Women United for United Nations

[2] WUUN acted as a self-appointed public relations agency for the U.N., publishing a monthly U.N. News for Women Broadcasters bulletin, promoting U.N stories to the press and also producing catalogs of U.N. themed documentary films.

The organisation established an Information Center for the U.N. in New York in conjunction with the American Association for the United Nations.

[3] WUUN also worked at the community level by organising discussions, providing speakers for local events, and producing educational resources.

[2] In 1951, WUUN issued a report opposed to a Women's International Democratic Federation report, "We Accuse," which described the bombing raids carried out by the United States Air Force and war crimes committed by the United Nations Forces in the Korean War.

[4][5] Suzy Kim, Professor of Korean History at Rutgers University,[6] suggests that the "30 US women's groups that formed the Women United for United Nations (WUUN) waged a 'patriotic' defense of 'collective security,' standing against pacifist and peace groups that campaigned against war and armament," and places WUUN in the context of groups such as the (CIA-funded) Committee of Correspondence, which was established, according to Professor Helen Laville,[7] as "a direct response to the Soviet peace campaign and the activities of the WIDF".