Berlin is fuming tonight after a humiliating defeat at the United Nations Security Council, with German officials privately blaming Moscow for orchestrating the vote that left Chancellor Scholz isolated on the global stage. The resolution, which called for a ceasefire in Ukraine and the withdrawal of Russian forces, failed to secure the necessary nine votes. Germany, which holds a non-permanent seat, had championed the measure as a critical step toward de-escalation.
Instead, it was torpedoed by a coalition of abstentions and a Russian veto. For a nation that prides itself on diplomacy and multilateralism, the defeat stings. The message from New York is clear: the world is fracturing along cold war lines, and Germany's voice carries less weight than it believes.
Back home, the opposition is sharpening its knives, accusing the government of overreach and naivety. The question now is whether Berlin can salvage its credibility or if this marks the beginning of a deeper diplomatic crisis.










