Explainer-Can the U.N. do more than just talk about Russia, Ukraine
crisis?
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[January 31, 2022]
By Michelle Nichols
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The U.N.
Security Council is due to meet in public on Monday, at the request of
the United States, to discuss Russia's troop build-up on the border with
Ukraine as international diplomacy aimed at easing tensions moves to the
world body in New York.
The United States describes the meeting of the 15-member body as a
chance for Russia to explain itself, while Russia signaled it could try
and block it. Nine votes are needed for the meeting to proceed and
Washington is "confident" it has sufficient support.
But aside from all members having the opportunity to air their views
openly, there will be no action by the council - even if Russia were to
invade Ukraine. A simple statement needs consensus support and Russia
could veto any bid for a resolution.
Russia is one of five permanent, veto-wielding powers on the council
along with the United States, France, Britain and China. The Security
Council is charged with maintaining international peace and security.
One day after the meeting, Russia is set to assume the council's
rotating presidency for February.
"The U.S. and its allies will use the U.N. as a political theater where
they can publicly shame Russia in the event of war," said Richard Gowan,
U.N. director at Crisis Group, a think-tank.
"I fear that this will be just one more crisis, like the Ethiopian war
and Burmese coup, that shows what little clout the U.N. carries in the
real world," he added.
WHAT HAPPENED WITH CRIMEA?
If Russia's military escalates the crisis, diplomats and foreign policy
analysts say diplomacy and action at the United Nations is likely to
mirror what happened in 2014 after Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimea
region.
The Security Council has met dozens of times since then to discuss the
Ukraine crisis. In March 2014, it voted on a U.S.-drafted resolution
opposing a referendum on the status of Crimea and urging countries not
to recognize it. It received 13 votes in favor, China abstained and
Russia cast a veto.
Seeking to demonstrate Russia's international isolation, Western
countries then took a similar text to the 193-member General Assembly,
which adopted a resolution declaring the referendum invalid. It received
100 votes in favor, 11 against and 58 abstentions, while two dozen
countries didn't vote.
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Members of the Ukrainian Navy fire a gun during naval drills in the
northwestern part of the Black Sea, Ukraine, in this handout picture
released January 29, 2022. The Ukrainian Naval Forces/Handout via
REUTERS
General Assembly resolutions carry
political weight but are not legally binding. Unlike the Security
Council, no country has veto power in the General Assembly.
WHAT ARE WESTERN DIPLOMATS DOING?
So far, Western diplomacy at the United Nations during the latest
military build-up has largely focused on trying to rally support -
should they need it - among U.N. members by accusing Russia of
undermining the U.N. Charter.
The Charter is the founding document of the United Nations,
outlining its purposes and principles agreed in 1945.
"Russia's actions toward Ukraine are not only a regional issue,"
U.S. President Joe Biden's ambassador to the United Nations, Linda
Thomas-Greenfield, told reporters last week.
"They impact every U.N. member state, and we must be prepared to
stand together in unity and solidarity should Russia defy the shared
values and principles that undergird our international system," she
said.
WHAT CAN RUSSIA DO AS SECURITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT?
On Tuesday, Russia takes over the council's rotating presidency for
February. This is largely an administrative role, but does involve
scheduling meetings, so some diplomats warn Russia could delay any
attempts by council members to request another discussion on actions
by Russia.
As things stand, the council is already due to discuss Ukraine on
Feb. 17, diplomats said. It is a regularly scheduled meeting on the
Minsk agreements, which were endorsed by the council in 2015 and
designed to end a separatist war by Russian-speakers in eastern
Ukraine.
The General Assembly is also set to hold an annual discussion on
"the situation in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine"
on Feb. 23.
(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Mary Milliken and Daniel
Wallis)
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