Let us be perfectly clear: the spectacle of Germany flailing against Russia in the UN Security Council this week was not a diplomatic mishap. It was a historical echo, a tragicomic re-enactment of a decaying empire mistaking bureaucratic muscle for geopolitical acumen. Berlin has blamed Moscow for a ‘bitter defeat’ over a vote on the Ukraine resolution. But the real blame lies with a foreign policy establishment that has forgotten how to wield power, preferring instead to wring its hands and cite procedure while the wolves circle. And who stood as the quiet, effective victor? Britain, of course, whose subtle manoeuvring reminded the world that diplomacy is not a popularity contest but a chess match for survival.
The vote was on a resolution condemning Russia’s actions in Ukraine, a predictable ritual of modern geopolitics. Germany, desperate to assert its post-war, post-reunification relevance, pushed hard. They assumed that moral authority, economic heft, and a chorus of EU backing would carry the day. Instead, Russia, using a blend of procedural cunning and blunt veto power, simply laughed at Berlin’s pretensions. The German ambassador’s face, as caught by cameras, was a study in pained incredulity. He looked like a university don who had discovered his prize essay had been used to wrap fish and chips. This is the fate of nations that confuse earnestness with strategy. They deserve the defeat they receive.
But the true lesson of this farce is not Russia’s veto – that was always a certainty. The interesting twist is how Britain emerged from the wreckage with its reputation enhanced. While Germany blundered into the vote like a cargo ship without a rudder, our diplomats had already secured what mattered: a unified Western stance that did not overreach. Whitehall understood that a doomed resolution would merely hand a propaganda victory to Moscow. So Britain quietly worked the corridors, securing abstentions where needed, avoiding the grandstanding that French or German ego would demand. It was a classic piece of British statecraft: achieve the substance while letting others claim the form. The result? The resolution failed, but the blame falls squarely on Germany’s incoherence, not on a lack of Western unity. Britain’s vote was never in doubt, but its positioning was flawless.
This episode reveals a deeper decadence in the German political soul. Since 1945, Germany has defined itself by its rejection of power politics, by its devotion to multilateralism, to rules above might. Noble sentiments, but in a world where Russia plays by Machiavelli, not Kant, they become a self-imposed handicap. The Germans have become the Romans of the late Empire: wealthy, verbose, and utterly unable to defend themselves. They hire mercenaries (American protection) and rely on allies (Britain, France for nuclear deterrence) while pretending they are leading a moral crusade. It would be laughable if the stakes were not so high. Their ‘bitter defeat’ is a symptom of a nation that has lost its nerve, that sees diplomacy as a seminar rather than a struggle.
Britain, by contrast, has never fallen for that illusion. We know that diplomacy is about interests and power, not just shared values. We have the scars of empire and the lessons of Brexit to teach us that the world is a harsh place. Our diplomats understand that a defeat can be a victory, that a veto can be a trap for the unwary. This week, they proved it. The German blame game – pointing fingers at Russia as if a bear should apologise for clawing you – is a sign of weakness. A true power would have expected the attack and planned accordingly. Britain did. We do not need to shout about it. The result speaks for itself.
So let Berlin have its tantrum. Let them wail about Russian perfidy. The rest of us will note that the only country to emerge from this fiasco with its dignity and strategic position intact is the one that remembered that history is written by the clever, not the loud. Britain’s diplomatic superiority, for the moment, is affirmed. And in this age of crumbling empires and rising threats, that is no small thing.










