We know how that story goes. As the Axis powers flexed their military might in the 1930s, the League watched helplessly. It didn’t have any armed forces under its command. Gradually, member states, including Germany, Italy, Japan and Spain withdrew from the League. When WWII erupted, the League, whose express mission was to keep the peace, was written off as a failure. Eight-five million lives were lost in WWII. The economic and psychological toll of the war was crushing. In the wake of this devastation, the United Nations (UN) was formed in 1945 in the hope of preventing future wars. In 1948, the UN General Assembly passed the International Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide. The UN Charter promises to save the world from the ‘scourge of war’, to foster international cooperation, to protect human rights, and to uphold international law.