The nations that now rely on Russia for their supply will “likely” be the most affected, according to the government.
Sergey Lavrov, the foreign minister of Russia, declared on Saturday that both the proposed 10-point peace proposal from Ukraine and the Black Sea Grain Initiative, which provides safe passage for Ukrainian exports, will not be revived and that both are “not realistic.”
Lavrov spoke to the General Assembly of the United Nations at the annual summit of world leaders held at U.N. headquarters in New York. Ukraine and its Western allies sought to mobilize support for Kyiv’s defensive battle against Russian aggression during a week of international diplomacy.
The Kyiv-initiated peace plan, according to Lavrov, “is completely not feasible.” “This cannot be put into practice. Everyone recognizes that it is unrealistic, but they nonetheless insist that this is the sole basis for negotiations.
If Kiev and the West maintained in that stance, the issue, according to Lavrov, would be settled on the battlefield.
In addition, Lavrov claimed that Moscow quit the Black Sea Grain Initiative, which had guaranteed the free flow of agricultural products from Ukraine, since pledges made to Russia had not been kept.
Additionally, he deemed the most recent U.N. recommendations to reopen that export route “simply not realistic.”
The U.S. and its subordinate Western collective, according to Lavrov, are responsible for fomenting crises that “artificially divide humanity into hostile blocks and impede the achievement of overall goals.”