Times-Herald

US: Security Council must tell Russia to stop nuclear threats

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UNITED NATIONS (AP) — U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken called on every U.N. Security Council member to "send a clear message" to Russia that it must stop its nuclear threats in the war in Ukraine.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said earlier this week that his nuclear-armed country will "certainly use all means available to us" if its territory is threatened and to defend the country and its people.

Blinken used a council session Thursday to criticize Russia's invasion and press other countries to join in Washington's forceful condemnati­ons of the conflict. He listed atrocities he said were committed by Russia — and suggested that more could come.

"Every council member should send a clear message that these reckless nuclear threats must stop immediatel­y," he said.

The Security Council has held dozens of contentiou­s meetings on Ukraine since the war began in February, but Thursday's meeting had special stature: It was held during the annual U.N. General Assembly gathering of world leaders and brought multiple foreign ministers to the table.

Called by France, the current council president, the meeting was focused on addressing accountabi­lity for alleged abuses and atrocities, and the U.S. and other Western members repeatedly accused Russia of committing them.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, meanwhile, repeated his country's frequent claims that Kyiv has long oppressed Russian speakers in Ukraine's east — one of various explanatio­ns Moscow has offered for the invasion.

Ukraine's Western allies, he said, "have been covering up the crimes of the Kyiv regime."

Lavrov was not in the room when Blinken and some other U.S. allies spoke, only appearing just before his own speech.

Despite Blinken's forceful words, no one expects the council to act against Russia since Moscow has veto power as a permanent member.

Instead, a U.S. official said Blinken's aim was to convince other members to impress upon Moscow the global damage that the war is causing and demand that it end. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to preview Blinken's speech before he spoke.

The meeting came a day after President Joe Biden assailed Putin for what he called egregious violations of the U.N. Charter and internatio­nal law. At the U.N. Security Council, Blinken made the case that Russia should face further censure and isolation for its invasion.

In listing several allegation­s of war crimes and other atrocities, he called on countries that have yet to speak out forcefully against them as an affront to internatio­nal order.

He noted that the war had not only caused massive destructio­n to Ukraine and the Ukrainian people but also distracted the council from other global crises, including potential famines, climate change and widespread poverty.

As the meeting began, there were already signs of a charged atmosphere around the council's famous horseshoe-shaped table.

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