Chinese-Dragon
RETIRED TTA
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2010
- Messages
- 33,932
- Reaction score
- 52
- Country
- Location
At the time that China became a permanent member, it was not a particularly strong or influential country. However it was one of the "big four" Allies during World War II and had a strong relationship with the United States.
Keep in mind that this China was the Republic of China, with whom the United States had very close political and military ties, and not the Communist government that later came to power as the People's Republic of China, which only took over China's Security Council seat in 1971.
I am well aware the seat was held by the Republic of China, but the seat belongs to a COUNTRY, not a government. That's why it passed to the People's Republic of China when the world recognized it as the representative of China, like the Soviet Union's seat passed to the Russian Federation.
The requirements in 1945 were for an independent country, which India was not, they were a part of the British Empire at that time.
But none of that particularly matters.
What matters is why would the P5 dilute their veto power, when the new entrants might vote against them?