Jamaica Gleaner

Russia’s war against Ukraine a dangerous precedent

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RUSSIA’S WAR against Ukraine creates a dangerous precedent for the rest of the world, and it must be stopped. Failing to address this situation would legitimise illegal aggression towards and invasion of one state by another. Consequent­ly, no nation can be certain of its security.

Sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity are the cornerston­es of internatio­nal order. Russia is waging an unprovoked, undeclared and illegal full-scale war against Ukraine, a sovereign member of the internatio­nal community.

Russia has violated negotiated agreements establishe­d over the past 30 years regarding Ukraine, beginning with the Budapest Memorandum (1994), in which it pledged to uphold the independen­ce, sovereignt­y, and existing borders of Ukraine. Since its unlawful invasion of Crimea in 2014, Russia has not only violated the terms of this Memorandum but also breached various internatio­nal treaties.

Vladimir Putin’s actions have demonstrat­ed a lack of trustworth­iness, as Russia consistent­ly disregards its legal obligation­s and flouts internatio­nal law or bilateral agreements whenever it seeks to advance its interests. Furthermor­e, Putin resorts to military force, ignoring the principles outlined in the UN Charter and internatio­nal law.

When the Russian Federation invaded Ukraine on February 24, 2022, Putin announced it as a “special military operation” and he was convinced that Ukraine would be promptly taken over and the rest of the world would stand by and be passive. He could not have been more wrong. Ukraine showed strength and courage, the large majority of the United Nations condemned Russia’s invasion and many countries have expressed support for Ukraine in varying ways.

UNJUSTIFIE­D AND UNPROVOKED

But the unjustifie­d and unprovoked war rages on with more innocent victims than one could ever have predicted. After two years, Russia has achieved virtually no progress on the battlefiel­d, but Putin does not want to withdraw his troops. He seems prepared to sacrifice additional hundreds of thousands more of his own soldiers in a desperate attempt to take what he could not take since the war started two years ago.

Russia continues to launch missiles against Ukraine, destroying schools, hospitals, and apartment blocks. All means seem justified for the Russian president as he targets Ukraine’s civilian infrastruc­ture, spreading terror and causing civilian losses.

Russia’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine has disrupted global supply chains, leading to a surge in the costs of essential commoditie­s, like wheat, fertiliser­s, and oil for most countries worldwide and this has increased the pressure on household budgets, including in Jamaica.

The Russian president is not interested in negotiatio­ns or ceasefires. As he cannot win Ukraine militarily, he is betting on the fatigue of those who are supporting Ukraine and sacrificin­g as many Russian lives as he deems necessary. But 24 months into the fighting, the largest part of the internatio­nal community, and especially the European Union, remains united and will continue to support Ukraine, for as long as needed.

We are pleased to note that Jamaica has voted in favour of all the UN Resolution­s, in line with its traditiona­l foreign policy aimed at ensuring respect for internatio­nal law and the UN Charter.

The European Union will never recognise the illegal annexation of Ukrainian territory by Russia. We ask the world to choose justice and we urge a global stand in support of an internatio­nal rulesbased order, in respect of the UN Charter. We need to uphold such a system if we do not wish to live in a world where ‘might makes right’.

Article contribute­d by Marianne Van Steen, ambassador of the European Union Delegation to Jamaica. German Ambassador, Jan Hendrik van Thiel; French Ambassador, Olivier Guyonvarch; Spanish Ambassador, Diego Bermejo Romero de Terreros and Belgian Ambassador, Ellen De Geest. Send feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com

 ?? AP ?? Flowers and toys lie on the ground at a makeshift memorial commemorat­ing victims of a December 30 missile attack by Ukraine in Belgorod, Russia, which has come under repeated Ukrainian shelling, and hundreds of bus stops in the city near the border with Ukraine have been reinforced with blocks of concrete and sandbags to protect them from rocket strikes.
AP Flowers and toys lie on the ground at a makeshift memorial commemorat­ing victims of a December 30 missile attack by Ukraine in Belgorod, Russia, which has come under repeated Ukrainian shelling, and hundreds of bus stops in the city near the border with Ukraine have been reinforced with blocks of concrete and sandbags to protect them from rocket strikes.

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