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TelAve News/10889024
BRUSSELS - TelAve -- A legal analysis released today by the Noble World Foundation (NWF) shows that the European Union (EU) could become a full UN member without amending the UN Charter, reshaping global governance and weakening the Security Council's permanent members' veto power. The analysis, titled "The Undefined State: How the UN Can Admit the European Union," highlights a long‑overlooked feature of the Charter: Article 4 limits membership to "states" but never defines the term. This silence, originally intended to preserve flexibility, has become a legal doorway.
"Direct Charter amendment is impossible—it requires the consent of the five permanent members," said Shiv R. Jhawar, founder of NWF and author of the analysis. "But the Charter contains another provision, so ordinary it has been overlooked for generations. That silence is not a weakness. It is the key to transformation."
The analysis uses a key UN precedent. In December 1991, after the dissolution of the USSR, the Russian Federation assumed the Soviet Union's permanent Security Council seat—including its veto—through a simple letter, not through Charter amendment or a General Assembly vote. Member states did not object. The system adapted to political reality without amending the Charter.
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"The bar for EU membership is actually lower than the bar the UN already crossed for Russia," Jhawar noted. "If the UN could reinterpret 'USSR' to mean 'Russian Federation'—a different state by any traditional measure—it can reinterpret 'state' to admit a European Federation formed by democratic choice."
If the 27 EU member states unify into a single federal state, they would cease to exist as separate UN members. France and the United Kingdom would lose individual Security Council seats. Their vetoes would not be shared or surrendered—they would be transformed through integration. Under the UN's long‑standing "black box" approach, the organization does not examine internal constitutional arrangements. It asks only whether a single authority speaks with one voice and can be held accountable for Charter obligations. A unified Europe would meet that test.
Beyond Europe, the same principle applies to other regions. A united African Union, Latin American Federation, or Arab Union may transform the General Assembly from a chamber of nations to a platform for continents. Such integration would dilute the veto's power without requiring its abolition.
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"The veto does not need to be abolished," the analysis concludes. "It needs to be diluted until it becomes irrelevant. When France and the United Kingdom are absorbed into a European Federation, two vetoes disappear. When Africa unifies, the demand for African permanent representation becomes impossible to ignore."
The full analysis is available at:
👉 https://www.nobleworld.org/why-the-european-union-is-not-a-un-member/
To learn more, visit nobleworld.org
"Direct Charter amendment is impossible—it requires the consent of the five permanent members," said Shiv R. Jhawar, founder of NWF and author of the analysis. "But the Charter contains another provision, so ordinary it has been overlooked for generations. That silence is not a weakness. It is the key to transformation."
The analysis uses a key UN precedent. In December 1991, after the dissolution of the USSR, the Russian Federation assumed the Soviet Union's permanent Security Council seat—including its veto—through a simple letter, not through Charter amendment or a General Assembly vote. Member states did not object. The system adapted to political reality without amending the Charter.
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"The bar for EU membership is actually lower than the bar the UN already crossed for Russia," Jhawar noted. "If the UN could reinterpret 'USSR' to mean 'Russian Federation'—a different state by any traditional measure—it can reinterpret 'state' to admit a European Federation formed by democratic choice."
If the 27 EU member states unify into a single federal state, they would cease to exist as separate UN members. France and the United Kingdom would lose individual Security Council seats. Their vetoes would not be shared or surrendered—they would be transformed through integration. Under the UN's long‑standing "black box" approach, the organization does not examine internal constitutional arrangements. It asks only whether a single authority speaks with one voice and can be held accountable for Charter obligations. A unified Europe would meet that test.
Beyond Europe, the same principle applies to other regions. A united African Union, Latin American Federation, or Arab Union may transform the General Assembly from a chamber of nations to a platform for continents. Such integration would dilute the veto's power without requiring its abolition.
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"The veto does not need to be abolished," the analysis concludes. "It needs to be diluted until it becomes irrelevant. When France and the United Kingdom are absorbed into a European Federation, two vetoes disappear. When Africa unifies, the demand for African permanent representation becomes impossible to ignore."
The full analysis is available at:
👉 https://www.nobleworld.org/why-the-european-union-is-not-a-un-member/
To learn more, visit nobleworld.org
Source: Noble World Foundation
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