India’s Bid for a Non-Permanent UNSC Seat (2028–29) A Strategic Step Towards Global Leadership

India’s Bid for a Non-Permanent UNSC Seat (2028–29) A Strategic Step Towards Global Leadership

 

GS PAPER II

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

MULTILATERAL DIPLOMACY

G4 NATIONS

 

WHY THIS MATTERS FOR YOU

  Direct Prelims fodder: UNSC composition, veto power, G4, India’s UNSC history.

  High-value Mains theme: global governance reform, India’s rise as a leading power.

  Every fact in this capsule has been arranged for fast, exam-focused revision.

 

  1. WHY IS THIS IN NEWS?

India has intensified its diplomatic campaign to be elected as a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council (UNSC) for the 2028–29 term. External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar is visiting several countries to mobilise international support ahead of the election at the UN General Assembly.

KEY TAKEAWAY

  This campaign runs alongside India’s long-term demand for comprehensive UNSC reform and eventual permanent membership — remember this link for Mains answers.

 

Quick Facts Table — Memorise This

Particular

Details

UN Founded

24 October 1945

Security Council Members

15

Permanent Members (P5)

China, France, Russia, UK, USA

Non-Permanent Members

10

Term of Non-Permanent Members

2 Years

Election Body

UN General Assembly

Voting Requirement

Two-thirds majority of members present and voting

India’s Previous Terms

1950-51, 1967-68, 1972-73, 1977-78, 1984-85, 1991-92, 2011-12, 2021-22

Current Bid

2028–29

 

  2. UNDERSTANDING THE UN SECURITY COUNCIL

The UNSC is the most powerful organ of the United Nations, responsible for maintaining international peace and security.

Composition

  5 Permanent Members (P5) — hold veto power

  10 Non-Permanent Members

  Substantive decisions require 9 affirmative votes, including concurrence of all P5 members

 

  3. WHY IS INDIA CONTESTING AGAIN FOR A NON-PERMANENT SEAT?

1. Greater Role in Global Decision-Making

Membership allows India to directly influence discussions on:

   International conflicts

   Peacekeeping

   Counter-terrorism

   Sanctions

   Maritime security

2. Strengthening India’s Diplomatic Influence

A successful election demonstrates India’s acceptance as a responsible global power and strengthens bilateral relations through diplomatic outreach.

3. Building Momentum for Permanent Membership

India continues to argue that meaningful UNSC reform must include expansion of the permanent category, not just additional elected seats.

 

  4. WHY DOES INDIA DESERVE A PERMANENT SEAT?

THE SIX-POINT CASE — HIGH-YIELD FOR MAINS

  World’s Largest Population — nearly one-sixth of humanity, yet no permanent representation.

  Major Economic Power — among the world’s largest economies; rising influence in trade, tech & digital governance.

  Founding Member of the UN — associated with the UN since 1945; consistent supporter of the UN Charter.

  Major Contributor to UN Peacekeeping — one of the largest troop contributors over the decades.

  Voice of the Global South — leads on climate justice, food security, development finance, Digital Public Infrastructure, and institutional reform.

  Responsible Nuclear Power — follows a No First Use doctrine with a record of responsible nuclear stewardship.

 

MUST-REMEMBER FACT

  More than 2.9 lakh Indian peacekeepers have served in over 50 UN peacekeeping missions — many have made the supreme sacrifice for international peace.

 

  5. INDIA’S CONTRIBUTIONS DURING ITS 2021–22 UNSC TERM

Major priorities included:

   Maritime Security

   Counter-terrorism

   Peacekeeping reforms

   Women, Peace and Security

   Afghanistan

   Africa

   Technology for peacekeeping

 

  6. G4 COUNTRIES

India seeks permanent membership alongside the G4 group — these countries support each other’s candidature.

Country

Objective

India

Permanent UNSC Seat

Japan

Permanent UNSC Seat

Germany

Permanent UNSC Seat

Brazil

Permanent UNSC Seat

 

  7. CHALLENGES BEFORE INDIA

Chinese Opposition

China has often been cautious regarding India’s permanent membership, making reform politically difficult.

Requirement of UN Charter Amendment

Any reform requires:

   Two-thirds approval in the General Assembly

   Ratification by two-thirds of member states

   Approval by all five permanent members

REMEMBER

  This triple requirement is what makes UNSC reform ‘extremely difficult’ — a favourite Mains phrase.

 

Opposition by the ‘Uniting for Consensus’ Group

Countries such as Pakistan, Italy, and Argentina prefer expanding only non-permanent seats instead of creating new permanent members.

 

  8. SIGNIFICANCE OF INDIA’S CURRENT CAMPAIGN

Dimension

Significance

Diplomatic

Expands global partnerships; builds support among UN members; enhances strategic engagement

Strategic

Increases India’s influence over peace & security issues; supports its rise as a leading global power

Political

Reinforces India’s image as a responsible stakeholder in multilateral institutions

Economic

Stronger diplomatic standing may support trade, investment and technology partnerships

 

  9. WHY IS THIS IMPORTANT FOR UPSC?

Prelims — Likely Angles

   Composition of UNSC

   Election of non-permanent members

   Veto power

   G4 countries

   India’s UNSC membership history

   UN Charter amendments

Mains — Likely Themes

   Reform of global governance institutions

   India’s quest for permanent membership

   India’s role in multilateral diplomacy

   Challenges to UNSC reform

   Global South and India’s leadership

 

Important Data for UPSC

Indicator

Value

UN Members

193

UNSC Members

15

Permanent Members

5

Non-Permanent Members

10

Term

2 Years

India’s Previous UNSC Terms

8

Current Campaign

2028–29

 

  10. EXPERT VIEW

SCHOLARLY OPINION — GOOD FOR MAINS QUOTATION-STYLE REFERENCE

  Many scholars argue that the legitimacy of the Security Council depends on reflecting contemporary geopolitical realities rather than the power distribution of 1945.

  India’s size, economic weight, peacekeeping record, and growing international influence are frequently cited as reasons for a greater role in global governance.

 

  11. WAY FORWARD

   Continue diplomatic outreach to secure support for the 2028–29 election

   Build wider consensus on comprehensive UNSC reforms

   Deepen engagement with Africa, Latin America and Small Island Developing States

   Strengthen India’s role in peacekeeping, climate diplomacy and development partnerships

   Promote a more representative, transparent and accountable multilateral order

12. UPSC PRELIMS PRACTICE QUESTIONS

Q1. With reference to the UN Security Council, consider the following statements:

   1. The Security Council has five permanent and ten non-permanent members.

   2. Non-permanent members are elected by the UN General Assembly for a two-year term.

   3. Every permanent member possesses veto power over substantive resolutions.

Which of the statements given above are correct?

   A. 1 and 2 only

   B. 2 and 3 only

   C. 1 and 3 only

   D. 1, 2 and 3

ANSWER

  D — All three statements are correct.

 

Q2. Which of the following countries are members of the G4 group advocating UNSC reform?

   1. India

   2. Germany

   3. Brazil

   4. Japan

Select the correct answer using the code below.

   A. 1 and 2 only

   B. 2, 3 and 4 only

   C. 1, 2, 3 and 4

   D. 1, 3 and 4 only

ANSWER

  C — India, Germany, Brazil and Japan all belong to the G4.

 

  13. UPSC MAINS QUESTION (GS PAPER II)

250-WORD MAINS QUESTION

  “Reforming the United Nations Security Council is essential for enhancing the legitimacy and effectiveness of global governance. Discuss India’s case for permanent membership while examining the challenges to comprehensive UNSC reform.” (250 Words)

 

  14. VALUE ADDITION — ONE-LINERS TO REVISE JUST BEFORE THE EXAM

RAPID-FIRE REVISION

  UNSC is the principal organ responsible for maintaining international peace and security.

  India has served eight terms as a non-permanent member of the UNSC.

  The G4 (India, Japan, Germany and Brazil) advocates expansion of permanent membership.

  Meaningful UNSC reform requires amendment of the UN Charter and support from all permanent members.

  India’s current campaign for the 2028–29 non-permanent seat complements — rather than replaces — its long-term demand for permanent membership.

 

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