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Russia and China Veto Watered-down UN Resolution Aimed at Reopening Strait of Hormuz

The vote took place just hours before Trump's 'deadline' for Iran to open the strategic waterway or face attacks on its power plants and bridges.
The vote took place just hours before Trump's 'deadline' for Iran to open the strategic waterway or face attacks on its power plants and bridges.
russia and china veto watered down un resolution aimed at reopening strait of hormuz
File image of a UN Security Council meeting, held in June 2025, at the UN headquarters. Photo: AP/PTI.
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United Nations: Russia and China on Tuesday (April 7) vetoed a UN Security Council resolution aimed at reopening the Strait of Hormuz that had been repeatedly watered down in hopes those two countries would abstain.

The vote – 11-2, with two abstentions from Pakistan and Colombia – took place just hours before an 8 pm Eastern Time (5:30 am IST, 3:30 am in Tehran) deadline set by US President Donald Trump for Iran to open the strategic waterway or face attacks on its power plants and bridges.

One-fifth of the world's oil typically passes through the strait, and Iran's stranglehold during the war has sent energy prices soaring.

"Failing to adopt this resolution sends the wrong signal to the world, to the people of the world," Abdullatif bin Rashid Al Zayani, Bahrain's foreign minister, said after the vote – "the signal that the threat to international waterways can pass without any decisive action by the international organisation responsible for the maintenance of international peace and security".

It's doubtful the resolution introduced by Bahrain, even if it had been adopted, would have impacted the war, now in its fifth week, because it was significantly weakened to try to get Russia and China to abstain rather than veto it.

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The initial Gulf proposal would have authorised countries to use "all necessary means" – UN wording that would include military action – to ensure transit through the Strait of Hormuz and deter attempts to close it.

After Russia, China and France, all veto-wielding countries on the 15-member Security Council, expressed opposition to approving the use of force, the resolution was revised to eliminate all references to offensive action. It would have authorised only "all defensive means necessary". A vote had been expected on Saturday.

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But instead the resolution was further weakened to eliminate any reference to Security Council authorisation – which is an order for action – and limit its provisions to the Strait of Hormuz. Previous drafts had included adjacent waters.

The resolution vetoed Tuesday "strongly encourages states interested in the use of commercial maritime routes in the Strait of Hormuz to coordinate efforts, defensive in nature, commensurate with the circumstances, to contribute to ensuring the safety and security of navigation across the Strait of Hormuz".

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This should include escorting merchant and commercial vessels, and deterring attempts to close, obstruct or interfere with international navigation through the strait, it says.

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The resolution also demanded that Iran immediately halt attacks on merchant and commercial vessels and stop impeding their freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz and attacking civilian infrastructure.

In response to the US and Israeli attacks beginning on February 28, Iran has targeted hotels, airports, residential buildings and other civilian infrastructure in more than ten countries, including the Islamic Republic's Gulf neighbours, some of the world's major exporters of oil and natural gas.

Iran's blockade in the strait is seen by Gulf nations as an existential threat. Bahrain, a Gulf nation that hosts the US Fifth Fleet and is the Security Council's Arab representative and its president this month, has been pressing for UN action.

At the same time, Trump on Monday demanded again that Iran reopen the Strait of Hormuz after heaping praise on the US military for the daring rescue of two crewmen of a fighter jet shot down in Iran. The Republican president warned Iran that the "entire country can be taken out in one night, and that might be tomorrow night".

He repeated the warning on Tuesday, saying a "whole civilisation will die tonight" if Tehran does not meet his deadline to agree to a deal that includes reopening the Strait of Hormuz.

Russia's UN ambassador Vassily Nebenzia and China's UN ambassador Fu Cong have blamed the US and Israel for starting the war and sparking an expanding global crisis. They told the Security Council last week that the most urgent priority now is to end military operations immediately.

In response to Iran's strikes against its Gulf neighbors, the Security Council adopted a Bahrain-sponsored resolution on March 11 condemning the "egregious attacks" and calling for Tehran to immediately halt its strikes.

That resolution, adopted by a vote of 13-0 with Russia and China abstaining, also condemned Iran's actions in the Strait of Hormuz as a threat to international peace and security and called for an immediate end to all actions blocking shipping.

(AP)

This article went live on April seventh, two thousand twenty six, at eight minutes past ten at night.

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