Miami Herald

U.S., Russian diplomats clash at U.N. over war in Ukraine

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Russian and Western diplomats clashed over alleged war crimes in Ukraine on Thursday during a heated meeting of the United Nations Security Council.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Russia’s withdrawal from the Ukrainian cities of Izyum and Bucha revealed gruesome torture and killing of Ukrainian civilians that could not be dismissed as the actions of a few bad actors.

“Wherever the Russian tide recedes, we discover the horror that’s left in its wake,” Blinken said. “We cannot, we will not allow President Putin to get away with it.”

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov denied the charges and accused Ukrainian forces of killing civilians in the eastern Donbas region “with impunity.”

He blamed the United States, France and Germany for not holding Ukraine accountabl­e for alleged atrocities.

“The Kyiv regime owes its impunity to its Western sponsors,” he said.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba seized on Lavrov’s remarks, saying his comments made him an accomplice to crimes occurring in Ukraine.

“Russian diplomats are directly complicit because their lies incite these crimes and cover them up,” he said.

The meeting marked only the second time that Blinken and Lavrov have been in the same room since Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine. Moscow’s decision to attend the meeting surprised some U.S. officials who expected Russia to recoil at a topic designed to expose and condemn its plans to stage referendum­s and annex occupied territory in Ukraine.

In singling out Russia for blame, Blinken was joined by top diplomats from countries including France, Britain, Norway, Albania and Ireland, as well as U.N. Secretary General António Guterres, who accused the Kremlin of violating internatio­nal law.

The meeting was attended by the chief prosecutor of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, Karim Khan, who said his team was deploying to Ukraine in the coming days to investigat­e allegation­s in the country’s east, where residents of territory previously occupied by Russia have accused Russian forces of torture, forced disappeara­nces and rape.

Without explicitly blaming Russia, Khan made clear the atrocities he has investigat­ed during visits to war-scorched areas of Ukraine including the Kyiv suburb of Bucha and the northeaste­rn city of Kharkiv were real and shocking.

“The bodies I saw were not fake,” he said.

French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna said that Russia has committed “unspeakabl­e crimes” and that officials who committed, ordered or planned them must be held accountabl­e.

Guterres called Moscow’s plan to stage referendum­s on joining Russia in occupied areas of Ukraine a “violation of the U.N. charter, and of internatio­nal law and precedent.”

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