Germany's Security Council defeat: rethinking influence in a multipolar world
Hornidge, Anna-KatharinaExternal Publications (2026)
published on table.media/forum, 30.06.2026
Germany's failure to secure a non-permanent seat on the UN Security Council is more than a diplomatic setback. It is a structural signal; and a credibility problem. For decades, Germany cultivated a reputation as an honest broker: a power that applied international law consistently. That reputation has taken damage. Germany's hesitant position toward Israel’s conduct in Gaza and Lebanon, and its evasive response to the US’ intervention in Venezuela, have seeded a perception of selectivity – that international legal norms are called for when politically convenient, and set aside when one’s own history or current dependencies make this difficult. In a world where countries from across Africa, Asia and Latin America are increasingly attentive to such inconsistencies, this matters. Credibility, once spent, is difficult to rebuild.
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