Only Belarus, Syria, North Korea and Eritrea joined Russia in opposing the measure, a powerful indication of the international isolation that Russian President Vladimir Putin faces for invading his countryâs smaller neighbor â and that the resolutionâs supporters sought to emphasize.
The abstentions included China and India, as expected, but also some surprises from usual Russian allies Cuba and Nicaragua. And the United Arab Emirates, which abstained on Fridayâs similar Security Council resolution, voted âyes.â
Cuba had spoken in Russiaâs defense on Tuesday, with Ambassador Pedro Luis Cuesta blaming the crisis on what he said is the U.S. determination to keep expanding NATO toward Russiaâs borders and on the delivery of modern weapons to Ukraine, ignoring Russiaâs concerns for its own security. He told the assembly the resolution âsuffers from lack of balanceâ and doesnât begin to address the concerns of both parties, or âthe responsibility of those who took aggressive actions which precipitated the escalation of this conflict.â
Unlike Security Council resolutions, General Assembly resolutions are not legally binding, but they do have clout in reflecting international opinion. Under special emergency session rules, a resolution needs approval of two-thirds of those countries voting, and abstentions donât count.
After Russia vetoed a similar Security Council resolution Friday, Ukraine and its supporters won approval for the assembly to hold an emergency special session -- the first since 1997 -- to try to spotlight opposition to Russiaâs invasion.
Deploring Russiaâs âaggressionâ against Ukraine âin the strongest terms,â the measure demands an immediate halt to Moscowâs use of force and the immediate, complete and unconditional withdrawal of all Russian forces.
The resolution says that Russiaâs military operations in Ukraine âare on a scale that the international community has not seen in Europe in decades and that urgent action is needed to save this generation from the scourge of war.â It âurges the immediate peaceful resolution of the conflictâ and reaffirms the assemblyâs commitment âto the sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity of Ukraine within its internationally recognized borders.â
The measure also condemns âthe Russian Federationâs decision to increase the readiness of its nuclear forcesâ â an issue raised by many U.N. members concerned about that prospect.
Before the vote, Ukraineâs U.N. ambassador, Sergiy Kyslytsya, told the assembly, âThey have come to the Ukrainian soil, not only to kill some of us ... they have come to deprive Ukraine of the very right to exist.â He said that âthe crimes are so barbaric that it is difficult to comprehend.â
Russian Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia urged U.N. members to vote against the resolution, contending Western nations exerted âunprecedented pressureâ with âopen and cynical threatsâ to get support for the measure.
âThis document will not allow us to end military activities. On the contrary, it could embolden Kyiv radicals and nationalists to continue to determine the policy of their country at any price,â Nebenzia warned.
âYour refusal to support todayâs draft resolution is a vote for a peaceful Ukraineâ that would not âbe managed from the outside,â he said. âThis was the aim of our special military operation, which the sponsors of this resolution tried to present as aggression.â
The resolution also calls on Russia to reverse a decision to recognize two separatist parts of eastern Ukraine as independent. The measure further deplores âthe involvement of Belarus in this unlawful use of force against Ukraine.â a characterization that Belarussian Ambassador Valentin Rybakov flatly rejected in his speech to the assembly shortly before the vote.
He said Belarusâ only involvement in the conflict was organizing talks, due to continue Thursday, between Russia and Ukraine. Belarus has taken Russiaâs side, with Rybakov saying the resolution reflected âdouble standardsâ toward Russia and the West.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told reporters immediately after the vote: âThe message of the General Assembly is loud and clear: End hostilities in Ukraine â now. Silence the guns â now. Open the door to dialogue and diplomacy â now.â
âWe donât have a moment to lose,â he said. âThe brutal effects of the conflict are plain to see ⦠It threatens to get much, much worse.â
U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield followed, saying âthe world has spoken with a clear, united voiceâ and the vote âdemonstrated that Russia is isolated and alone, and that the costs will keep rising until Russia relents.â
She urged all countries to âkeep the momentum going,â do everything possible to help the Ukrainian people, hold Russia accountable and âmatch our strong words with strong actions.â
Explaining Chinaâs abstention, Ambassador Zhang Jun used more emotional language than at previous U.N. meetings, citing âdramatic changes of the situation in Ukraineâ and calling what is unfolding âheart wrenching.â He reiterated Beijingâs support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all countries, and for the peaceful settlements of all disputes in line with the U.N. Charter.
âThe top priority right now is to ease the situation on the ground as much as possible, and prevent the situation from escalating or even getting out of control,â Zhang said.
During more than two days of meetings preceding the vote, there were speeches from about 120 countries.
From the tiny Pacific island nation of Palau to Europeâs economic powerhouse Germany, country after country lashed out at Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine and urged support for the U.N. resolution.
There were only a few that supported Russia and some that took no position, such as Suriname and South Africa. The latter urged compromise and diplomacy to find a lasting resolution to the crisis. In Wednesdayâs vote, Suriname voted âyesâ and South Africa abstained.
The resolutionâs co-sponsors included Afghanistan, where the Taliban ousted the elected government last August, and Myanmar, where the military overthrew the elected government led by Aung San Suu Kyi on Feb. 1, 2021. But neither the Taliban nor Myanmarâs military government have gained U.N. recognition, so that support came from representatives of their previous governments.
During the meeting, some supporters of the resolution had signs under the nameplates of their countries in Ukraineâs blue and yellow colors reading: â#TodayWeAreAllUkraine.â
British Ambassador Barbara Woodward said the vote sent a clear message that the assembly condemns Putin and supports Ukraine.
âWe have stood up against those who seek to redraw the worldâs borders by threat or use of force,â she said. âFor if president Putinâs aggression against Ukraine goes unchecked, which country could be next?â