UNITED NATIONS — Denmark, Greece, Pakistan, Panama and Somalia got seats on the U.N. Security Council on Thursday.
The 15-member council has a powerful body of five permanent, veto-empowered members whose composition reflects its post-World War II founding — China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
Then there's a changing cast of 10 countries that serve two-year terms.
To pick them, the 193 members of the U.N. vote for the nominees of regional groupings in a secret ballot whose results are generally close to unanimous but occasionally reflect global tensions. Last year, Slovenia soundly defeated Russia's close ally Belarus for the seat representing the East European regional group, a vote that showed strong global opposition to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
This year, the regional groups put forward Somalia for an African seat, Pakistan for an Asia-Pacific seat, Panama for a Latin America and Caribbean seat, and Denmark and Greece for two mainly Western seats.
The five council members elected Thursday will start their terms on Jan. 1.
The Security Council is charged with maintaining international peace and security but because of Russia's veto power it has been unable to take action on Ukraine. Because of close U.S. ties to Israel it has not called for a cessation of hostilities in Gaza.
Virtually every country agrees that the Security Council needs to expand and reflect the modern world but the U.N. can't agree how, blocking significant reform.