United Nations

The United Nations was an organization comprised of many of the world countries prior to 2052 and was an organization created in order to settle international disputes.

Background
The United Nations entered into force of its charter on October 24, 1945. In May 2052, the entity began to collapse, due to the start of the Resource Wars following the European Commonwealth's military intervention in the Middle East. The oil-rich states of the Middle East previously raised crude oil prices to near confiscatory levels in light of the growing global petroleum shortage.

Facing an economic disaster because of European nations' heavy reliance on imported Middle Eastern oil, the European Commonwealth invaded the Middle East to force its states to lower oil prices or to seize their remaining reserves of petroleum. The United Nations actively tried to restore peace with nothing to show for their efforts. As natural resource pressures grew and the United Nations' impotence to maintain a stable international order became clear, many member nations withdrew from the organization, prepared to use military force to defend what was theirs or seize what was somebody else's.

The United Nations General Assembly finally disbanded the organization on July 27, 2052, after the majority of its member-states had withdrawn from it. Its last Secretary-General was a Japanese diplomat, Sakugama Okiri. Its former headquarters in New York were then sold to a major toy retailer to be transformed into a superstore.