In practice, international rules are applied selectively, enforced unevenly, and ignored when they become inconvenient for powerful states. Smaller nations are expected to comply strictly with international law, while influential actors reinterpret or bypass it with minimal consequences. This double standard undermines the legitimacy of the entire global system and exposes how power, not principle, ultimately determines outcomes.
International institutions were created to prevent conflict and promote cooperation, yet they are deeply shaped by post-war power structures that no longer reflect current realities. Voting rights, veto powers, and leadership positions remain concentrated among a few states, limiting meaningful reform. As global challenges evolve, these institutions struggle to respond effectively, trapped between outdated mandates and political deadlock.
- Military interventions, sanctions, and diplomatic pressure are framed as moral responsibilities, even when their outcomes worsen instability and civilian suffering.
- This selective moralism has made many societies deeply skeptical of international intentions.


The erosion of trust in global institutions has serious consequences. When rules are seen as tools of dominance rather than fairness, cooperation weakens and unilateral action increases. States become less willing to compromise and more inclined toward self-interest.
A credible international order cannot survive on rhetoric alone. It requires consistency, accountability, and a willingness to apply rules equally, even when doing so limits the freedom of the powerful.