MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian lawmakers have submitted a draft bill to the State Duma that would rewrite a chapter of history by nullifying the Soviet decision in 1954 to transfer Crimea from Russia to Ukraine.
The move appears aimed at establishing a legal basis for Russia to argue that Crimea, the Black Sea peninsula which it claims to have annexed from Ukraine in 2014, was never really part of Ukraine to begin with.
The draft, submitted by a lawmaker from each of Russia’s two houses of parliament, describes the 1954 handover as arbitrary and illegal because no referendum was held and Soviet authorities had no right to transfer territory from one constituent republic to another without consent.
Does this mean Russia should lose the USSR’s permanent seat on the UN security council?
Yep. And it should go to Ukraine.
Lmao. As a firm supporter of Ukraine in this conflict, the sentiment is nice but giving them a permanent seat on the world security council is ridiculous. Neither their economic nor military power warrants that, many much more powerful and influential countries don’t get a permanent seat.
Could be wrong, but I assumed it was a joke
I’m german, we don’t do so well with humor.
To be fair, it’s easy to miss sarcasm and dry humour in text. I do it all the time =)
German humour is no laughing matter.
Nice sentiment, but that would be a pretty absurd choice. It would be nice to have a South American or African permanent member, or perhaps India.
Id say give India a few years before deciding. Modi isn’t steering them in the best direction as of late.
I suggested them not because I’m a Modi stan but because there’s a much stronger case for their geopolitical importance.
The AU just got a seat on the G20, just sayin
Pfft lol
It would be more absurd not to give it to Ukraine
Believe it or not, they still use the .SU top Domain Name. Which they got just before shit inploded in 1991. So just based on that fact they will say “,нет товарищ or no comrade”
On what ground? is there any UN article that will legitimate it?
The USSR’s seat was never officially given to Russia - they sort of just kept occupying it and no one told them to stop.
At last somebody who engages intellectually with an answer, although I don’t see the truth of it. Do you have any any resources supporting your statement? At least according Article 23 of UN charter, it’s stated clearly of the five permanent members.
It’s official for the five countries, not given but acquired.
EDIT: I am interested in the real knowledge and fact, and I am never interested in bias and one-sided answer just to support one’s view. That not healthy academically.
Sorry, I’m not sure what you’re saying or asking here. Is this a question?
please provide references for your earlier statement. I think it is blatantly wrong. Please prove to me otherwise.
The passage you cited is a good start, as it still to this day states that the USSR is a member, and the USSR of course no longer exists. It seems quite unambiguous to me, to the extent that I’m not sure why you believe it supports your argument.
You can read this for more background if you like: https://www.chicagotribune.com/2022/02/28/ian-hurd-read-the-words-as-they-appear-russia-is-not-a-member-of-the-united-nations-security-council/
Because Russia is the sole continuation to USSR according to Alma-Ata Protocol in 1991?
From Just Security and for the subsequent quotes.
And during those days the members didn’t want to bring it up because that was the way they wanted it to happened and now suddenly we question their legitimacy because they have turned to be direct threats to us?
and…
Anyway, you can read the whole linked article. It is a good read for those who are interested in geopolitics and the non-bias.
Does any of that contradict my statement which triggered this tangent of yours? I said “The USSR’s seat was never officially given to Russia - they sort of just kept occupying it and no one told them to stop.”
These snippets from your citations say the same thing practically verbatim. I’m not sure why you’re so bent out of shape about this.