Frontlines and Backrooms

Richard Falk | Why International Law Doesn’t Restrain Power


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Richard Falk reflects on the structure of international law and its relationship to power in today’s world.

A former UN Special Rapporteur and Professor Emeritus at Princeton University, Falk has spent decades examining how global order is shaped — not only by legal principles, but by political will, strategic interests, and the realities of power.

From the architecture of the United Nations and the limits of reform, to the selective application of legal norms in conflicts such as Gaza and Iran, this conversation explores a central question:

Is international law a constraint on power — or one of its instruments?

00:00 — Opener & Introduction
01:26 — What International Law Was Meant to Do
03:40 — The UN System and Veto Power
06:28 — Why the UN Cannot Be Reformed
11:13 — The “Board of Peace” and Parallel Power Structures
15:11 — Francesca Albanese and Silencing Criticism
18:17 — Israel privileged place in the world
22:02 — Lobbying, Israel, and Western Politics
25:32 — Europe, the US, and the Atlantic Alliance
27:12 — What Happens When Leaders Ignore the Law
30:32 — Could the UN Survive Without the US?
33:24 — Collapse or Transition of World Order
35:39 — What Happens to Small States Without Law
38:53 — Law as Policy, Double Standards, Hypocrisy
42:07 — Nuclear Order and Who Gets Power
46:06 — Are We One Step Away from Disaster?
48:18 — Final Questions & Personal Reflection
59:41 — What comes in the next episodes

This is a conversation about the limits of law, the realities of power, and the structure of a world that may be entering a new phase.

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Frontlines and BackroomsBy Vladimir Bobetic