The 15-foot-high black granite stele known as “The Universal Soldier,” sculpted by Mac Adams was dedicated in 1991 to the 22 nations that participated in the defense of the south in the Korean (often referred to as the “Forgotten”) War of 1950-53.

“Let Us Beat Swords into Plowshares” was sculpted in bronze by Russian-born Evgeniy Vuchetich and donated to the U.N. by the Government of the Soviet Union in 1959.
At the time, the United Nations Office of Public Information commented that the sculpture was: “symbolizing man’s desire to put an end to war and convert the means of destruction into creative tools for the benefit of all mankind.”
Although the sculptor is in the style of Socialist Realism (depictions of-supposed- communist values) from a country with an official ideology of atheism, the title of the work was derived from biblical references: Isaiah 2:4, Joel 3:10 and Micah 4:3.
That’s U Thant Island in the background.