UN Secretary-General Defends Multipolar Global Order

Published on January 30, 2026 | Translated from Spanish
António Guterres, Secretary-General of the United Nations, speaking at a podium with the UN emblem, during a speech on global governance and multilateralism.

UN Secretary-General Defends a Multipolar Global Order

The top representative of the United Nations, António Guterres, argues that planetary challenges cannot be resolved when a single superpower imposes its will or when the world is divided into competing spheres of power. 🗺️ In this context, he clearly alludes to the United States and China as the two poles currently shaping international relations.

An Urgent Call to Strengthen Collective Cooperation

Guterres emphasizes the urgency of supporting a multipolar system and enhancing the role played by multilateral organizations. To address challenges such as preserving peace, promoting progress, and complying with international norms in an era of growing geopolitical friction, the leader advocates for strengthening global institutions. In particular, he highlights that the UN Security Council must fulfill its mandate more effectively. 🕊️

Pillars for Effective Global Governance:
  • Managing current crises through genuine and collective collaboration.
  • Preventing the planet from fracturing into opposing blocs that cannot provide unified responses.
  • Revitalizing dialogue and shared decision-making mechanisms.
"A world fractured into opposing blocs cannot provide common responses to common threats, such as climate change or economic instability."

The Scenario of Competition Between Major Powers

His words come in an international context defined by strategic rivalry between Washington and Beijing, as well as several regional conflicts that strain the system. Guterres warns that this fragmentation prevents united action against global dangers. His message seeks to reactivate the conversation and the foundations of world governance. ⚖️

Threats Requiring Joint Action:
  • Climate change and its planetary-scale effects.
  • Global economic and financial instability.
  • Conflicts that endanger international peace and security.

More Than a Matter of Raw Power

The Secretary-General poses a final reflection: in the geopolitical arena, just as in some technological debates, raw destructive capacity or greater influence is sometimes confused with being right. The solution, he insists, does not lie in unilateral imposition, but in building consensuses and strengthening the multilateral framework. 🤝