You're reading: Contentious UN Security Council Session on Russia’s Threat Against Ukraine

The United Nations Security Council held a contentious special session on the Ukraine crisis on Jan. 31 during which the United States accused Russia of working to upend the international order.

The U.S. called for the special meeting in response to Russia’s refusal to de-escalate a massive military build-up on Ukraine’s northern and eastern borders. While the meeting was another diplomatic effort to defuse the Ukraine crisis, it actually brought the differences between Russia and the West into stark contrast.

At the outset, U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield stated that Russia’s actions over the last couple of months “strike at the very heart of the UN Charter.”

She noted that the threat Russia poses today goes beyond Ukraine. “Russia’s aggression today not only threatens Ukraine. It also threatens Europe. It threatens the international order this body is charged with upholding. An order that, if it stands for anything, stands for the principle that one country cannot simply redraw another country’s borders by force, or make another country’s people live under a government they did not choose.”

The U.S. Ambassador noted that Ukraine has been a full member of the UN for more than 30 years and its independence, sovereignty, and territorial integrity are neither open to question nor subject to review.

“Ukraine is a sovereign country and a sovereign people, entitled to determine their own future, without the threat of force. This is not just the conviction that Ukrainians hold – it is a right enshrined by the UN Charter, a right that Russia and every other member of this institution has freely committed to upholding,” explained Thomas Greenfield.

Russia, along with China, had opposed the special session with Russia’s Ambassador to the UN Vasily Nebenzia calling the meeting “an attempt to mislead the international community.”

Yet, during his remarks, it was Nebenzia who repeatedly misstated the facts surrounding the war that Russia has waged against Ukraine since 2014. He called the 2014 Revolution of Dignity “a bloody coup” instigated by “Nazis,” and accused Ukraine of banning the Russian language in the country and causing a schism within the Orthodox Church.

He alleged that of the 14,000 people killed as a result of the Donbas conflict, most of the deaths were the result of shelling by Ukraine’s military forces. He also questioned the fact that more than 100,000 Russian troops are massed on Ukraine’s borders, asking how that number was developed.

“We have never cited this figure,” said Nebenzia.

He asserted that the US has a history of disinformation and the words of US government officials cannot be trusted. He referred back to claims of Iraq’s possession of weapons of mass destruction that US Secretary of State Colin Powell made before the UN Security Council prior to the US attack of the country in 2003, which subsequently proved false.

Nebenzia also noted remarks by Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky, who said several days ago that there is no reason to believe that a Russian attack is imminent.

Ukraine’s government has walked a fine line between working with the West for much-needed military and diplomatic support in response to Russia’s military build-up and its own need to retain an internal semblance of calm and normalcy as the level of alarm within the country continues to rise.

During the Security Council session, Ukraine’s Ambassador to the United Nations Serhii Kyslytsia asserted Ukraine’s “inherent sovereign right to choose our international agreements.”

Kyslytsia, who suggested that Zelensky was ready to personally meet with Putin to address the Kremlin’s issues, said that while Ukraine remains “open to a diplomatic solution,” it is also “ready to defend itself.”

Russia has amassed some 130,000 troops on Ukraine’s eastern border and in February is scheduled to hold joint military exercises in Belarus on Ukraine’s northern border. A CNN report suggested that Russia is also bringing blood supplies to the border with Ukraine, which could indicate a final stage of preparedness for military action.

The Kremlin is demanding that the U.S. and NATO give formal assurances that it will never extend to Ukraine an invitation to join the defense alliance. The Kremlin is also demanding that NATO drawdown military troops and hardware in Eastern Europe.

During individual remarks, all 15 members of the UN Security Council plus several ambassadors representing eastern European countries asserted Ukraine’s independence, sovereignty, and territorial integrity, calling for a peaceful and diplomatic resolution to the crisis. Only China suggested that Russia’s military build-up did not indicate a looming threat of invasion.