At the U.N., Russia Warns the U.S. and Israel: What Was Said and Why It Matters
We are now.. 30 seconds to Midnight, according to the Nuclear Clock, what I like to call The End of the World clock..
It has now come to all of our attention, that Russia will no longer sit idly by while Israel breaks international laws and prepares for its Greater Israel project to proceed at on going speed. And, because the earth's once mighty nation who was once the police of the world is now seen as a criminal.
After all, we are allies to Israel.
Israel commits atrocities such as assassinations and genocide.
Qatar was the latest of one of those two major examples.
The on going Genocide is the other, very obvious example.
The Police of the World, Allied to Israel, has done nothing to stop it, sanction it... They turned their cheek and looked away. Because... Allies.
It's like aiding and abiding now to the rest of the world.
Birds of a Feather.
Russia’s ambassador Vassily Nebenzia used a United Nations Security Council briefing on September 23, 2025 to criticize Israel’s campaign in Gaza and to fault repeated U.S. vetoes of ceasefire resolutions, calling for a shift toward diplomacy and recognition of Palestinian statehood. You can read the mission’s posted text and watch the U.N. meeting video here.
In his remarks, Nebenzia said Israel’s actions were “unacceptable,” urged an immediate ceasefire, and argued Washington should stop treating multilateral diplomacy as an obstacle. His comments came as outside estimates reported more than 65,000 Palestinian deaths since October 2023 and as the fighting in Gaza City intensified.
The timing overlapped with a diplomatic shift: several U.S. allies announced recognition of a Palestinian state ahead of UNGA speeches, a move Israel and the United States opposed. Coverage documented recognitions and debate among Western capitals about the implications.
Council dynamics were mixed. A high-level Security Council session on the Middle East drew wide participation, but divisions persisted and prior ceasefire efforts have repeatedly deadlocked. The meeting video and a preview from Security Council Report provide context on agenda and stakes.
Russia was not alone in urging a halt to the Gaza offensive: a majority of Council members called for a ceasefire and warned of humanitarian catastrophe. Anadolu’s readout summarizes positions from South Korea, Slovenia, Algeria, the UK, Denmark, Greece, France, Russia, and others.
The U.S. position emphasized support for Israel and pressed Hamas to accept negotiated proposals, while criticizing what it described as performative diplomacy at the Council. For balance, see reporting that captures both the U.S. stance at UNGA and allied pushback over statehood recognition.
Israel’s perspective at UNGA and beyond has stressed the need to dismantle Hamas and rejected outside moves toward statehood as rewarding violence; fighting in Gaza and strikes beyond its borders continued during the week of speeches. For current battlefield and diplomatic updates, see these briefings.
If you want to watch the session yourself, the U.N. posts full videos and clips; the same Security Council meeting is available on UN Web TV, and the Russian mission hosts a copy of Nebenzia’s statement with a video link.
For broader context on how this fits into the week’s diplomacy, you can follow UNGA coverage and daily recaps from major outlets and U.N. platforms. These provide the surrounding speeches, side events, and procedural developments.
Complete reference list
https://russiaun.ru/en/news/unsc_230925
https://webtv.un.org/en/asset/k1d/k1dlg1h1x6
https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/reactions-growing-recognition-palestinian-state-2025-09-22/
https://press.un.org/en/content/security-council
https://webtv.un.org/en/search/categories/meetings-events/security-council/middle-east
https://media.un.org/avlibrary/en/asset/d344/d3448618
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@1TheBrutalTruth1 Sept 2025 Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976: Allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education, and research.
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