The United Nations General Assembly — where the world meets for peace
Why UNGA 81 Will Be the Most Important General Assembly in History
The United Nations Has Spoken on Iran and Gaza.
Now the World Must Answer in New York This September.
In recent months the United Nations has issued clear, urgent calls on the escalating violence involving Iran and the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza. These statements are not background noise. They are the conscience of the international community speaking directly to every nation on Earth.
The United Nations Has Already Named the Crises
On February 28, 2026, Secretary-General António Guterres condemned the military escalation in the Middle East in the strongest terms, stating that the use of force by the United States and Israel against Iran, and the subsequent retaliation by Iran, “undermine international peace and security.” He called immediately for a cessation of hostilities and de-escalation to prevent a wider regional conflict.
Just weeks ago, as tensions resurfaced with renewed military exchanges between the United States and Iran, the United Nations again spoke through Assistant Secretary-General Elizabeth Spehar at the Security Council. She warned that every new strike increases the risk of miscalculation and welcomed the decision by parties to exercise restraint and de-escalate.
At the same time, United Nations humanitarian agencies have continued to sound the alarm on the dire situation in Gaza and the occupied Palestinian territory — restrictions on aid, ongoing violence, and the desperate need for safe, unhindered humanitarian access.
The United Nations has not remained silent. Through its Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, it has determined that the actions in Gaza constitute genocide. At the same time, the Secretary-General and UN agencies continue to urge immediate de-escalation, protection of civilians, and full humanitarian access.
UNGA 81: The Moment History Is Watching
This September, the 81st session of the United Nations General Assembly convenes in New York City. World leaders, foreign ministers, and heads of state will gather under one roof — the only truly universal forum where every nation, large and small, has an equal voice.
Never in recent memory has the need for collective action been more urgent. The crises in the Middle East have shown that unilateral actions and bilateral deals alone cannot deliver lasting peace. Only through the multilateral framework of the United Nations can nations come together to negotiate, compromise, and build sustainable solutions that protect civilians and prevent wider war.
United Nations General Assembly Hall, New York
The Moral Authority to Lead
The United Nations carries unique moral authority because it represents all of humanity. Its Charter, signed by 193 member states, remains the highest expression of our shared commitment to peace, human dignity, and international cooperation. When the Secretary-General and UN officials speak, they speak not for one nation or one bloc — they speak for the collective conscience of the world.
Behind every UN statement stand the voices of countless diplomats, humanitarian workers, and the peoples of every continent who believe that dialogue is stronger than division and that peace is possible when we choose it together.
A Call to Every Leader on Earth
This September, the table is set in New York City. The United Nations General Assembly and UN Blockchain Week will bring together heads of state, policymakers, technologists, civil society, and citizens from every corner of the globe.
I call on every leader — from the largest powers to the smallest nations — to come to New York not merely to speak, but to listen, to negotiate in good faith, and to commit to concrete steps toward peace. The people of the world are watching. Our children are watching.
Let us use this historic gathering to chart a path forward together — one that ends cycles of violence, restores hope to suffering populations, and builds lasting peace through dialogue and cooperation. The United Nations gives us the forum. The moment gives us the urgency. The only question is whether we will seize it.
Come to New York this September.
Stand with the United Nations.
Choose peace — together.
One human species. One shared future. One United Nations.


Leave a Reply