It was the only possible outcome.… The conference room in Geneva had no flags. That, Leila Hassan thought, was deliberate. No symbols, no maps—just a circular table under soft white light, as if the architects had tried to design neutrality itself. Outside, the glass walls reflected a city that believed in systems: banks, treaties, precision. Inside, the representatives of five civilizations sat with entirely different ideas of what a “state” even was. Leila was there as an observer for the United Nations Secretariat—young, multilingual, and already aware that neutrality was less a position than a performance. The European delegate spoke first. “To us,” he said, fingers interlocked, “the state is the vessel of a political community. Laws are not commands—they are agreements shaped by history, by rights, by shared identity.” Leila noted the familiar echoes: post-war integration, the slow erosion of borders, something like w...