United Nations:The UN Security Council scheduled an emergency meeting on Ukraine for Wednesday night, just hours after diplomats from dozens of countries took the floor at the General Assembly to deplore Russia's actions toward the country and plead for diplomacy as fears of a new war in Europe grew.
Citing an immediate threat of Russian offensive, Ukraine requested the council session after Russia said that rebels in eastern Ukraine had asked Moscow for military assistance. The council, where Russia holds the rotating presidency this month, was meeting just two days after another emergency session saw no support for Russia's decision to recognise two rebel regions of Ukraine as independent and to order Russian troops there for peacekeeping.
Council diplomats are now finalising a draft of a resolution that would declare that Russia is violating the UN Charter, international law, and a 2015 council resolution on Ukraine, a diplomat said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the discussions were private. The resolution would urge Russia to come back into compliance immediately, the diplomat said.
At the General Assembly meeting earlier Wednesday, Russia and ally Syria defended Moscow's moves. But even China, which usually takes Russia's side at the U.N., spoke up for the world body's longstanding principle of respecting countries' sovereignty and internationally recognised borders, while not mentioning Russia by name. Meeting a day after Western powers and some other countries imposed new sanctions on Russia, the 193-member General Assembly didn't take any collective action. But the comments from nearly 70 nations, with more scheduled for Monday, represented the broadest forum of global sentiment since the crisis dramatically escalated this week.
Countries from Guatemala to Turkey to Japan condemned Russia's embrace of the separatist regions' independence claims or voiced support for Ukraine. Ukraine, you're not alone, Bulgarian Ambassador Lachezara Stoeva said. U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield exhorted countries to get off the sidelines. "There is no middle ground here. Calling for both sides to de-escalate only gives Russia a pass. Russia is the aggressor here, she said.