Biden accuses Russia of 'irresponsible' nuclear threats, violating U.N. charter

U.S. President Joe Biden addresses the 76th Session of the U.N. General Assembly in New York City, U.S., September 21, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
U.S. President
Joe Biden accused Russia on Wednesday of making
"reckless" and "irresponsible" threats to use nuclear weapons and said Moscow had violated the core
tenets of United Nations membership by invading Ukraine.
Speaking at the
United Nations General Assembly in New York, Biden slammed Russian
President Vladimir Putin for starting an unprovoked war that
some 40 U.N. members were helping Ukraine fight through funding and weapons.
Earlier on
Wednesday, Putin ordered a Russian mobilization to fight in Ukraine and made a
thinly veiled threat to use nuclear weapons, in what NATO called a "reckless" act of desperation
in the face of a looming Russian defeat.
Biden echoed that
sentiment.
"Again, just
today, President Putin has made overt nuclear threats against Europe, in a reckless disregard for the responsibilities of
the nonproliferation regime," Biden said.
"A nuclear war
cannot be won and must never be fought," he said.
Biden said no one
had threatened Russia, despite its claims to the contrary, and that only Russia
had sought conflict, and he used the U.N. setting to underscore his view that
Moscow had violated the body's values.
"A permanent
member of the United Nations Security Council invaded its neighbour, attempted
to erase a sovereign state from the map. Russia has shamelessly violated the
core tenets of the United Nations Charter,” Biden said.
"This war is
about extinguishing Ukraine's right to exist as a state, plain and simple, and
Ukraine's right to exist as a people. Wherever you are, wherever you live,
whatever you believe, that should ... make your blood run cold."
Russia's mission to
the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment on
Biden's remarks. While Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov was in New York
for the U.N. gathering, a deputy Russian U.N. ambassador was in the chamber for
Biden's speech.
COMPETING FOR
INFLUENCE
The United States
and Western allies are competing with Russia for diplomatic
influence. The United States has acknowledged that some countries are concerned
the Ukraine war had drawn global attention away from other crises.
Washington has also
long been vying for sway with Beijing.
"Let me be
direct about the competition between the United States and China. As we manage to shift geopolitical trends, the United States will conduct itself as a
reasonable leader," Biden said.
"We do not seek
conflict. We do not seek a Cold War. We do not ask any nation to choose between
the United States or any other partner," he said.
Biden also called
out China for suspending bilateral cooperation with the United States on
climate talks after U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi's visit
to Taiwan.
"The United
States will work with every nation, including our competitors, to solve global
problems like climate change. Climate diplomacy is not a favour to the United
States or any other nation and walking away hurts the entire world," he
said.
Biden announced $2.9
billion (about Ksh 350 billion) in additional U.S. funding to combat global food insecurity, building
on $6.9 billion in U.S. food security funding already committed this year.
The United States
has strengthened its focus on food security since Russia's Feb. 24 invasion of
Ukraine worsened a global food crisis that was already fueled by climate change
and the COVID-19 pandemic. Russia and Ukraine are major grain and fertilizer
exporters and shipments were disrupted by the war.
Biden pushed back
against Russian complaints that Western sanctions are harming its exports,
stressing that U.S. sanctions explicitly allow Russia to export food and fertilizer
and that it was "Russia's war that is worsening food insecurity."
He also urged
countries not to hoard grain while so many people are suffering: "In every
country in the world, no matter what else divides us, if parents cannot feed
their children, nothing, nothing else matters."
The United States
has accused China of stockpiling grain. China's grain stocks at the end of the
2021/22 season were estimated by the International Grains Council to be 323.5
million tonnes, more than half the global total of 602.9 million. They dwarf
those of the United States, the world's top grain exporter, which were
estimated at 57.5 million tonnes.
Biden also pushed
for the extension of a deal, brokered in July by the United Nations and Turkey,
that allowed Ukraine to resume Black Sea food and fertilizer exports. Russia
has cast a shadow over whether the initial 120-day deal should continue.
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