As the world convulses in war and contentiousness, its leaders convene at the UN to figure it out
The UN faces a 15% budget cut amid US funding withdrawal while leaders debate wars in Gaza and Ukraine and push for a two-state Israeli-Palestinian solution.
- World leaders are convening at the United Nations during a volatile time marked by wars in Gaza and Ukraine, as well as global challenges.
- Secretary-General Antonio Guterres stated that international cooperation is straining under pressures unseen in our lifetimes.
- Richard Gowan, U.N. director for the International Crisis Group, noted the focus on President Donald Trump's appearance and the situation in Gaza.
- Gowan believes the United States and other countries will continue engaging with the United Nations despite funding and staffing cuts.
99 Articles
99 Articles
The UN is running out of cash. Can it reform before it's too late?
As the United Nations turns 80, it’s showing its age. Born from the ashes of World War II with a mission to prevent future conflict, the UN now faces a world aflame: war in Gaza, Ukraine, and Sudan; humanitarian disasters in Haiti, Yemen, and the DRC; over 120 million people displaced. But even as the crises pile up, the UN is running out of money—and fast.Ian Bremmer breaks down the UN’s looming financial crisis. The world body is funded entire…

As the world convulses in war and contentiousness, its leaders convene at the U.N. to figure it out
UNITED NATIONS — World leaders begin convening Monday at one of the most volatile moments in the United Nations’ 80-year history, and the challenges they face are as dire as ever if not more so: unyielding wars in Gaza and Ukraine, escalating changes in the U.S. approach to the world, hungry people everywhere and technologies that are advancing faster than the understanding of how to manage them. Read more...
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