UN Security Council adopts neutral US stance on war in Ukraine as Trump pursues peace

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Vote results are displayed during the Eleventh Emergency Special Session draft resolution meeting in the United Nations General Assembly on the 3rd anniversary of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, at the U.N. headquarters in New York, U.S., February 24, 2025. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

The United Nations on Feb 24 had earlier rejected a US bid to tone down the General Assembly’s stance on Russia’s war in Ukraine.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- The United Nations Security Council on Feb 24 adopted a US-drafted resolution on the third anniversary of

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

that takes a neutral position on the conflict as US President Donald Trump seeks to broker peace.

The short resolution reflects Mr Trump’s upending of US policy on Ukraine after taking office in January and his more conciliatory stance towards Russia. In contrast, former president Joe Biden’s administration led efforts at the United Nations to support Ukraine throughout the war.

Russia’s UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia acknowledged “constructive changes” in the US position on the conflict.

He told the council the resolution was “not an ideal one”, but “a starting point for future efforts towards peaceful settlement”.

The 15-member UN Security Council had been deadlocked throughout the war and unable to take any action because Russia holds a veto.

But the 193-member General Assembly has repeatedly supported Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and called for a just, lasting and comprehensive peace in line with the UN Charter.

The US failed earlier on Feb 24 to convince the General Assembly to pass the same three-paragraph resolution adopted by the Security Council.

The resolution mourns the loss of life in the “Russia-Ukraine conflict”, reiterates the UN’s purpose to maintain international peace and security and peacefully settle disputes, and urges a swift end to the conflict and a lasting peace.

The Security Council adopted the US resolution with 10 votes in favour, while France, Britain, Denmark, Greece and Slovenia abstained. Russia voted in favour after failing to amend it and vetoing European bids to add language supporting Ukraine.

“This resolution puts us on the path to peace. It is a first step, but a crucial one, one of which we should all be proud,” acting US Ambassador to the UN Dorothy Shea told the council. “Now we must use it to build a peaceful future for Ukraine, Russia and the international community.”

No equivalence

However, Mr Trump’s approach to mediation have left Ukraine and European allies wary of his focus on Russia and worried they could be cut out of talks to end the war.

Britain’s UN Ambassador Barbara Woodward told the council that the terms of peace in Ukraine matter and must “send a message that aggression does not pay”.

“This is why there can be no equivalence between Russia and Ukraine in how this council refers to this war. If we are to find a path to sustainable peace, the council must be clear on the war’s origins,” she said.

French UN Ambassador Nicolas de Riviere – whose President Emmanuel Macron met with Mr Trump in Washington on Feb 24 – said that while France was “fully committed to peace in Ukraine, we call for comprehensive, just and lasting peace, and certainly not for capitulation of the victim”.

The General Assembly earlier adopted two resolutions, one drafted by Ukraine and Europeans and one drafted by the US that was amended by the assembly to include its long-held language supporting Ukraine.

Those votes gave Ukraine and European states a diplomatic victory over Washington.

“This war has never been about Ukraine only. It is about a fundamental right of any country to exist, to choose its own path and to live free from aggression,” Ukraine’s Deputy Foreign Minister Mariana Betsa told the assembly before the vote.

The amended US-drafted resolution won 93 votes in favour, while 73 states abstained and eight voted no. Russia failed in a bid to amend the US text to include a reference to the “root causes” of the conflict.

The resolution drafted by Ukraine and European countries passed with 93 votes in favour, 65 abstentions and 18 no votes.

Along with the United States, some other countries that voted no were Russia, North Korea and Israel. REUTERS

Acting US Ambassador to the UN Dorothy Shea says the proposed European and Russian changes pursued “a war of words rather than an end to the war”.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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