United Nations:Russia accused the United States on Monday of aggression against Iraq and Syria aimed at preserving its global dominance and salvaging the Biden administration's "image" ahead of U.S. elections. The U.S. retorted that its military response to unjustified attacks by Iranian-backed proxies against American forces is not only legal but will continue.
The exchange came at a contentious U.N. Security Council meeting called by Russia, Syria's closest ally, where both countries also said they did not want an escalation and spillover of the Israel-Hamas war. Many council members expressed fears of a growing Mideast conflict and urged de-escalation and stepped-up peace efforts.
Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia accused the U.S. of violating international law and continuing "to sow chaos and destruction in the Middle East."
He said violence by the United States and its allies has escalated from the Palestinian territories to Lebanon, the Red Sea and Yemen and is "nullifying international efforts to reestablish peace in the Middle East." He called on all countries "to unequivocally condemn these senseless acts … which violate the sovereignty of Iraq and the Syrian Arab Republic."
The Russian ambassador claimed the United States is attempting "to flex muscles ... to justify and salvage the image of the current American administration ... in the light of the upcoming presidential pre-election campaign." And he claimed the Americans were undertaking military action in an effort "at any price to preserve their dominating position in the world."
U.S. Deputy Ambassador Robert Wood countered that the United States has an absolute right to self-defense against attacks on American forces and the actions it has taken were "necessary and proportionate."
He told the council that since Oct. 18, Iran-aligned militia groups have attacked U.S. and coalition forces over 165 times in Iraq, Syria, and in a drone attack on a Jordanian facility hosting U.S. forces fighting Islamic State extremists on Jan. 28 that killed three U.S. Army members and injured many more.
The U.S. responded with 85 airstrikes in Iraq and Syria on Feb. 2 which both countries claimed resulted in civilian deaths, injuries and property destruction. They condemned the attacks as violations of their sovereignty – as their ambassadors did again at Monday's council meeting.
Wood stressed that the United States doesn't want more conflict in a region where it is "actively working to contain and deescalate the conflict in Gaza."
"And we are not seeking a direct conflict with Iran," Wood said "But we will continue to defend our personnel against unacceptable attacks. Period."
He accused Iran of failing "to rein in its extremist proxies."