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Daily Wrap 18 September 2024
Result of the General Assembly vote on a draft resolution on the ICJ advisory opinion on the legal consequences arising from Israel's policies and practices in the Occupied Palestinian Territory
UN General Assembly demands Israel end 'unlawful presence' in Occupied Palestinian Territory

The United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday voted overwhelmingly to adopt a resolution that demands that Israel "brings to an end without delay its unlawful presence" in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.

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Peace and Security
A boy walks in the Al Salaam camp for displaced people in North Darfur.
Sudan: UN urges immediate action to stop fighting in El Fasher

A sharp escalation in fighting in Sudan's El Fasher, along with ongoing clashes between rival military factions across the country, is heightening the risk of atrocities, including violence against women, and worsening the already dire humanitarian crisis, senior UN officials warned on Wednesday.

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Peace and Security
Children carry WFP food rations in a makeshift camp for displaced people in Marib, Yemen.
World News in Brief: Yemen detainee appeal, Typhoon Yagi impacts, ease asylum seekers' plight, mpox cash boost

Regional directors from six UN agencies and three non-governmental organizations (NGOs) called on Wednesday for the immediate and unconditional release of scores of colleagues who have been arbitrarily detained in Yemen for 100 days.

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Humanitarian Aid
Special Representative and Head of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) Roza Otunbayeva addresses the Security Council meeting on Afghanistan.
Afghanistan: UN warns of growing crisis under increasingly authoritarian Taliban rule

Concerns for women and the overall state of humanitarian rights in Afghanistan are growing following further legal clampdowns by the Taliban, the UN Security Council heard on Wednesday.

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Peace and Security
A shopping district in Beirut, Lebanon (file).
UN appeals for restraint after further devices explode across Lebanon

UN Secretary-General António Guterres has called for an end to the escalation in violence in the Middle East amid reports of a fresh wave of electronic device detonations in Lebanon which caused further deaths and injuries. 

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Peace and Security
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres speaking at a press conference ahead of the General Assembly high-level week.
'Create a future fit for our grandchildren', Guterres urges, ahead of gamechanger Summit

Countries must use a once-in-a-generation UN summit to address current and emerging global challenges and reform outdated international institutions, Secretary-General António Guterres said on Wednesday in New York. 

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UN Affairs
Space-based observations and AI modelling are already transforming the science of forecasting, a potential gamechanger for countries ill-equipped to protect themselves from weather hazards, such as South Sudan.
Climate crisis: Satellites and AI offer hope for global action, says UN weather agency

Amid renewed warnings from leading climate scientists that global warming could reach 3C above pre-industrial levels this century, the head of the UN World Meteorological Organization (WMO) insisted on Wednesday that new technology and AI offer the opportunity to implement the drastic action needed to resist the existential crisis. 

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Climate and Environment
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With Two Nuclear-Armed Strategic Competitors, U.S. Modernization Top Priority

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With Two Nuclear-Armed Strategic Competitors, U.S. Modernization Top Priority
Sept. 18, 2024 | By C. Todd Lopez

With two nuclear-armed peer competitors — Russia and China — and with both advancing their nuclear capability, the U.S. now, more than ever, must move at full speed to modernize its nuclear deterrence capability. That effort is not just for U.S. national security, but as well for partners who depend on the U.S.

 

"The security environment we face today is unprecedented," said Melissa Dalton, undersecretary of the Air Force. "We face for the first time in our nation's history, two strategic competitors that are nuclear states with large and growing nuclear arsenals. When we look at the and its breathtaking modernization over the last two decades, we see today they have over 500 operational nuclear warheads, far exceeding prior projections." 

Speaking Wednesday at the Air & Space Forces Association's 2024 Air, Space & Cyber Conference just outside of Washington, Dalton said that in coming years, the U.S. expects China's warheads to exceed 1,000. At the same time, she said, Russia also remains a challenge. 

"We see Russia brandishing its nuclear weapons in the context of the Ukraine conflict and also possessing novel nuclear capabilities that are designed to challenge our escalation calculus," she said. "The stakes are incredibly high." 

During the Cold War, the U.S. maintained top-notch nuclear deterrence, and the domestic defense industry stood ready to provide whatever was needed. But since the fall of the Soviet Union, and with the U.S. focused on other parts of the world for the past 20-plus years, the U.S. must now up its game. 

"We mortgaged our nuclear modernization for 30 years, and for a lot of understandable reasons," Dalton said. "We had the post-Cold War peace dividend. We were fighting counterterrorism globally. But the fact is, the bills are now way past due, and in that time, our competitors went to school on us, and they caught up." 

With U.S. defense underpinned by its nuclear deterrent, modernization of that capability is a top priority for the Department of Defense. 

"The 2022 nuclear posture review reaffirmed our commitment to delivering a safe, secure and effective nuclear deterrent, and that security guarantee extends to our allies around the globe, and that can never be in question," she said. 

The department is now engaged in a recapitalization of its nuclear triad, which involves new submarines, such as the Columbia-class ballistic missile submarines; new bomber aircraft, such as the B-21 Raider; and a new ground-based system, called Sentinel, to replace the 400 silo-based Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles. 

Air Force Gen. Anthony Cotton, commander of U.S. Strategic Command, said that while two-thirds of the nuclear triad, the ground systems and the aircraft-based systems belong to the Air Force — the submarine systems belong to the Navy — modernization is not just an Air Force effort or even just a Navy effort. 

"It is imperative that we understand that it's not a Department imperative that we maintain the nuclear security and nuclear triad," he said. "It is a national imperative. It's national policy that the foundation of what we hold dear, the framework of that is nuclear deterrence. And to add to that, and I've seen this in the last 19 months of being in command, our allies and partners are counting on us more than ever."

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