Initial Charter of the New United Nations

Founding

2041
15/1

After the nuclear destruction of Jerusalem, all members nations--with the exception of seven--dissolve the United Nations. A new draft charter with the resolution to restructure global government is then introduced, implemented, and enacted.


Outrage over the original United Nations Security Council vetoed and counter-vetoed a number of actions that the rest of the world considered would have prevented the so-called Second Holocaust and the Great Genocide.   The United States, Russia, China, the United Kingdom, and France, permanent members of the Security Council, naturally objected. But the outrage was so intense, nations such as Germany, Brazil, Israel, Japan, and Indonesia and coalitions such as Oceania, the Arab League, the rest of the European Union, and the African Union joined together and walked out en masse.   The new draft charter, which was much more democratic and egalitarian than the initial U.N., was introduced on January 15, 2041. Much of the original U.N. structure remained, but the most notable change was the rotation of nations in leadership roles to address the concerns and needs of smaller nations, more democratic representation, and the abolishing of the permanent Security Council for Revised United Nations Security Council (RUNSC).

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