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Cablegram dated 19 June 1954 from Guatemala to the President of the Security Council (CIA backed 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état) Soviet Union: 18 June 1954: S/3229: S/PV.674: Letter dated 29 May 1954 from Thailand to the President of the Security Council (Viet Minh incursion into Thailand) Soviet Union: 29 March 1954: S/3188/Corr.1: S/PV.664
Vetoed resolutions; List of vetoes; ... This is a list of United Nations Security Council Resolutions 2701 to 2800 adopted between 19 October 2023 to present day.
Report from Commission for Conventional Armaments and the General Assembly 78: 18 October 1949 9–0–2 (abstentions: Ukraine, USSR) Report from Commission for Conventional Armaments and the General Assembly 79: 17 January 1950 9–0–0 (present not voting: Yugoslavia; absent: USSR) General Assembly and Commission for Conventional Armaments 80
United Nations Security Council resolutions are United Nations resolutions adopted by the fifteen members of the Security Council (UNSC); the United Nations (UN) body charged with "primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security". [1]
Resolution Date Vote Concerns 2601: 29 October 2021 15–0–0 Protection of education in armed conflict 2602: 29 October 2021 13–0–2 (abstentions: Russian Federation and Tunisia)
Extends mandate of United Nations Operation in Côte d'Ivoire; demands respect for election results: 1963: 20 December 2010 15–0–0 Continues Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate under guidance of the Counter-Terrorism Committee: 1964: 22 December 2010 15–0–0
Part of a series on the UN Security Council resolutions Permanent members China France Russia United Kingdom United States Non-permanent members Lists of resolutions Resolutions 1 to 1000 (1946–1995) 00 1 to 0 100 (1946–1953) 101 to 0 200 (1953–1965) 201 to 0 300 (1965–1971) 301 to 0 400 (1971–1976) 401 to 0 500 (1976–1982) 501 to 0 600 (1982–1987) 601 to 0 700 (1987–1991) 701 ...
The UN Charter specifies, in Article 27, that decisions of the Security Council shall be made by an affirmative vote of nine members, out of the 15 members of the Security Council. With the exception of purely procedural decisions, all other resolutions adopted by the Security Council can be vetoed by any of the five permanent members. [1]