Permanent membership (and associated veto power)was, IIRC, directly tied in to both military and economic capability - ie: The permanent members were those expected to contribute most of the funds/strike force needed to make the UN work.
One could make the case for merging the UK/French vote/seat and perhaps now adding Brazil (once the whole South American economy picks up again anyway), perhaps India, and at the very outside Japan or another Euro vote.
Getting rid of veto powers/permanent seats though could sink the UN as an effective entity.
You'd be left with a simple majority vote either in the SC or the General assembly and absolutely no way to enforce it.
For example, with all the bad press the US has gotten lately, a majority vote put forward by a coalition of minor nations might have achance of sanctioning military force against them, regardless of the lack of ability to enforce the same.
One could make the case for merging the UK/French vote/seat and perhaps now adding Brazil (once the whole South American economy picks up again anyway), perhaps India, and at the very outside Japan or another Euro vote.
Getting rid of veto powers/permanent seats though could sink the UN as an effective entity.
You'd be left with a simple majority vote either in the SC or the General assembly and absolutely no way to enforce it.
For example, with all the bad press the US has gotten lately, a majority vote put forward by a coalition of minor nations might have achance of sanctioning military force against them, regardless of the lack of ability to enforce the same.
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