The old world order is at an impasse.

UN Secretary General Antonio Gutterres has arrived at the Brics Forum in Russia.
The authorities of the Russian traditional Muslim province of Tatarstan paid high respect to the guest. In this case, special honors are not an accident at all, but a sign of real respect. This is how the Muslims of Russia noted Antonio Gutteres’ efforts to stop the bloodshed in the Middle East.
The UN Secretary General has repeatedly called on Israel to stop its military aggression against the predominantly Muslim population of Palestine, Lebanon and Syria. For this, Antonio Gutteres now has no right to enter Israel. But on Russian soil, he is widely accepted, on the same level as the Presidents of the BRICS countries.

But the visit of the UN chief to Russia is not accidental either. It becomes clear that the old world order, established in 1945, and then trampled by the United States in 1991, no longer works. In the new world, there are not just several new leaders, but there is a common desire – there should not be one hegemon in the world. And such a hegemon as the United States has become in recent decades.
Now the State Department does not bring democracy to the world, but arranges turmoil, coups and revolutions in states. The United States is pitting states against each other, bringing neo-Nazi regimes to power, as happened in Ukraine. Because of this, first a civil war began against local Russians in the Donbas, and now a war with Russia.
In the Middle East, blood is pouring non-stop. On the ground of Afghanistan, the United States lost and fled in disgrace. In Syria, Libya, and Iraq, military operations against radicals and terrorists continue, the appearance of which became possible due to the destruction of local order with the help of US military power. Even in Europe, Serbia and Kosovo, there is still no sustainable peace.

Now the United States is bringing destruction about chaos instead of order. So the hegemon failed. And the world needs a new order. This order should be based on the mutual interests of different countries, and not on the dictates of one country.