Presidency of the United Nations Security Council

The presidency of the United Nations Security Council is responsible for leading the United Nations Security Council. It rotates among the 15 member-states of the council monthly. The head of the country's delegation is known as the President of the United Nations Security Council. The presidency has rotated every month since its establishment in 1946,[1] and the president serves to coordinate actions of the council, decide policy disputes, and sometimes functions as a diplomat or intermediary between conflicting groups.

Presidency of United Nations Security Council
رئاسة مجلس الأمن (Arabic)
安全理事会主席 (Chinese)
Présidence du Conseil de sécurité (French)
Председатель Совета Безопасности (Russian)
Presidencia del Consejo de Seguridad (Spanish)
Member ofUnited Nations Security Council
SeatUnited Nations Headquarters
AppointerUnited Nations Security Council
Term lengthOne month
Constituting instrumentCharter of the United Nations
Formation17 January 1946
First holderAustralia
Websitewww.un.org/securitycouncil/content/presidency

Role

The United Nations Security Council chamber in New York City

The presidency derives responsibility from the Provisional Rules of Procedure of the United Nations Security Council as well as the council's practice.[2] The role of the president involves calling the meetings of the Security Council,[3] approving the provisional agenda (proposed by the secretary-general),[4] presiding at its meetings,[5] deciding questions relating to policy[6] and overseeing any crisis. The president is authorized to issue both Presidential Statements[7] (subject to consensus among Council members) and notes,[8] which are used to make declarations of intent that the full Security Council can then pursue.[9] The president is also responsible for reading statements of the Security Council to the press. The holder of the presidency is considered to be the 'face' and spokesperson of the UNSC.[10] The holder of the presidency may appeal to parties in a conflict to "exercise restraint".[11]

The president represents the Security Council before other United Nations organs and member states. They also call upon members to speak, send applicants for United Nations membership to a committee of the UNSC and decide voting order.[12] Particularly after the end of the Cold War, the president has worked to coordinate the UNSC with other organs.[13] The president has authority to rule upon points of order, which can be put to a vote if a member of the council challenges it.[11] They also name members of various subsidiary organs, and are generally responsible for maintaining order.[14] Since November 2000, the president has generally prepared background papers for the topic being discussed.[15]

The president also continues to represent their state. If their nation is involved in a conflict the UNSC is discussing, they are expected to temporarily step down.[14] Conversely, because the presidency rotates monthly, all nations on the UNSC can evenly emphasize issues important to them.[16] Most non-permanent states hold the presidency once or twice during their two-year terms; Burkina Faso changed its name from Upper Volta in August 1984 during its term, and held it three times.[17] The president often makes a distinction between when they are speaking as the president and as the representative of their state.[18]

Davidson Nicol, an academic, writes that:

Although the role of the President should not be exaggerated, the work of the Council, its reputation and that of the United Nations are very much affected by the calibre and style of the individual who presides over the organ having responsibility for international peace and security. . . The Security Council is the pivot of the United Nations in efforts to maintain and enhance international peace and security. The major function of its President should be to guide it effectively and expeditiously toward this noble goal. [19]

Identity

The Permanent Representative (ambassador) of the state to the security council is usually the president of the council,[12] but the presidency is technically given to a state and not a person.[16] For example, in January 2000, a month in which the United States held the presidency of the Security Council,[20] U.S. vice president Al Gore headed the United States delegation to the United Nations for a few days. As a result, Gore was the president of the Security Council during this time.[21] Heads of state have met six times at the UNSC.[22] All members of the council, including the president, must present credentials issued by either the head of state, the head of government, or the minister of foreign affairs of their respective states to the secretary-general, except if the representative is also the head of government or minister of foreign affairs.[23]

Rotation

The United Nations Charter mentions the presidency once,[24] stating that the Security Council is empowered to establish rules of procedure, "including the method of selecting its president" in Article 30.[25] At its first meeting on 17 January 1946, the UNSC adopted provisional rule 18 and established that the presidency would rotate monthly among all the members of the Security Council, with no distinction between permanent and non-permanent members. The rotation takes place in alphabetical order of the member states' official names in English. French was originally proposed as the source of the order, based on its predecessor, the Council of the League of Nations, but English was picked by the Executive Committee of the UN Preparatory Commission, despite reservations that three permanent members could serve in order (the USSR, United States, and United Kingdom).[16] As such, Australia was the first nation to hold the presidency.[26][27][12] Such rotation makes the presidency unique among all United Nations organs.[16] The president is the only non-elected head of a United Nations organ.[26][28]

The president of the Security Council may optionally recuse themselves when the Security Council debates a question directly connected to the president's nation. For example, Cape Verde served as president in November 1993, but temporarily stepped down for part of the day on 10 November 1993 while the UN General Assembly and Security Council conducted an election to the International Court of Justice where Cape Verde was running for a seat. The Security Council member next in line, China, temporarily served as president during the election.[29]

Changes

Due to the UNSC's first meeting being on a January 17, terms initially began on the 17th of every month. Since there were eleven members on the Security Council at the time, the last member in alphabetical order, the United States, was due to end its first term on 16 December 1946. It was suggested by Australia that month to extend the term to 31 December 1946 so that all future rotations of the presidency would occur on the first of every month (United Nations Security Council Resolution 14).

As a result, the first year of operation of the Security Council had all eleven members serve as president exactly once, the United States became the only member to serve a term longer than one month, and all future years that had an eleven-member Security Council would have one member serve twice for the January and December months.

On 1 January 1966, the Security Council was expanded to fifteen members, and no future members would serve as president more than once in a year barring exceptional circumstances.

Function

In 1981, Sydney D. Bailey, an observer of the United Nations, divided the history of the UNSC into three eras; from 1946 to 1955, 1956–1965, and 1966 to 1981. In the first, presidents often acted on their own initiative without consulting the security council. During the second era, the security council was less involved in affairs relating to the Cold War, adopting the slogan "Leave it to Dag [Hammarskjöld]". From 1966 to 1981, the president began informally discussing matters before holding formal sessions and generally becoming more efficient.[30]

Early function

Dmitry Manuilsky

In 1947 and 1948, the UNSC was involved in the independence of Israel and the ensuing 1947–1949 Palestine war. In July 1948, the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic held the presidency. The council met on 7 July upon the request of a United Nations mediator, to consider whether it should promote peace. The UNSC had previously invited representatives of the Arab Higher Committee and the Jewish Agency of Palestine to discuss the issue.[31]

Dmitry Manuilsky, the president in July, addressed the Jewish Agency as 'the representative of the State of Israel'. However, the UNSC had not formally recognized the state. Various member-states criticized his action, and only the United States supported it. In response, the Arab Higher Committee representatives left discussions, and did not return, hindering the UNSC's ability to negotiate the matter. Historian Istvan Pogany considers that "the President deliberately abused his office in order to further the objectives of his government."[31]

In 1948, the president informally engaged in diplomacy several times, the first in January 1948, when the Belgian president requested that India and Pakistan "refrain from any step incompatible with the Charter and liable to result in an aggravation of the situation". In April, the Colombian president met with representatives of the Jewish Agency and Arab Higher Committee to discuss possible terms for peace. Later that year, the Argentinian president established a 'Technical Committee on Berlin Currency and Trade'.[32] In August 1950, Sydney D. Bailey writes that the holder of the presidency, the Soviet Union, manipulated "the procedure of the Council for partisan purposes during debates on Korea".[33]

The president has also formally negotiated on behalf of the UNSC several times. In February 1957, upon the request of the UNSC, then-president Gunnar Jarring of Sweden prepared a report on India–Pakistan relations. He consulted with both nations and discussed many potential solutions to their disagreements, none of which were agreed upon. Such actions have generally not been requested since the 1970s. The president will also manage less formal negotiations upon request of the council.[32]

Later function

Tsiang held the presidency 16 times, starting in 1948 and ending in 1962.

In a 31 March 1976 meeting discussing South African aggression against Angola, the meeting continued past midnight and it was technically 1 April. Thomas S. Boya, the representative of Benin and president for March, offered to pass the presidency on to China. Though the meeting was adjourned before a decision was reached, it became established procedure for the president to step down exactly when the month elapsed. A similar case on 31 May 2010 resulted in Nawaf Salam of Lebanon giving the presidency to Claude Heller of Mexico.[28]

In September 1994, during the Rwandan genocide, Rwanda was supposed to hold the presidency, but had not been present at Security Council meetings from 14 July. On 25 August, the Council decided to allow Spain to hold the position for September. A Rwandan delegation was again present on 16 September, and it was decided that the nation would hold the presidency in December.[17] The presidency has been ceded several times. The first was from 10 to 12 January 1950, when the representative of Taiwan ceded to Cuba. The United States ceded in 1948, China in 1950, India in 1951, Lebanon in 1956, and the United Kingdom in 1968. On 10 November 1993 the representative of Cape Verde, José Luís Jesus, ceded to China as he was a candidate for election to the International Court of Justice; and on 15 December 1994 the Rwandan representative ceded to Argentina. Both the United States and Soviet Union refused requests to cede the presidency, the US during the Cold War and USSR during the Congo Crisis.[34][35]

Taieb Slim, the Tunisian holder of the presidency in September 1980, asked Iran and Iraq to "desist from all armed activity and all acts that might worsen the dangerous situation and to settle their dispute by peaceful means.[11] The presidency was reformed in a 2010 note revised its function, largely focusing on increasing transparency. Efforts at such reform had begun in the 1990s.[36] There have been various other efforts to reform the position, such as allowing terms to be extended during times of war.[37]

Numerous people have served multiple times as president. The most times anyone has held the position is sixteen, by T.F. Tsiang, a representative of the Republic of China; the second-most was held by Yakov Malik, a representative of the USSR, ten.[38]

List of presidents

1946–1949

Presidents from 1946 to 1949:[39]

DatesStateName
17 January – 16 February 1946  AustraliaNorman Makin
17 February – 16 March 1946  BrazilCyro de Freitas Valle
17 March – 16 April 1946  ChinaGuo Taiqi
17 April – 16 May 1946  EgyptHafez Afifi Pasha
17 May – 16 June 1946  FranceAlexandre Parodi
17 June – 16 July 1946  MexicoFrancisco Castillo Nájera
17 July – 16 August 1946  NetherlandsEelco van Kleffens
17 August – 16 September 1946  PolandOskar R. Lange
17 September – 16 October 1946  Soviet UnionAndrei Gromyko
17 October – 16 November 1946  United KingdomAlexander Cadogan
17 November – 31 December 1946  United StatesHerschel V. Johnson II
January 1947  AustraliaNorman Makin
February 1947  BelgiumFernand van Langenhove
March 1947  BrazilOswaldo Aranha
April 1947  ChinaQuo Tai-chi
May 1947  ColombiaAlfonso López Pumarejo
June 1947  FranceAlexandre Parodi
July 1947  PolandOskar R. Lange
August 1947  SyriaFaris al-Khoury
September 1947  Soviet UnionAndrei Gromyko
October 1947  United KingdomAlexander Cadogan
November 1947  United StatesWarren Austin
December 1947  AustraliaJohn Hood
January 1948  BelgiumFernand van Langenhove
February 1948  CanadaA. G. L. McNaughton
March 1948  ChinaTsiang Tingfu
April 1948  ColombiaAlfonso López Pumarejo
May 1948  FranceAlexandre Parodi
June 1948  SyriaFaris al-Khoury
July 1948  Ukrainian SSRDmitry Manuilsky
August 1948  Soviet UnionYakov Malik
September 1948  United KingdomAlexander Cadogan
October 1948  United States
 Argentina
Warren Austin
Juan Atilio Bramuglia
November 1948  ArgentinaJosé Arce
December 1948  BelgiumFernand van Langenhove
January 1949  CanadaA. G. L. McNaughton
February 1949  ChinaTsiang Tingfu
March 1949  CubaAlberto Inocente Álvarez
April 1949  EgyptMahmoud Fawzi Bey
May 1949  FranceJean Chauvel
June 1949  NorwayArne Sunde
July 1949  Ukrainian SSRDmitry Manuilsky
August 1949  Soviet UnionSemyon K. Tsarapkin
September 1949  United KingdomAlexander Cadogan
October 1949  United StatesWarren Austin
November 1949  ArgentinaJosé Arce
December 1949  CanadaA. G. L. McNaughton

1950–1954

Presidents from 1950 to 1954:[40]

DatesStateName
January 1950  ChinaTsiang Tingfu
February 1950  CubaCarlos Blanco Sanchez
March 1950  EcuadorHomero Viteri Lafronte
April 1950  EgyptMahmoud Fawzi Bey
May 1950  FranceJean Chauvel
June 1950  IndiaBenegal Narsing Rau
July 1950  NorwayArne Sunde
August 1950  Soviet UnionYakov Malik
September 1950  United KingdomGladwyn Jebb
October 1950  United StatesWarren Austin
November 1950  YugoslaviaAleš Bebler
December 1950  ChinaTsiang Tingfu
January 1951  EcuadorAntonio Quevedo
February 1951  FranceFrançois Lacoste
March 1951  India
 Netherlands
Benegal Narsing Rau
D. J. von Balluseck
April 1951  NetherlandsD. J. von Balluseck
May 1951  TurkeySelim Sarper and Ilhan Savut
June 1951  Soviet UnionYakov Malik
July 1951  United KingdomGladwyn Jebb
August 1951  United StatesWarren Austin
September 1951  YugoslaviaAleš Bebler
October 1951  BrazilJoão Carlos Muniz
November 1951  ChinaTsiang Tingfu
December 1951  EcuadorAntonio Quevedo
January 1952  FranceJean Chauvel
February 1952  GreeceAlexis Kyrou
March 1952  NetherlandsD. J. von Balluseck
April 1952  PakistanPatras Bokhari
May 1952  TurkeySelim Sarper
June 1952  Soviet UnionYakov Malik
July 1952  United KingdomGladwyn Jebb
August 1952  United StatesWarren Austin
September 1952  BrazilJoão Carlos Muniz
October 1952  ChileHernán Santa Cruz
November 1952  ChinaTsiang Tingfu
December 1952  FranceHenri Hoppenot
January 1953  GreeceAlexis Kyrou
February 1953  LebanonCharles Malik
March 1953  PakistanAhmed S. Bokhari
April 1953  Soviet UnionAndrey Vyshinsky
May 1953  United KingdomGladwyn Jebb
June 1953  United StatesHenry Cabot Lodge Jr.
July 1953  ChileRudecindo Ortega Masson
August 1953  ChinaTsiang Tingfu
September 1953  ColombiaFrancisco José Urrutia Holguín
October 1953  DenmarkWilliam Borberg
November 1953  FranceHenri Hoppenot
December 1953  GreeceAlexis Kyrou
January 1954  LebanonCharles Malik
February 1954  New ZealandLeslie Munro
March 1954  TurkeySelim Sarper
April 1954  Soviet UnionAndrey Vyshinsky
May 1954  United KingdomPierson Dixon
June 1954  United StatesHenry Cabot Lodge Jr.
July 1954  BrazilErnesto Leme
August 1954  ChinaTsiang Tingfu
September 1954  ColombiaFrancisco José Urrutia Holguín
October 1954  DenmarkWilliam Borberg
November 1954  FranceHenri Hoppenot
December 1954  LebanonCharles Malik

1955–1959

Presidents from 1955 to 1959:[40]

DatesStateName
January 1955  New ZealandLeslie Munro
February 1955  PeruVictor Belaunde
March 1955  TurkeySelim Sarper
April 1955  Soviet UnionArkady Sobolev
May 1955  United KingdomPierson Dixon
June 1955  United StatesHenry Cabot Lodge Jr.
July 1955  BelgiumFernand van Langenhove
August 1955  BrazilCyro de Freitas Valle
September 1955  Republic of ChinaTsiang Tingfu
October 1955  FranceHenri Hoppenot
November 1955 IranNasrollah Entezam
December 1955  New ZealandLeslie Munro
January 1956  PeruVictor Belaunde
February 1956  Soviet UnionArkady Sobolev
March 1956  United KingdomPierson Dixon
April 1956  United StatesHenry Cabot Lodge Jr.
May 1956  YugoslaviaJože Brilej
June 1956  AustraliaEdward Ronald Walker
July 1956  BelgiumJosef Nisot
August 1956  Republic of ChinaTsiang Tingfu
September 1956  CubaEmilio Núñez Portuondo
October 1956  FranceChristian Pineau, Bernard Cornut-Gentille, and Louis de Guiringaud
November 1956 IranNasrollah Entezam
December 1956  PeruVictor Belaunde
January 1957  PhilippinesCarlos P. Romulo
February 1957  SwedenGunnar Jarring
March 1957  Soviet UnionArkady Sobolev
April 1957  United KingdomPierson Dixon
May 1957  United StatesHenry Cabot Lodge Jr.
June 1957  AustraliaEdward Ronald Walker
July 1957  Republic of ChinaTsiang Tingfu
August and September 1957  Colombia
 Cuba
Francisco José Urrutia Holguín
Emilio Núñez Portuondo
October 1957  FranceGuillaume Georges-Picot
November 1957  IraqHashim Jawad
December 1957  PhilippinesCarlos P. Romulo
January 1958  SwedenGunnar Jarring
February 1958  Soviet UnionArkady Sobolev
March 1958  United KingdomPierson Dixon
April 1958  United StatesHenry Cabot Lodge Jr.
May 1958  CanadaCharles Ritchie
June 1958  Republic of ChinaTsiang Tingfu
July 1958  ColombiaAlfonso Araújo Gaviria
August 1958  FranceGuillaume Georges-Picot
September 1958  IraqHashim Jawad
October 1958  JapanKoto Matsudaira
November 1958  PanamaJorge Illueca
December 1958  SwedenGunnar Jarring
January 1959  TunisiaMongi Slim
February 1959  Soviet UnionArkady Sobolev
March 1959  United KingdomPierson Dixon
April 1959  United StatesHenry Cabot Lodge Jr.
May 1959  ArgentinaMario Amadeo
June 1959  CanadaCharles Ritchie
July 1959  Republic of ChinaTsiang Tingfu
August 1959  FranceArmand Bérard
September 1959  ItalyEgidio Ortona
October 1959  JapanKoto Matsudaira
November 1959  PanamaJorge Illueca
December 1959  TunisiaMongi Slim

1960–1964

Presidents from 1960 to 1964:[41]

DatesStateName
January 1960  Soviet UnionArkady Sobolev
February 1960  United KingdomPierson Dixon
March 1960  United StatesHenry Cabot Lodge Jr.
April 1960  ArgentinaMario Amadeo
May 1960  CeylonClaude Corea
June 1960  Republic of ChinaTsiang Tingfu
July 1960  EcuadorJosé A. Correa
August 1960  FranceArmand Bérard
September 1960  ItalyEgidio Ortona
October 1960  PolandBohdan Lewandowski
November 1960  TunisiaMongi Slim
December 1960  Soviet UnionValerian Zorin
January 1961  United Arab RepublicOmar Loutfi
February 1961  United KingdomPatrick Dean
March 1961  United StatesAdlai E. Stevenson
April 1961  CeylonT. B. Subasinghe
May 1961  ChileDaniel Schweitzer
June 1961  Republic of ChinaTsiang Tingfu and Y. C. Hsueh
July 1961  EcuadorLeopoldo Benites
August 1961  FranceArmand Bérard
September 1961  LiberiaNathan Barnes
October 1961  TurkeyTurgut Menemencioglu
November 1961  Soviet UnionValerian Zorin
December 1961  United Arab RepublicOmar Loutfi
January 1962  United KingdomPatrick Dean
February 1962  United StatesAdlai E. Stevenson and Francis T. P. Plimpton
March 1962  VenezuelaCarlos Sosa Rodríguez
April 1962  ChileDaniel Schweitzer
May 1962  Republic of ChinaTsiang Tingfu
June 1962  FranceArmand Bérard
July 1962  GhanaAlex Quaison-Sackey
August 1962  IrelandFrederick Boland
September 1962  RomaniaMihai Haseganu
October 1962  Soviet UnionPlaton Morozov and Valerian Zorin
November 1962  United Arab RepublicMahmoud Riad
December 1962  United KingdomPatrick Dean
January 1963  United StatesAdlai E. Stevenson
February 1963  VenezuelaCarlos Sosa-Rodriguez
March 1963  BrazilGeraldo de Carvalho Silos
April 1963  Republic of ChinaLiu Chieh
May 1963  FranceRoger Seydoux
June 1963  GhanaAlex Quaison-Sackey
July 1963  MoroccoAhmed Taibi Benhima
August 1963  NorwaySievert A. Nielsen
September 1963  PhilippinesJacinto Castel Borja
October 1963  Soviet UnionNikolai Fedorenko
November 1963  United KingdomPatrick Dean
December 1963  United StatesAdlai E. Stevenson, Charles Yost, and Francis T. P. Plimpton
January 1964  BoliviaRenan Castrillo Justiniano
February 1964  BrazilCarlos A. Bernardes
March 1964  Republic of ChinaLiu Chieh
April 1964  CzechoslovakiaJiří Hájek
May 1964  FranceRoger Seydoux
June 1964  Ivory CoastArsene A. Usher
July 1964  MoroccoAhmed Taibi Benhima
August 1964  NorwaySievert A. Nielsen
September 1964  Soviet UnionPlaton D. Morozov
October 1964  United KingdomPatrick Dean
November 1964  United StatesAdlai E. Stevenson
December 1964  BoliviaFernando Ortiz Sanz

1965–1969

Presidents from 1965 to 1969:[41]

DatesStateName
January 1965  Republic of ChinaLiu Chieh
February 1965  FranceRoger Seydoux
March 1965  Ivory CoastArsene Usher
April 1965  JordanAbdul Monem Rifa'i
May 1965  MalaysiaRadhakrishna Ramani
June 1965  NetherlandsJ. G. de Beus
July 1965  Soviet UnionPlaton Morozov
August 1965  United KingdomRoger Jackling
September 1965  United StatesArthur Goldberg
October 1965  UruguayHector Payssé Reyes
November 1965  BoliviaFernando Ortiz Sanz
December 1965  Republic of ChinaLiu Chieh
January 1966  FranceRoger Seydoux
February 1966  JapanAkira Matsui
March 1966  JordanMuhammed El-Farra
April 1966  MaliMoussa Leo Keita
May 1966  NetherlandsJ. G. de Beus
June 1966  New ZealandFrank Corner
July 1966  NigeriaSimeon Adebo
August 1966  UgandaApollo Kironde
September 1966  Soviet UnionNikolai Fedorenko
October 1966  United KingdomHugh Foot, Baron Caradon and Roger Jackling
November 1966  United StatesArthur Goldberg
December 1966  UruguayPedro P. Berro
January 1967  ArgentinaRaúl Alberto Quijano
February 1967  BrazilJosé Sette Câmara
March 1967  BulgariaMilko Tarabanov
April 1967  CanadaGeorge Ignatieff
May 1967  Republic of ChinaLiu Chieh
June 1967  DenmarkHans Tabor
July 1967  EthiopiaEndelkachew Makonnen
August 1967  FranceRoger Seydoux
September 1967  IndiaGopalaswami Parthasarathi
October 1967  JapanSenjin Tsuruoka
November 1967  MaliMamadou Boubacar Kante
December 1967  NigeriaSimeon Adebo
January 1968  PakistanAgha Shahi
February 1968  ParaguayMiguel Solano Lopez
March 1968  SenegalOusmane Socé
April 1968  Soviet UnionYakov Malik
May 1968  United KingdomHugh Foot, Baron Caradon
June 1968  United StatesArthur Goldberg
July 1968  AlgeriaTewfik Bouattoura
August 1968  BrazilJoão Augusto de Araújo Castro
September 1968  CanadaGeorge Ignatieff
October 1968  Republic of ChinaLiu Chieh
November 1968  DenmarkOtto L. Borch
December 1968  EthiopiaEndelkachew Makonnen
January 1969  FinlandMax Jakobson
February 1969  FranceArmand Bérard
March 1969  HungaryKároly Csatorday
April 1969  NepalPadma Bahadur Khatri
May 1969  PakistanAgha Shahi
June 1969  ParaguayMiguel Solano Lopez
July 1969  SenegalIbrahima Boye
August 1969  SpainJaime de Piniés
September 1969  Soviet UnionYakov Malik
October 1969  United KingdomHugh Foot, Baron Caradon
November 1969  United StatesCharles Yost
December 1969  ZambiaVernon Mwaanga

1970–1974

Presidents from 1970 to 1974:[42]

DatesStateName
January 1970  BurundiTerence Nsanze
February 1970  Republic of ChinaLiu Chieh
March 1970  ColombiaJoaquín Vallejo Arbeláez
April 1970  FinlandMax Jakobson
May 1970  FranceJacques Kosciusco-Morizet
June 1970  NepalPadma Bahadur Khatri
July 1970  NicaraguaGuillermo Sevilla Sacasa
August 1970  PolandEugeniusz Kułaga
September 1970  Sierra LeoneDavidson Nicol
October 1970  SpainJaime de Piniés
November 1970  SyriaGeorge Tomeh
December 1970  Soviet UnionYakov Malik
January 1971  United KingdomColin Crowe
February 1971  United StatesCharles Woodruff Yost
March 1971  ArgentinaCarlos Ortiz de Rozas
April 1971  BelgiumEdouard Longerstaey
May 1971  BurundiTerence Nsanze
June 1971  Republic of ChinaLiu Chieh
July 1971  FranceJacques Kosciusco-Morizet
August 1971  ItalyPiero Vinci
September 1971  JapanToru Nakagawa
October 1971  NicaraguaGuillermo Sevilla Sacasa
November 1971  PolandEugeniusz Kułaga
December 1971  Sierra LeoneIsmail Byne Taylor-Kamara
January 1972  SomaliaAbdulrahim Abby Farah and Umar Arteh Ghalib
February 1972  SudanMansour Khalid, Rahmatalla Abdalla, and Mohammed Fakhreddine
March 1972  Soviet UnionYakov Malik
April 1972  United KingdomColin Crowe
May 1972  United StatesGeorge H. W. Bush
June 1972  YugoslaviaLazar Mojsov
July 1972  ArgentinaCarlos Ortiz de Rozas
August 1972  BelgiumEdouard Longerstaey
September 1972  People's Republic of ChinaHuang Hua
October 1972  FranceLouis de Guiringaud
November 1972  GuineaJeanne-Martin Cissé
December 1972  IndiaSamar Sen
January 1973  IndonesiaChaidir Anwar Sani
February 1973  KenyaJoseph Odero-Jowi
March 1973  PanamaAquilino Boyd, Omar Torrijos, and Juan Antonio Tack
April 1973  PeruJavier Pérez de Cuéllar
May 1973  SudanRamatalla Abdulla
June 1973  Soviet UnionYakov Malik
July 1973  United KingdomKenneth Jamieson and Colin Crowe
August 1973  United StatesJohn A. Scali
September 1973  YugoslaviaLazar Mojsov
October 1973  AustraliaLaurence McIntyre
November 1973  AustriaPeter Jankowitsch
December 1973  People's Republic of ChinaHuang Hua
January 1974  Costa RicaGonzalo Facio Segreda
February 1974  FranceLouis de Guiringaud
March 1974  IndonesiaChaidir Anwar Sani
April 1974  IraqTalib Shabib
May 1974  KenyaCharles Gatere Maina
June 1974  MauritaniaMoulaye El Hassen
July 1974  PeruJavier Pérez de Cuéllar
August 1974  Soviet UnionYakov Malik
September 1974  United KingdomIvor Richard
October 1974  CameroonMichel Njine
November 1974  United StatesJohn A. Scali
December 1974  AustraliaLaurence McIntyre

1975–1979

Presidents from 1975 to 1979:[42]

DatesStateName
January 1975 Byelorussian SSRGuerodot G. Tchernouchtchenko
February 1975  People's Republic of ChinaHuang Hua
March 1975  Costa RicaGonzalo J. Facio and Fernando Salazar
April 1975  FranceLouis de Guiringaud
May 1975  GuyanaShridath Ramphal
June 1975  IraqAbdul Karim Al-Shaikhly
July 1975  ItalyEugenio Plaja
August 1975  JapanShizuo Saito
September 1975  MauritaniaMoulaye El Hassen
October 1975  SwedenOlof Rydbeck
November 1975  Soviet UnionYakov Malik
1–15, 17–31 December 1975  United KingdomIvor Richard
16 December 1975  CameroonFerdinand Oyono
January 1976  United Republic of TanzaniaSalim Ahmed Salim
February 1976  United StatesDaniel Patrick Moynihan
March 1976  BeninThomas S. Boya
April 1976  People's Republic of ChinaHuang Hua
May 1976  FranceLouis de Guiringaud
June 1976  GuyanaRashleigh E. Jackson and Frederick R. Wills
July 1976  ItalyPiero Vinci
August 1976  JapanIsao Abe
September 1976  LibyaMansour Rashid El-Kikhia
October 1976  PakistanIqbal A. Akhund
November 1976  PanamaJorge Illueca
December 1976  RomaniaIon Datcu
January 1977  Soviet UnionOleg Troyanovsky
February 1977  United KingdomJames Murray
March 1977  United StatesAndrew Young
April 1977  VenezuelaSimón Alberto Consalvi
May 1977  BeninThomas S. Boya
June 1977  CanadaWilliam Hickson Barton
July 1977  People's Republic of ChinaChen Chu
August 1977  FranceJacques Leprette
September 1977  Federal Republic of GermanyRüdiger von Wechmar
October 1977  IndiaRikhi Jaipal
November 1977  LibyaMansour Rashid El-Kikhia
December 1977  MauritiusRadha Krishna Ramphul and Harold E. Walter
January 1978  NigeriaJoseph Nanven Garba and Leslie O. Harriman
February 1978  Soviet UnionOleg Troyanovsky
March 1978  United KingdomIvor Richard
April 1978  United StatesAndrew Young
May 1978  VenezuelaRuben Carpio Castillo
June 1978  BoliviaMario Rolon Anaya
July 1978  CanadaWilliam Hickson Barton
August 1978  People's Republic of ChinaChen Chu
September 1978  CzechoslovakiaIlja Hulínský
October 1978  FranceJacques Leprette
November 1978  GabonLéon N'Dong
December 1978  Federal Republic of GermanyRüdiger von Wechmar
January 1979  JamaicaDonald O. Mills
February 1979  KuwaitAbdalla Y. Bishara
March 1979  NigeriaLeslie O. Harriman
April 1979  NorwayOle Ålgård
May 1979  PortugalVasco Futscher Pereira
June 1979  Soviet UnionOleg Troyanovsky
July 1979  United KingdomIvor Richard
August 1979  United StatesAndrew Young
September 1979  ZambiaPaul J. F. Lusaka
October 1979  BangladeshKhwaja Mohammed Kaiser
November 1979  BoliviaSergio Palacios de Vizzio
December 1979  People's Republic of ChinaChen Chu

1980–1984

Presidents from 1980 to 1984:[43]

DatesStateName
January 1980  FranceJacques Leprette
February 1980  German Democratic RepublicPeter Florin
March 1980  JamaicaDonald O. Mills
April 1980  MexicoPorfirio Muñoz Ledo
May 1980  NigerIde Oumarou
June 1980  NorwayOle Ålgård
July 1980  PhilippinesCarlos P. Romulo
August 1980  PortugalVasco Futscher Pereira
September 1980  TunisiaTaieb Slim
October 1980  Soviet UnionOleg Troyanovsky
November 1980  United KingdomAnthony Parsons
December 1980  United StatesDonald McHenry
January 1981  People's Republic of ChinaLing Qing
February 1981  FranceJacques Leprette
March 1981  German Democratic RepublicPeter Florin
April 1981  IrelandNoel Dorr
May 1981  JapanMasahiro Nisibori
June 1981  MexicoPorfirio Muñoz Ledo
July 1981  NigerIde Oumarou
August 1981  PanamaJorge Illueca
September 1981  PhilippinesCarlos P. Romulo
October 1981  SpainJaime de Piniés
November 1981  TunisiaTaieb Slim
December 1981  UgandaOlara Otunnu
January 1982  Soviet UnionOleg Troyanovsky
February 1982  United KingdomAnthony Parsons
March 1982  United StatesJeane Kirkpatrick
April 1982  ZaireGérard Kamanda wa Kamanda
May 1982  People's Republic of ChinaLing Qing
June 1982  FranceLuc de la Barre de Nanteuil
July 1982  GuyanaNoel G. Sinclair
August 1982  IrelandNoel Dorr
September 1982  JapanMasahiro Nisibori
October 1982  JordanHazem Nuseibeh
November 1982  PanamaCarlos Ozores Typaldos
December 1982  PolandWłodzimierz Natorf
January 1983  TogoAtsu-Koffi Amega
February 1983  Soviet UnionOleg Troyanovsky
March 1983  United KingdomJohn Adam Thomson
April 1983  United StatesJeane Kirkpatrick
May 1983  ZaireUmba di Lutete and Gérard Kamanda wa Kamanda
June 1983  ZimbabweElleck Mashingaidze
July 1983  People's Republic of ChinaLing Qing
August 1983  FranceLuc de la Barre de Nanteuil
September 1983  GuyanaNoel G. Sinclair
October 1983  JordanAbdullah Salah
November 1983  MaltaVictor J. Gauci
December 1983  NetherlandsMax van der Stoel
January 1984  NicaraguaFrancisco Javier Chamorro Mora
February 1984  PakistanS. Shah Nawaz
March 1984  PeruJavier Arias Stella
April 1984 Ukrainian SSRVolodymyr O. Kravets
May 1984  Soviet UnionOleg Troyanovsky
June 1984  United KingdomJohn Adam Thomson
July 1984  United StatesJeane Kirkpatrick
August 1984  Upper Volta, from 4 August on as  Burkina FasoLeandre Bassole
September 1984  ZimbabweElleck Mashingaidze
October 1984  Burkina FasoBasile Laerte Guissou and Leandre Bassole
November 1984  People's Republic of ChinaLing Qing
December 1984  EgyptAhmed Tawfik Khalil

1985–1989

Presidents from 1985 to 1989:[43]

DatesStateName
January 1985  FranceClaude de Kemoularia
February 1985  IndiaNatarajan Krishnan
March 1985  MadagascarBlaise Rabetafika
April 1985  PeruJavier Arias Stella
May 1985  ThailandBirabhongse Kasemsri and Siddhi Savetsila
June 1985  Trinidad and TobagoErrol Mahabir and D. H. N. Alleyne
July 1985 Ukrainian SSRHennadiy Udovenko
August 1985  Soviet UnionOleg Troyanovsky
September 1985  United KingdomJohn Adam Thomson and Geoffrey Howe
October 1985  United StatesHerbert S. Okun and Vernon A. Walters
November 1985  AustraliaRichard Woolcott
December 1985  Burkina FasoLeandre Bassole
January 1986  People's Republic of ChinaLuye Li
February 1986 People's Republic of the CongoMartin Adouki
March 1986  DenmarkOle Bierring
April 1986  FranceClaude de Kemoularia
May 1986  GhanaJames Victor Gbeho
June 1986  MadagascarBlaise Rabetafika
July 1986  ThailandBirabhongse Kasemsri
August 1986  Trinidad and TobagoD. H. N. Alleyne
September 1986  Soviet UnionAlexander Belonogov
October 1986  United Arab EmiratesMohammed Hussein Al Shaali
November 1986  United KingdomJohn Adam Thomson
December 1986  United StatesVernon A. Walters
January 1987  VenezuelaAndres Aguilar
February 1987  ZambiaPeter D. Zuze
March 1987  ArgentinaMarcelo Delpech
April 1987  BulgariaBoris Tsvetkov
May 1987  People's Republic of ChinaJiahua Huang
June 1987 People's Republic of the CongoMartin Adouki
July 1987  FranceJean-Bernard Raimond and Pierre-Louis Blanc
August 1987  Federal Republic of GermanyHans Werner Lautenschlager
September 1987  GhanaJames Victor Gbeho
October 1987  ItalyMaurizio Bucci
November 1987  JapanKiyoaki Kikuchi
December 1987  Soviet UnionAlexander Belonogov
January 1988  United KingdomCrispin Tickell
February 1988  United StatesHerbert S. Okun and Vernon A. Walters
March 1988  YugoslaviaDragoslav Pejić
April 1988  ZambiaPeter D. Zuze
May 1988  AlgeriaHocine Djoudi
June 1988  ArgentinaMarcelo Delpech
July 1988  BrazilPaulo Nogueira Batista
August 1988  People's Republic of ChinaLi Luye
September 1988  FrancePierre-Louis Blanc
October 1988  Federal Republic of GermanyAlexander Graf York von Wartenburg
November 1988  ItalyMario Scialoja and G. Migliuolo
December 1988  JapanH. Kagami
January 1989  MalaysiaRazali Ismail
February 1989  NepalJ. P. Rana
March 1989  SenegalA. C. Diallo
April 1989  Soviet UnionAlexander Belonogov
May 1989  United KingdomCrispin Tickell
June 1989  United StatesThomas R. Pickering
July 1989  YugoslaviaDragoslav Pejić
August 1989  AlgeriaHocine Djoudi
September 1989  BrazilPaulo Nogueira Batista
October 1989  CanadaL. Yves Fortier
November 1989  People's Republic of ChinaLi Luye
December 1989  ColombiaEnrique Peñalosa

1990–1994

Presidents from 1990 to 1994:[44]

DatesStateName
January 1990  Côte d'IvoireAmara Essy
February 1990  CubaRicardo Alarcón
March 1990 People's Democratic Republic of YemenAbdullah Saleh al-Ashtal
April 1990  EthiopiaTesfaye Tadessa
May 1990  FinlandKlaus Törnudd
June 1990  FrancePierre-Louis Blanc
July 1990  MalaysiaRazali Ismail
August 1990  RomaniaAurel Dragoș Munteanu
September 1990  Soviet UnionYuli Mikhailovich Vorontsov and Eduard Shevardnadze
October 1990  United KingdomDavid Hannay
November 1990  United StatesThomas R. Pickering and James Baker
December 1990  YemenAbdullah Saleh al-Ashtal
January 1991  ZaireBagbeni Adeito Nzengeya
February 1991  ZimbabweSimbarashe Mumbengegwi
March 1991  AustriaPeter Hohenfellner
April 1991  BelgiumPaul Noterdaeme
May 1991  People's Republic of ChinaLi Daoyu
June 1991  Côte d'IvoireJean-Jacques Bechio
July 1991  CubaRicardo Alarcón
August 1991  EcuadorJosé Ayala Lasso
September 1991  FranceJean-Bernard Mérimée and Roland Dumas
October 1991  IndiaChinmaya Rajaninath Gharekhan
November 1991  RomaniaAurel Dragoș Munteanu
1–25 December 1991  Soviet UnionYuli Mikhailovich Vorontsov
26–31 December 1991  Russia
January 1992  United KingdomDavid Hannay and John Major
February 1992  United StatesThomas R. Pickering
March 1992  VenezuelaDiego Arria
April 1992  ZimbabweSimbarashe Mumbengegwi and Stanislaus Garikai Chigwedere
May 1992  AustriaPeter Hohenfellner
June 1992  BelgiumPaul Noterdaeme
July 1992  Cape VerdeJosé Luís de Jesus
August 1992  People's Republic of ChinaLi Daoyu
September 1992  EcuadorJosé Ayala Lasso
October 1992  FranceJean-Bernard Mérimée
November 1992  HungaryAndre Erdos
December 1992  IndiaChinmaya Rajaninath Gharekhan
January 1993  JapanYoshio Hatano
February 1993  MoroccoAhmed Snoussi
March 1993  New ZealandTerence Christopher O'Brien and Donald Charles McKinnon
April 1993  PakistanJamsheed Marker
May 1993  RussiaYuli Mikhailovich Vorontsov
June 1993  SpainJuan Antonio Yáñez-Barnuevo
July 1993  United KingdomDavid Hannay and —— Richardson
August 1993  United StatesMadeleine Albright
September 1993  VenezuelaAdolfo Taylhardat
October 1993  BrazilRonaldo Mota Sardenberg
November 1993  Cape Verde
 People's Republic of China
José Luís de Jesus
Li Zhaoxing
December 1993  People's Republic of ChinaLi Zhaoxing
January 1994  Czech RepublicKarel Kovanda
February 1994  DjiboutiRoble Olhaye
March 1994  FranceJean-Bernard Mérimée
April 1994  New ZealandColin Keating and Donald Charles McKinnon
May 1994  NigeriaIbrahim Gambari and Baba Gana Kingibe
June 1994  OmanSalim Bin Mohammed Al-Kussaiby
July 1994  PakistanJamsheed Marker
August 1994  RussiaYuli Mikhailovich Vorontsov
September 1994  SpainJuan Antonio Yáñez-Barnuevo and Francisco Javier Solana de Madariaga
October 1994  United KingdomDavid Hannay
November 1994  United StatesMadeleine Albright
December 1994  RwandaManzi Bakuramutsa

1995–1999

Presidents from 1995 to 1999:[44]

DatesStateName
January 1995  ArgentinaEmilio Cárdenas
February 1995  BotswanaJoseph Legwaila and Mompati Merafhe
March 1995  People's Republic of ChinaLi Zhaoxing and Xuexian Wang
April 1995  Czech RepublicKarel Kovanda and Alexandr Vondra
May 1995  FranceJean-Bernard Mérimée
June 1995  GermanyDetlev Graf zu Rantzau
July 1995  HondurasGerardo Martínez Blanco and Delmer Urbizio Panting
August 1995  IndonesiaNugroho Wisnumurti
September 1995  ItalyFrancesco Paolo Fulci and Susanna Agnelli
October 1995  NigeriaIbrahim Gambari
November 1995  OmanSalim bin Mohammed Al-Khussaiby
December 1995  RussiaSergey Lavrov
January 1996  United KingdomJohn Weston
February 1996  United StatesMadeleine Albright
March 1996  BotswanaJoseph Legwaila
April 1996  ChileJuan Somavía
May 1996  People's Republic of ChinaHuasun Qin
June 1996  EgyptNabil Elaraby
July 1996  FranceAlain Dejammet
August 1996  GermanyAntonius Eitel
September 1996  Guinea-BissauAlfredo Lopes Cabral
October 1996  HondurasDelmer Urbizio Panting and Gerardo Martínez Blanco
November 1996  IndonesiaNugroho Wisnumurti
December 1996  ItalyFrancesco Paolo Fulci
January 1997  JapanHisashi Owada
February 1997  KenyaNjuguna M. Mahugu
March 1997  PolandZbigniew M. Włosowicz
April 1997  PortugalAntónio Monteiro
May 1997  South KoreaPark Soo Gil and Chong Ha Yoo
June 1997  RussiaSergey Lavrov
July 1997  SwedenPeter Osvald and Lena Hjelm-Wallén
August 1997  United KingdomJohn Weston
September 1997  United StatesWilliam B. Richardson and Madeleine Albright
October 1997  ChileJuan Somavía
November 1997  People's Republic of ChinaHuasun Qin
December 1997  Costa RicaFernando Berrocal Soto
January 1998  FranceAlain Dejammet
February 1998  GabonCasimir Oyé-Mba and Denis Dangue Réwaka
March 1998  GambiaMomodou Lamin Sedat Jobe and Abdoulie Momodou Sallah
April 1998  JapanHisashi Owada
May 1998  KenyaNjuguna Mahugu and Bonaya Godana
June 1998  PortugalAntónio Monteiro and Jaime Gama
July 1998  RussiaSergey Lavrov
August 1998  SloveniaDanilo Türk
September 1998  SwedenLena Hjelm-Wallén and Hans Dalgren
October 1998  United KingdomJeremy Greenstock
November 1998  United StatesPeter Burleigh
December 1998  BahrainJassim Mohammed Buallay
January 1999  BrazilCelso Amorim
February 1999  CanadaRobert R. Fowler and Lloyd Axworthy
March 1999  People's Republic of ChinaQin Huasun
April 1999  FranceAlain Dejammet
May 1999  GabonDenis Dangue Réwaka
June 1999  GambiaBaboucarr-Blaise Jagne
July 1999  MalaysiaSyed Hamid Albar and Agam Hasmy
August 1999  NamibiaMartin Andjaba and Theo-Ben Gurirab
September 1999  NetherlandsPeter van Walsum and Jozias van Aartsen
October 1999  RussiaSergey Lavrov
November 1999  SloveniaDanilo Türk and Boris Frlec
December 1999  United KingdomJeremy Greenstock and Peter Hain

2000–2004

Presidents from 2000 to 2004:[20]

DatesStateName
January 2000  United StatesAl Gore, Richard Holbrooke, and Madeleine Albright
February 2000  ArgentinaArnoldo Manuel Listre and Adalberto Rodríguez Giavarini
March 2000  BangladeshAnwarul Karim Chowdhury and Abdus Samad Azad
April 2000  CanadaLloyd Axworthy and Robert Fowler
May 2000  People's Republic of ChinaWang Yingfan
June 2000  FranceJean-David Levitte
July 2000  JamaicaPatricia Durrant and Paul Robertson
August 2000  MalaysiaAgam Hasmy
September 2000  MaliMoctar Ouane and Alpha Oumar Konaré
October 2000  NamibiaMartin Andjaba and Theo-Ben Gurirab
November 2000  NetherlandsPeter van Walsum, Jozias van Aartsen, and Eveline Herfkens
December 2000  RussiaSergey Lavrov
January 2001  SingaporeKishore Mahbubani and S. Jayakumar
February 2001  TunisiaSaid Ben Mustapha and Habib Ben Yahia
March 2001  UkraineValeriy P. Kuchinsky, Volodymyr Yelchenko, and Anatoliy Zlenko
April 2001  United KingdomJeremy Greenstock
May 2001  United StatesJames B. Cunningham
June 2001  BangladeshAnwarul Karim Chowdhury and Abdus Samad Azad
July 2001  People's Republic of ChinaWang Yingfan
August 2001  ColombiaGuillermo Fernández de Soto and Alfonso Valdivieso Sarmiento
September 2001  FranceJean-David Levitte
October 2001  IrelandRichard Ryan and Brian Cowen
November 2001  JamaicaPatricia Durrant, P. J. Patterson, and Keith D. Knight
December 2001  MaliMoctar Ouane
January 2002  MauritiusJagdish Koonjul and Anil Gayan
February 2002  MexicoAdolfo Aguilar Zínser
March 2002  NorwayOle Peter Kolby and Jan Petersen
April 2002  RussiaSergey Lavrov
May 2002  SingaporeKishore Mahbubani and S. Jayakumar
June 2002  SyriaMikhail Wehbe and Farouk al-Sharaa
July 2002  United KingdomJeremy Greenstock and Valerie Amos
August 2002  United StatesJohn Negroponte and James B. Cunningham
September 2002  BulgariaSolomon Passy, Stefan Tafrov, Georgi Parvanov, and Rayko Strahilov Raytchev
October 2002  CameroonMartin Belinga Eboutou
November 2002  People's Republic of ChinaZhang Yishan and Wang Yingfan
December 2002  ColombiaAlfonso Valdivieso Sarmiento and Carolina Barco
January 2003  FranceJean-Marc de La Sablière and Dominique de Villepin
February 2003  GermanyGunter Pleuger and Joschka Fischer
March 2003  GuineaFrançois Lonseny Fall and Mamady Traore
April 2003  MexicoAdolfo Aguilar Zínser and Luis Ernesto Derbez
May 2003  PakistanMunir Akram and Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri
June 2003  RussiaSergey Lavrov
July 2003  SpainInocencio Arias, Ana Menendez, and Ana Palacio
August 2003  SyriaMikhail Wehbe and Faisal Meqdad
September 2003  United KingdomEmyr Jones Parry and Jack Straw
October 2003  United StatesJohn Negroponte and James B. Cunningham
November 2003  AngolaGaspar Martins
December 2003  BulgariaStefan Tafrov and Solomon Passy
January 2004  ChileHeraldo Muñoz and Soledad Alvear
February 2004  People's Republic of ChinaWang Guangya
March 2004  FranceJean-Marc de La Sablière and Pierre-André Wiltzer
April 2004  GermanyGunter Pleuger and Kerstin Müller
May 2004  PakistanMunir Akram and Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri
June 2004  PhilippinesLauro L. Baja Jr. and Delia Domingo-Albert
July 2004  RomaniaMihnea Motoc, Adrian Năstase, and Mircea Geoană
August 2004  RussiaAndrey Denisov
September 2004  SpainJuan Antonio Yáñez-Barnuevo and Miguel Ángel Moratinos
October 2004  United KingdomEmyr Jones Parry, Bill Rammell, and Adam Thomson
November 2004  United StatesJohn Danforth and Anne W. Patterson
December 2004  AlgeriaAbdallah Baali and Abdelaziz Belkhadem

2005–2009

DatesStateName
January 2005  ArgentinaCésar Mayoral and Rafael Bielsa[20]
February 2005  BeninJoel W. Adechi and Rogatien Biaou[20]
March 2005  BrazilRonaldo Mota Sardenberg[20]
April 2005  People's Republic of ChinaWang Guangya and Zhang Yishan[20]
May 2005  DenmarkEllen Margrethe Løj, Lars Faaborg-Andersen, and Per Stig Møller[20]
June 2005  FranceJean-Marc de La Sablière, Michel Duclos, and Brigitte Collet[20]
July 2005  GreeceAdamantios Vassilakis[45]
August 2005  JapanKenzo Oshima[46]
September 2005  PhilippinesLauro L. Baja Jr.[47] and Bayani Mercado[48]
October 2005  RomaniaMihnea Motoc[49] and Mihai Răzvan Ungureanu[50]
November 2005  RussiaAndrey Denisov[51]
December 2005  United KingdomEmyr Jones Parry[52]
January 2006  United Republic of TanzaniaAugustine P. Mahiga[53]
February 2006  United StatesJohn R. Bolton[54]
March 2006  ArgentinaCésar Mayoral[55]
April 2006  People's Republic of ChinaWang Guangya[56]
May 2006  Republic of the CongoBasile Ikouébé[57] and Pascal Gayama[58]
June 2006  DenmarkEllen Margrethe Løj[59]
July 2006  FranceJean-Marc de La Sablière[60]
August 2006  GhanaNana Effah-Apenteng[61]
September 2006  GreeceAdamantios Vassilakis[62]
October 2006  JapanKenzo Oshima[63]
November 2006  PeruJorge Voto-Bernales[64]
December 2006  QatarNassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser[65] and Mutlaq Majed al-Qahtani[66]
January 2007  RussiaVitaly Churkin[67]
February 2007  SlovakiaPeter Burian[68]
March 2007  South AfricaDumisani Kumalo[69]
April 2007  United KingdomEmyr Jones Parry[70] and Karen Pierce[71]
May 2007  United StatesZalmay Khalilzad[72] and Alejandro Daniel Wolff[73]
June 2007  BelgiumJohan C. Verbeke[74]
July 2007  People's Republic of ChinaWang Guangya[75]
August 2007  Republic of the CongoPascal Gayama[76]
September 2007  FranceJean-Maurice Ripert[77] and Bernard Kouchner[78]
October 2007  GhanaLeslie K. Christian[79]
November 2007  IndonesiaMarty Natalegawa[80]
December 2007  ItalyMarcello Spatafora[81]
January 2008  LibyaGiadalla Ettalhi[82]
February 2008  PanamaRicardo Alberto Arias[83]
March 2008  RussiaVitaly Churkin[84]
April 2008  South AfricaDumisani Kumalo[85]
May 2008  United KingdomKaren Pierce[86]
June 2008  United StatesZalmay Khalilzad[87] and Alejandro Daniel Wolff[88]
July 2008  VietnamLê Lương Minh[89]
August 2008  BelgiumJan Grauls[90]
September 2008  Burkina FasoMichel Kafando,[91] Blaise Compaoré[citation needed] and Alain Bédouma Yoda[92]
October 2008  People's Republic of ChinaZhang Yesui[93] and Liu Zhenmin[94]
November 2008  Costa RicaJorge Urbina,[95] Óscar Arias Sánchez, Saúl Weisleder,[96] and Jorge Ballestero[97]
December 2008  CroatiaNeven Jurica,[98] Stjepan Mesić,[99] and Ivo Sanader[100]
January 2009  FranceJean-Maurice Ripert,[101] Bernard Kouchner,[102] and Jean-Pierre Lacroix[103]
February 2009  JapanYukio Takasu[104]
March 2009  LibyaIbrahim Dabbashi[105] and Abdurrahman Mohamed Shalgham[106]
April 2009  MexicoClaude Heller[107] and Patricia Espinosa[108]
May 2009  RussiaVitaly Churkin[109] and Sergey Lavrov[110]
June 2009  TurkeyBaki İlkin[111] and Ahmet Davutoğlu[112]
July 2009  UgandaRuhakana Rugunda[113] and Sam Kutesa[114]
August 2009  United KingdomJohn Sawers[115]
September 2009  United StatesSusan Rice,[116] Barack Obama,[117] Rosemary DiCarlo,[118] and Hillary Clinton[119]
October 2009  VietnamLê Lương Minh[120]
November 2009  AustriaThomas Mayr-Harting[121]
December 2009  Burkina FasoMichel Kafando[122]

2010–2014

DatesStateName
January 2010  People's Republic of ChinaZhang Yesui[123]
February 2010  FranceGérard Araud[124]
March 2010  GabonEmmanuel Issoze-Ngondet[125]
April 2010  JapanYukio Takasu[126]
May 2010  LebanonNawaf Salam[127]
June 2010  MexicoClaude Heller[128]
July 2010  NigeriaJoy Ogwu[129]
August 2010  RussiaVitaly Churkin[130]
September 2010  TurkeyErtuğrul Apakan,[131] Abdullah Gül,[132] and Ahmet Davutoğlu[133]
October 2010  UgandaRuhakana Rugunda[134]
November 2010  United KingdomMark Lyall Grant[135]
December 2010  United StatesSusan Rice[136] and Brooke D. Anderson[137]
January 2011  Bosnia and HerzegovinaIvan Barbalić[138]
February 2011  BrazilMaria Luiza Ribeiro Viotti[139]
March 2011  People's Republic of ChinaLi Baodong[140]
April 2011  ColombiaJuan Manuel Santos[141] and Néstor Osorio Londoño[142]
May 2011  FranceGérard Araud[143]
June 2011  GabonAli Bongo Ondimba,[144] Alfred Moungara Moussotsi,[145] and Emmanuel Issoze-Ngondet[citation needed]
July 2011  GermanyPeter Wittig[146] and Guido Westerwelle[147]
August 2011  IndiaHardeep Singh Puri[148]
September 2011  LebanonNawaf Salam,[149] Michel Suleiman,[150] and Najib Mikati[citation needed]
October 2011  NigeriaJoy Ogwu[151]
November 2011  PortugalJosé Filipe Moraes Cabral[152]
December 2011  RussiaVitaly Churkin[153]
January 2012  South AfricaBaso Sangqu[154]
February 2012  TogoKodjo Menan[155]
March 2012  United KingdomMark Lyall Grant[156]
April 2012  United StatesSusan Rice[157]
May 2012  AzerbaijanAgshin Mehdiyev[158] and Ilham Aliyev[159]
June 2012  People's Republic of ChinaLi Baodong[160] and Wang Min[161]
July 2012  ColombiaNéstor Osorio Londoño[162]
August 2012  FranceGérard Araud[163]
September 2012  GermanyPeter Wittig[164]
October 2012  GuatemalaGert Rosenthal[165] and Harold Caballeros[166]
November 2012  IndiaHardeep Singh Puri[167]
December 2012  MoroccoMohammed Loulichki[168] and Saad-Eddine El Othmani[169]
January 2013  PakistanMasood Khan[170] and Hina Rabbani Khar[171]
February 2013  Republic of KoreaKim Sook[172] and Kim Sung-hwan[173]
March 2013  RussiaVitaly Churkin[174]
April 2013  RwandaEugène-Richard Gasana[175] and Louise Mushikiwabo[176]
May 2013  TogoKodjo Menan[177]
June 2013  United KingdomMark Lyall Grant[178]
July 2013  United StatesRosemary DiCarlo[179]
August 2013  ArgentinaMaría Perceval[180] and Agustín Rossi[181]
September 2013  AustraliaGary Quinlan[182] and Julie Bishop[183]
October 2013  AzerbaijanAgshin Mehdiyev[184] and Elmar Mammadyarov[185]
November 2013  People's Republic of ChinaLiu Jieyi[186]
December 2013  FranceGérard Araud[187] and Alexis Lamek[188]
January 2014  JordanZeid Ra'ad Zeid Al-Hussein[189]
February 2014  LithuaniaRaimonda Murmokaitė[190] and Linas Antanas Linkevičius[191]
March 2014  LuxembourgSylvie Lucas[192]
April 2014  NigeriaJoy Ogwu[193]
May 2014  South KoreaOh Joon[194]
June 2014  Russian FederationVitaly Churkin[195]
July 2014  RwandaEugène-Richard Gasana[196]
August 2014  United KingdomMark Lyall Grant[197]
September 2014  United StatesSamantha Power[198]
October 2014  ArgentinaMaría Cristina Perceval[199]
November 2014  AustraliaGary Quinlan[200]
December 2014  ChadMahamat Zene Cherif[201]

2015–2019

DatesStateName
January 2015  ChileCristian Barros[202]
February 2015  ChinaLiu Jieyi[203]
March 2015  FranceFrançois Delattre[204]
April 2015  JordanDina Kawar[205]
May 2015  LithuaniaRaimonda Murmokaitė[206]
June 2015  MalaysiaRamlan Bin Ibrahim[207]
July 2015  New ZealandGerard van Bohemen[208]
August 2015  NigeriaJoy Ogwu[209]
September 2015  Russian FederationVitaly Churkin[210]
October 2015  SpainRomán Oyarzun Marchesi[211]
November 2015  United KingdomMatthew Rycroft[212]
December 2015  United StatesSamantha Power[213]
January 2016  UruguayElbio Rosselli[214]
February 2016  VenezuelaRafael Ramírez Carreño[215]
March 2016  AngolaGaspar Martins[216]
April 2016  ChinaLiu Jieyi[217]
May 2016  EgyptAmr Abdellatif Aboulatta[218]
June 2016  FranceFrançois Delattre[219]
July 2016  JapanKoro Bessho[220]
August 2016  MalaysiaRamlan Bin Ibrahim[221] and Ahmad Zahid Hamidi[222]
September 2016  New ZealandGerard van Bohemen[223] and John Key[224]
October 2016  Russian FederationVitaly Churkin[225]
November 2016  SenegalFodé Seck[226]
December 2016  SpainRomán Oyarzun Marchesi[227]
January 2017  SwedenOlof Skoog[228]
February 2017  UkraineVolodymyr Yelchenko[229]
March 2017  United KingdomMatthew Rycroft[230][non-primary source needed]
April 2017  United StatesNikki Haley
May 2017  UruguayElbio Rosselli
June 2017  BoliviaSacha Llorenty[231]
July 2017  ChinaLiu Jieyi
August 2017  EgyptAmr Abdellatif Aboulatta[232]
September 2017  EthiopiaTekeda Alemu[233]
October 2017  FranceFrançois Delattre[234]
November 2017  ItalySebastiano Cardi[235]
December 2017  JapanKoro Bessho[236]
January 2018  KazakhstanKairat Umarov[237]
February 2018  KuwaitMansour Ayyad Al-Otaibi[238]
March 2018  NetherlandsKarel van Oosterom,[239] Sigrid Kaag, Stef Blok and Mark Rutte
April 2018  PeruGustavo Meza-Cuadra[240]
May 2018  PolandJoanna Wronecka, Andrzej Duda and Jacek Czaputowicz[241]
June 2018  Russian FederationVasily Nebenzya[242]
July 2018  SwedenOlof Skoog[243]
August 2018  United KingdomKaren Pierce[244]
September 2018  United StatesNikki Haley,[245] Donald Trump, Mike Pompeo
October 2018  BoliviaSacha Llorenty[246]
November 2018  ChinaMa Zhaoxu[246]
December 2018  Côte D'IvoireKacou Houadja Léon Adom,[247] Alassane Ouattara[248]
January 2019  Dominican RepublicJosé Singer W.,[249] Danilo Medina[249]
February 2019  Equatorial GuineaAnatolio Ndong Mba,[250] Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo[251]
March 2019  FranceFrançois Delattre[252]
April 2019  GermanyChristoph Heusgen[253]
May 2019  IndonesiaDian Triansyah Djani,[254] Retno Marsudi[255]
June 2019  KuwaitMansour Al-Otaibi, Sabah Al-Khalid Al-Sabah[256]
July 2019  PeruGustavo Meza-Cuadra, Néstor Bardales[257]
August 2019  PolandJoanna Wronecka
September 2019  Russian FederationVasily Nebenzya[258]
October 2019  South AfricaJerry Matthews Matjila
November 2019  United KingdomKaren Pierce
December 2019  United StatesKelly Craft[259]

2020–2024

DatesStateName
January 2020  VietnamĐặng Đình Quý[260] and Phạm Bình Minh[261]
February 2020  BelgiumMarc Pecsteen de Buytswerve[262]
March 2020  ChinaZhang Jun[263]
April 2020  Dominican RepublicJosé Singer Weisinger[264]
May 2020  EstoniaSven Jürgenson[265]
June 2020  FranceNicolas de Rivière[266]
July 2020  GermanyChristoph Heusgen[267]
August 2020  IndonesiaDian Triansyah Djani[268]
September 2020  NigerAbdou Abarry[269]
October 2020  Russian FederationVasily Nebenzya[270]
November 2020  Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesInga Rhonda King[271]
December 2020  South AfricaJerry Matthews Matjila[272]
January 2021  TunisiaTarek Ladeb[273]
February 2021  United KingdomBarbara Woodward[274]
March 2021  United StatesLinda Thomas-Greenfield[275]
April 2021  VietnamĐặng Đình Quý, Nguyễn Xuân Phúc and Bùi Thanh Sơn[276]
May 2021  ChinaZhang Jun
June 2021  EstoniaSven Jürgenson
July 2021  FranceNicolas de Rivière and Jean-Yves Le Drian
August 2021  IndiaT. S. Tirumurti and S. Jaishankar
September 2021  IrelandGeraldine Byrne Nason, Micheál Martin and Simon Coveney
October 2021  KenyaMartin Kimani and Raychelle Omamo
November 2021  MexicoJuan Ramón de la Fuente Ramírez, Marcelo Ebrard and Andrés Manuel López Obrador
December 2021  NigerAbdou Abarry
January 2022  NorwayMona Juul and Anniken Huitfeldt
February 2022  Russian FederationVasily Nebenzya
March 2022  United Arab EmiratesLana Zaki Nusseibeh
April 2022  United KingdomBarbara Woodward
May 2022  United StatesLinda Thomas-Greenfield
June 2022  AlbaniaFerit Hoxha, Olta Xhaçka and Edi Rama
July 2022  BrazilRonaldo Costa Filho
August 2022  ChinaZhang Jun
September 2022  FranceNicolas de Rivière and Catherine Colonna
October 2022  GabonMichel Xavier Biang and Michael Moussa-Adamo
November 2022  GhanaHarold Adlai Agyeman
December 2022  IndiaRuchira Kamboj
January 2023  JapanIshikane Kimihiro
February 2023  MaltaVanessa Frazier
March 2023  MozambiquePedro Comissário Afonso
April 2023  Russian FederationVasily Nebenzya
May 2023  SwitzerlandPascale Baeriswyl
June 2023  United Arab EmiratesLana Zaki Nusseibeh
July 2023  United KingdomBarbara Woodward
August 2023  United StatesLinda Thomas-Greenfield
September 2023  AlbaniaFerit Hoxha, Edi Rama
October 2023  BrazilSérgio França Danese
November 2023  ChinaZhang Jun
December 2023  EcuadorJosé de la Gasca[277]
January 2024  FranceNicolas de Rivière[278]
February 2024  GuyanaCarolyn Rodrigues-Birkett[279]
March 2024  JapanYamazaki Kazuyuki[280]
April 2024  MaltaVanessa Frazier[281]
May 2024  MozambiquePedro Comissário Afonso[282]
June 2024  South KoreaHwang Joon-kook[283]
July 2024  Russian FederationVasily Nebenzya[284]
August 2024  Sierra LeoneAlhaji Fanday Turay
September 2024  SloveniaBoštjan Malovrh
October 2024  Switzerland
November 2024  United Kingdom
December 2024  United States

2025–2029

DatesStateName
January 2025  Algeria
February 2025  China
March 2025  Denmark
April 2025  France
May 2025  Greece
June 2025  Guyana
July 2025  Pakistan
August 2025  Panama
September 2025  South Korea
October 2025  Russian Federation
November 2025  Sierra Leone
December 2025  Slovenia

Unusual circumstances

In 1961, the United Arab Republic (then a union of Egypt and Syria) was elected to the Security Council. Syria seceded from the union while it was still on the Security Council, but Egypt's official UN name remained the United Arab Republic and it was unaffected.

In August 1984, Upper Volta changed its name to Burkina Faso while president of the Security Council. The rest of its term was unaffected and rotated normally to Zimbabwe in September 1984. Afterward, Burkina Faso was first in English alphabetical order and it became president of the Security Council for a second time that year in October 1984.

In March 1990, South Yemen (officially the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen under D) served as president of the Security Council. Yemeni unification with North Yemen took place in May 1990, with both Yemens being treated as successor states under the name Yemen. After the term of the United States rotated out in November 1990, Yemen served as president of the Security Council for a second time that year in December 1990.

In December 1991, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics officially changed its name to the Russian Federation while president of the Security Council. By coincidence, the alphabetical order was unaffected, the surrounding members being Romania and the United Kingdom.

Rwanda was elected to the Security Council in 1994 and was due to serve its term as president in September 1994; however, its government was overthrown in July 1994 and the replacement government did not appoint a United Nations representative in August 1994. As a result, its term was temporarily skipped and Spain (which was due to serve in October) served in September instead. Rwanda would serve its term at the end of that alphabetical rotation.[285]

See also

Notes

References

Bibliography