permanent seat for India at the Council would strengthen stability in Asia and beyond.
- It would closely align the institution with changing geopolitical realities and establish the legitimacy of its decisions, offering the UNSC a chance to revamp itself.
Source: IE
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