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I am confused as well. One possible explanation: India has 16,000 citizens, a great many of them students, currently stranded in Ukraine, so their focus may be on avoiding antagonizing Russia in order to have more options to evacuate their nationals. Not taking sides between Russia and Ukraine may be a good short term strategy when your priority is to get your people out. That may not be a bad call, considering that this vote didn't actually mean anything.So let me get this straight.... India abstained from censuring Russia for starting an all out war because they say negotiations had broken down before Putin invaded? That makes no sense.
And you see the uselessness of the UN, Russia was allowed to veto a motion condemning the war they started
That would require Russia voting to kick itself out.Russia should be kicked out of the UN.
The UN is actually the weak federal government model kinda by design.And you see the uselessness of the UN, Russia was allowed to veto a motion condemning the war they started
The current setup has too many countries that can vetoAnd you see the uselessness of the UN, Russia was allowed to veto a motion condemning the war they started
That would require Russia voting to kick itself out.
Dumb, yes, but that's how the UN is set up. Five nations get to dance all night; all the others gaze longingly from afar and occasionally get a short-lived rotation on the dance floor.
And the UN should be kicked out of the United States.Russia should be kicked out of the UN.
Not at all. They are all in the eye of the world and voting. Without the UN they would all be in bunkers and not communicating.And you see the uselessness of the UN, Russia was allowed to veto a motion condemning the war they started
The UN is mostly not worth a damn. The Russians start this mess and vote to not hold themselves condemned for it. The world is a mess because of progressives who want everyone to "just get along". Sounds nice but some folks, some nations don't want to get along they want to get what others have and will use force of arms to take it.The U.N. Security Council has been non-functional and ineffective for some decades now. Their votes are irrelevant to me. Put differently, big whoop that 15 people in some room answered a poll question. I suppose we could start a poll here, have 15 people answer it, then ask news agencies to issue press releases summarizing the poll response, with select quotations from some of the respondents.
As to India, I'm a bit disappointed but not too surprised. India for a long time was well aligned with the USSR / Russia as a counterbalance to the United States (for reasons still inexplicable to me) going all-in with Pakistan. The US-India relationship seems to go through light and regular thawing/freezing cycles... it thawed a bit under Clinton, became warm under Bush, then cooler with Obama, then warmer again under Trump. Not sure whether the current administration has articulated a strategic position although it's my opinion that it's in the interest of the U.S. and India to become tight allies if either hopes to be competitive by the close of this century.
I have never understood why Russia has veto power.Russia vetoed the U.S.-backed Security Council resolution condemning Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. The vote on the council was 11 nations in favor, one against and three abstentions -- China, India and the U.A.E. As a permanent member, Russia has veto power.India’s U.N. ambassador, T.S. Tirumurti, justified his country's abstaining from a vote condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine by saying that “diplomacy was given up.” Dialogue is the only way to end hostilities, he said. “It is a matter of regret that diplomacy was given up. For these reasons, India has chosen to abstain from this resolution.”
I'm surprised by the gutlessness of India. Shame on them.
Not really,China abstaining is interesting.
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