<p>It was the middle of an emergency session of the UN Security Council, late on the evening of February 23, and Vassily Nebenzia looked shaken -- his face pale, his shoulders sagging.</p>.<p>Russia, the country he represents at the United Nations, had just invaded Ukraine, sending shock waves around the world that continue to reverberate today.</p>.<p>At nearly 60, Nebenzia -- a bald man, massively built, who wears thin-framed glasses and often fiddles with his watch -- was chairing the Council.</p>.<p>It was a shocking first for the UN: The man presiding over the august body dedicated to defending global peace was also the representative of a nuclear power now waging war against a democracy...</p>.<p>Did he know, when he opened the session and sat listening as his colleagues delivered impassioned pleas for Moscow to pull back the armed forces surrounding much of Ukraine -- that they had already invaded?</p>.<p>More generally, does he believe the words in the speeches he reads?</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/ukraine-accuses-russia-of-fake-referendum-plot-in-kherson-1090801.html" target="_blank">Ukraine accuses Russia of fake Kherson referendum plot</a></strong></p>.<p>"I don't know, but I believe not," one UN official told AFP, speaking on grounds of anonymity.</p>.<p>Several ambassadors said they shared that impression.</p>.<p>The Ukrainian ambassador, Sergiy Kyslytsya, regularly asks Nebenzia if he is actually in touch with Moscow.</p>.<p>British envoy Barbara Woodward, a specialist in Russian and Chinese affairs, reminded Nebenzia that "the great Russian writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn wrote: 'Man is given not only one life, but also one conscience.'"</p>.<p>"I know that you've spoken under instructions today, but I ask you to report faithfully back to Moscow what you have heard today -- the urgency of this Council's calls for peace."</p>.<p>Nebenzia did not respond to an AFP request for an interview.</p>.<p>He has, in resigned tones, followed his government's line at emergency meetings of the Council since war broke out, and further sessions are expected this week.</p>.<p>Under the exasperated eyes of his foreign colleagues, he has read speeches denying media reports of the destruction of civilian sites.</p>.<p>In impromptu replies, he has on occasion used the word "war" -- a word banned by Moscow in regard to Ukraine. But each time he has been careful to note that the word was first used by his boss, Foreign Secretary Sergei Lavrov.</p>.<p>"The Russian system has never been as centralized," said one Western ambassador, speaking anonymously.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/on-kyivs-eastern-front-ukrainians-hold-off-russian-tanks-1090805.html" target="_blank">On Kyiv's eastern front, Ukrainians hold off Russian tanks</a></strong></p>.<p>Russian diplomats "are excellent professionals, but they are not in a position to interact with power, they are simply there to execute government dictates, whether involved in preparing them or not -- and usually not."</p>.<p>At the UN, Nebenzia is known for his deep mastery of the issues. His career has taken him to Bangkok and Geneva, with a specialty in international organizations. He is fluent in the arcana of multilateral maneuvering and uses his deep understanding of procedure to his country's benefit.</p>.<p>Outside the sometimes theatrical jousting in the hallowed halls of the Security Council, his relations with colleagues are cordial and polite -- and have remained so since the invasion, according to several sources.</p>.<p>The ambassador is a man of culture with a sense of humor.</p>.<p>"I can do two things at the same time," he told AFP with a smile, after displaying the surprising ability to deliver a speech in Russian while listening to its English translation simultaneously on his headphones.</p>.<p>Russians are trained in this multi-tasking, his aides say. That allows them to ensure that their addresses are rendered as precisely as possible in the language in which most will hear them -- and to correct any errors on the spot, diplomats say.</p>.<p>At diplomatic receptions Nebenzia shows a convivial side. His favorite cocktail? "Half vodka, half Champagne," he once told two French journalists.</p>.<p>Married and father of a son, the ambassador likes to take off on weekends on his European motorbike -- a solitary hobby that goes well with the newly solitary status thrust on him by the Ukraine crisis.</p>.<p>But he is never far from the drama these days.</p>.<p>On February 28, during a news conference marking the end of his month leading Russia's rotating presidency of the Security Council, he abruptly interrupted the proceedings to answer his cell phone.</p>.<p>After listening for a moment without speaking, he hung up and announced -- adopting a tone of victimhood -- that the United States was expelling 12 members of his diplomatic mission.</p>.<p>Sources in Washington have said the 12 are spies -- with no connection to the war.</p>.<p>Diplomats later told AFP the 12 are members of the military.</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos</strong></p>
<p>It was the middle of an emergency session of the UN Security Council, late on the evening of February 23, and Vassily Nebenzia looked shaken -- his face pale, his shoulders sagging.</p>.<p>Russia, the country he represents at the United Nations, had just invaded Ukraine, sending shock waves around the world that continue to reverberate today.</p>.<p>At nearly 60, Nebenzia -- a bald man, massively built, who wears thin-framed glasses and often fiddles with his watch -- was chairing the Council.</p>.<p>It was a shocking first for the UN: The man presiding over the august body dedicated to defending global peace was also the representative of a nuclear power now waging war against a democracy...</p>.<p>Did he know, when he opened the session and sat listening as his colleagues delivered impassioned pleas for Moscow to pull back the armed forces surrounding much of Ukraine -- that they had already invaded?</p>.<p>More generally, does he believe the words in the speeches he reads?</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/ukraine-accuses-russia-of-fake-referendum-plot-in-kherson-1090801.html" target="_blank">Ukraine accuses Russia of fake Kherson referendum plot</a></strong></p>.<p>"I don't know, but I believe not," one UN official told AFP, speaking on grounds of anonymity.</p>.<p>Several ambassadors said they shared that impression.</p>.<p>The Ukrainian ambassador, Sergiy Kyslytsya, regularly asks Nebenzia if he is actually in touch with Moscow.</p>.<p>British envoy Barbara Woodward, a specialist in Russian and Chinese affairs, reminded Nebenzia that "the great Russian writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn wrote: 'Man is given not only one life, but also one conscience.'"</p>.<p>"I know that you've spoken under instructions today, but I ask you to report faithfully back to Moscow what you have heard today -- the urgency of this Council's calls for peace."</p>.<p>Nebenzia did not respond to an AFP request for an interview.</p>.<p>He has, in resigned tones, followed his government's line at emergency meetings of the Council since war broke out, and further sessions are expected this week.</p>.<p>Under the exasperated eyes of his foreign colleagues, he has read speeches denying media reports of the destruction of civilian sites.</p>.<p>In impromptu replies, he has on occasion used the word "war" -- a word banned by Moscow in regard to Ukraine. But each time he has been careful to note that the word was first used by his boss, Foreign Secretary Sergei Lavrov.</p>.<p>"The Russian system has never been as centralized," said one Western ambassador, speaking anonymously.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/on-kyivs-eastern-front-ukrainians-hold-off-russian-tanks-1090805.html" target="_blank">On Kyiv's eastern front, Ukrainians hold off Russian tanks</a></strong></p>.<p>Russian diplomats "are excellent professionals, but they are not in a position to interact with power, they are simply there to execute government dictates, whether involved in preparing them or not -- and usually not."</p>.<p>At the UN, Nebenzia is known for his deep mastery of the issues. His career has taken him to Bangkok and Geneva, with a specialty in international organizations. He is fluent in the arcana of multilateral maneuvering and uses his deep understanding of procedure to his country's benefit.</p>.<p>Outside the sometimes theatrical jousting in the hallowed halls of the Security Council, his relations with colleagues are cordial and polite -- and have remained so since the invasion, according to several sources.</p>.<p>The ambassador is a man of culture with a sense of humor.</p>.<p>"I can do two things at the same time," he told AFP with a smile, after displaying the surprising ability to deliver a speech in Russian while listening to its English translation simultaneously on his headphones.</p>.<p>Russians are trained in this multi-tasking, his aides say. That allows them to ensure that their addresses are rendered as precisely as possible in the language in which most will hear them -- and to correct any errors on the spot, diplomats say.</p>.<p>At diplomatic receptions Nebenzia shows a convivial side. His favorite cocktail? "Half vodka, half Champagne," he once told two French journalists.</p>.<p>Married and father of a son, the ambassador likes to take off on weekends on his European motorbike -- a solitary hobby that goes well with the newly solitary status thrust on him by the Ukraine crisis.</p>.<p>But he is never far from the drama these days.</p>.<p>On February 28, during a news conference marking the end of his month leading Russia's rotating presidency of the Security Council, he abruptly interrupted the proceedings to answer his cell phone.</p>.<p>After listening for a moment without speaking, he hung up and announced -- adopting a tone of victimhood -- that the United States was expelling 12 members of his diplomatic mission.</p>.<p>Sources in Washington have said the 12 are spies -- with no connection to the war.</p>.<p>Diplomats later told AFP the 12 are members of the military.</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos</strong></p>