Spent my Saturday analysing the 28-point plan. The result:
If the US is seriously considering enforcing this plan, it would place itself in violation of:
• 13 binding treaties and international instruments
• 23 political commitments, declarations, and authoritative resolutions
• 35 explicit articles, clauses, and legal principles
Total: 71 separate international legal or political obligations.
Full analysis below — and keep in mind that even this list is far from exhaustive.
.........
This is structured by principles. Under each principle I first state the core rule, then list key treaties/commitments, and show which points of the Witkoff–Dmitriev 28-point plan collide with them.
(References to the plan use its point numbers.)
I. Non-recognition of territorial acquisition by force and Ukraine’s territorial integrity
Core idea: No state may recognize as lawful any territorial change achieved by aggression; all states must respect Ukraine’s territorial integrity within its internationally recognised borders.
Key commitments and instruments the US is bound to or has endorsed
UN Charter
– Article 2(4): prohibition on the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state.
– Creates peremptory norms (jus cogens) and erga omnes obligations not to recognize or assist serious breaches.
UN General Assembly resolutions on Ukraine’s territorial integrity
– Resolution 68/262 (2014) “Territorial integrity of Ukraine” (Crimea).
– Resolution ES-11/1 (2022) “Aggression against Ukraine”.
– Resolution ES-11/4 (2022) “Territorial integrity of Ukraine: defending the principles of the Charter of the United Nations”, which:
• declares the referendums and annexation of Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia “invalid” and “illegal under international law”;
• calls on all states not to recognize these territories as part of Russia and demands Russia’s full withdrawal.
Declaration on Friendly Relations (UNGA Res. 2625, 1970)
– States that no territorial acquisition resulting from the threat or use of force shall be recognized as legal
Definition of Aggression (UNGA Res. 3314, 1974)
– Reiterates that no territorial acquisition or special advantage resulting from aggression is or shall be recognized as lawful.
OSCE Helsinki Final Act (1975) and Charter of Paris for a New Europe (1990)
– Inviolability of frontiers; territorial changes only in conformity with international law and by peaceful agreement, not by force.
PACE Resolution 2605 (June 2025) on the legal and human rights aspects/consequences of Russia’s aggression
– Stresses that inviolability of borders and non-recognition of territorial acquisitions resulting from use of force are core tenets of international law and of the rules-based order.
UNGA Resolution ES-11/5 (2022) on remedies and reparations for Ukraine
– Reaffirms Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and links it to accountability and reparations.
How the Witkoff–Dmitriev plan conflicts
– Point 21:
• “Crimea, Luhansk and Donetsk will be recognised as de facto Russian, including by the United States.”
• Kherson and Zaporizhzhia “frozen along the line of contact,” amounting to de facto recognition.
• Part of Donetsk Oblast that Ukraine currently controls is to be vacated by Ukraine and the withdrawal zone is to be “internationally recognised as territory belonging to the Russian Federation.”
– Point 2: “All ambiguities of the last 30 years will be considered settled” – in context, this means settling Russia’s unlawful territorial gains and closing the file.
By agreeing to these, the US would:
• directly contradict multiple UNGA resolutions it voted for (68/262, ES-11/1, ES-11/4, ES-11/5);
• breach the customary principle of non-recognition of territorial acquisition by force;
• undermine OSCE commitments and the PACE line that such acquisitions must never be recognized.
II. Sovereign right of states to choose their own alliances and foreign policy (no “sphere of influence”)
Core idea: Every sovereign state has the right to determine its own security arrangements and alliances; no other state may veto that choice or coerce it to change orientation.
Key commitments
UNGA Resolution 2625 (Friendly Relations, 1970)
– Every state has the right “to choose its political, economic, social and cultural systems, and to determine freely its foreign policy.”
– No state may compel another to subordinate its sovereign decisions.
OSCE Helsinki Final Act (1975)
– States may belong or not belong to alliances and organizations; they have the right to neutrality and to choose their own security arrangements.
OSCE Charter of Paris (1990)
– Affirms freedom of states to choose their own security arrangements.
OSCE Istanbul Summit Declaration (1999)
– “Each participating State has an equal right to security” and “the right to choose or change its security arrangements, including treaties of alliance.”
– No state or group of states may claim any pre-eminent responsibility for others’ security (direct rejection of “spheres of influence”).
OSCE Astana Commemorative Declaration (2010)
– Reaffirms inherent right to choose or change security arrangements, including alliances.
How the plan conflicts
– Point 3: “Russia will not invade neighbouring countries and NATO will not expand further.”
– Point 7: Ukraine must enshrine in its constitution that it will not join NATO, and NATO must amend its own statutes to exclude Ukraine permanently.
– Point 8: NATO agrees never to station troops in Ukraine.
This would:
• institutionalise a Russian veto over Ukraine’s (and potentially other states’) security choices;
• contradict the OSCE acquis (Helsinki, Paris, Istanbul, Astana) to which the US is a participating State;
• run against UNGA 2625’s prohibition on compelling a state to alter its foreign policy orientation.
If the US were to sponsor or enforce this arrangement, it would be acting contrary to its own commitments to these principles.
III. Prohibition of aggression and duty not to reward or stabilise its results
Core idea: Aggression is “the supreme international crime”; states must not aid or assist in maintaining situations created by aggression and must cooperate to end such breaches.
Key commitments
Nuremberg Charter and Nuremberg Principles (UN, 1950)
– Aggressive war defined as a crime against peace.
– Aggression is “the supreme international crime” because it contains all others.
UN Charter and UNGA Resolutions ES-11/1 and ES-11/4
– Russia’s invasion is characterized as aggression and a breach of the Charter; states must not recognize outcomes of aggression and must demand withdrawalUNGA Res. 3314 (Definition of Aggression)
– Annexation or occupation of territory by force constitutes aggression; no territorial advantage from aggression is lawful.
ILC Articles on State Responsibility (Arts. 40–41)
– For serious breaches of peremptory norms (like aggression and territorial acquisition by force):
• no recognition of the situation as lawful;
• no aid or assistance in maintaining that situation;
• obligation to cooperate to bring the breach to an end.
PACE Resolution 2605 (June 2025)
– Qualifies Russia’s conduct as continued aggression and stresses that the inviolability of borders and non-recognition of territorial acquisitions from use of force are foundations of the rules-based order;
– supports creation of a special tribunal for the crime of aggression and comprehensive accountability.
How the plan conflicts
– Point 21 again: locks in territorial gains from aggression and requires US recognition.
– Point 13: rapid reintegration of Russia into the global economy, including G8 return and large-scale strategic cooperation, without prior withdrawal and accountability.
– Point 14: remaining frozen Russian funds are partly turned into a joint US–Russian investment vehicle, incentivising the status quo rather than its reversal.
By endorsing such a settlement, the US would be:
• stabilising and legitimising the main fruits of a recognized act of aggression;
• potentially violating the duty not to recognize or assist serious breaches of peremptory norms;
• contradicting the direction of PACE and broader Western policy to insist on accountability and full respect for territorial integrity before normalisation.
IV. Prohibition of amnesty for war crimes, crimes against humanity and other core international crimes
Core idea: Serious international crimes must be investigated and prosecuted; blanket amnesties for such crimes are incompatible with modern international law.
Key commitments
Geneva Conventions (1949) – US party
– Common Article 1: obligation to “respect and ensure respect” for the Conventions.
– Grave breaches (wilful killing, torture, inhuman treatment, unlawful deportation, etc.) must be searched for and prosecuted (GC I Art. 49, GC II Art. 50, GC III Art. 129, GC IV Art. 146).
Customary international humanitarian law (ICRC Rule 158)
– States must investigate war crimes allegedly committed by their nationals or on their territory, and prosecute the suspects;
– No amnesty is permitted for war crimes.
Convention Against Torture (CAT, 1984) – US party
– Articles 4–7: obligation to investigate and prosecute torture; amnesty for torture is incompatible with these duties.
Nuremberg Charter and Principles
– No immunity for officials (Article 7); no defence of “just following orders” (Article 8); war crimes and crimes against humanity are crimes under international law and cannot be neutralised by domestic measures or political deals.
UN Security Council and Secretary-General practice
– Repeated statements and policies that UN-endorsed peace agreements must reject amnesty for genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and gross human rights violations.
PACE Resolution 2605 (and earlier PACE texts)
– Calls for full accountability, supports the special tribunal for the crime of aggression, and stresses that there can be no impunity for serious crimes committed in Ukraine.
How the plan conflicts
– Point 26:
• “All parties involved in this conflict will receive full amnesty for their actions during the war and agree not to make any claims or consider any complaints in the future.”
This is a blanket, across-the-board amnesty covering all parties and all acts during the war, without distinction between lawful and unlawful conduct.
If the US were to sponsor and enforce such a clause, it would:
• contradict its obligations under the Geneva Conventions and CAT to prosecute grave breaches and torture;
• run counter to the customary prohibition on amnesty for war crimes and other core crimes;
• undermine the Nuremberg-based anti-impunity framework;
• directly conflict with PACE’s push for a special tribunal and with the broader international effort toward accountability for crimes committed in Ukraine.
V. Victims’ right to remedy, reparations and justice
Core idea: Victims of gross violations of human rights and serious violations of IHL are entitled to truth, justice, and reparation; states cannot pre-empt these rights by political deals or “no claims” clauses.
Key commitments
UN Basic Principles and Guidelines on the Right to a Remedy and Reparation (2005)
– Victims of gross violations of international human rights law and serious violations of IHL have the right to:
• equal and effective access to justice;
• adequate, effective and prompt reparation;
• access to relevant information concerning violations.
UNGA ES-11/5 (2022) on remedies and reparations for Ukraine
– Reaffirms the need for an international mechanism for reparation for damage, loss or injury arising from Russia’s internationally wrongful acts in UkraineCouncil of Europe’s Register of Damage and PACE texts
– Council of Europe and PACE support creation of a Register of Damage and mechanisms for full reparation to Ukrainian victims and the state of Ukraine.
How the plan conflicts
– Point 26 (again):
• “All parties… agree not to make any claims or consider any complaints in the future.”
– This would extinguish, by political fiat, the claims of victims to justice and reparations.
– Point 14:
• Frozen Russian assets are partly repurposed into US–Russia profit-sharing ventures, and European frozen assets are unfrozen, rather than being dedicated in full to a victim-centred reparations mechanism consistent with ES-11/5 and CoE practice.
US support for such provisions would be at odds with:
• its own vote for ES-11/5;
• the emerging international reparations framework for Ukraine;
• the general UN principle that victims’ rights cannot be traded away in peace deals.
VI. Collective commitments on sanctions, non-normalisation, and accountability for aggression
Core idea: Sanctions and diplomatic isolation are tools to enforce respect for international law; states have committed to sustain them until aggression ends and accountability is ensured.
Key political and legal commitments
Multiple UNGA resolutions and state practice on sanctions and non-recognition of Russia’s annexations (2014–2024).
PACE Resolution 2605 and prior PACE texts
– Call for sustained pressure and accountability, including a special tribunal, until Russia ceases aggression, withdraws, and pays reparations; stress that normalisation and lifting of sanctions must be linked to compliance with international law.
NATO, EU and G7 statements (which the US has signed onto)
– Commitments to maintain sanctions and political non-recognition until Ukraine’s territorial integrity is restored and accountability ensured.
How the plan conflicts
– Point 13: phased reintegration of Russia into the global economy, including a new long-term US–Russia economic cooperation agreement and re-admission to the G8, without tying this to full withdrawal, reparations and accountability.
– Point 14: use of frozen assets in ways partly aligned with rebuilding but significantly directed to joint US–Russia profit-making structures, and unfreezing of European funds, contrary to emerging EU/CoE approach that frozen assets should serve as a lever for reparations and law-compliant outcomes.
By supporting such a package, the US would be undermining the unified sanctions and accountability front it has itself helped build and committed to maintain.
If the United States were to support and enforce the Witkoff–Dmitriev 28-point plan in its current form, it would run contrary to, or directly collide with, at least six clusters of international commitments:
Non-recognition of territorial acquisition by force and Ukraine’s territorial integrity (UN Charter; UNGA 68/262, ES-11/1, ES-11/4, ES-11/5; OSCE; PACE 2605).
Sovereign right of states to choose their alliances and foreign policy (UNGA 2625; Helsinki, Paris, Istanbul, Astana OSCE documents).
Prohibition of aggression and the duty not to reward its fruits (Nuremberg, UN Charter, UNGA 3314, ILC Articles, PACE 2605).
Prohibition of amnesty for war crimes and other core international crimes (Geneva Conventions, CAT, customary IHL, Nuremberg, UN and regional practice).
Victims’ right to justice and reparations (UN Basic Principles; UNGA ES-11/5; CoE Register of Damage; PACE).
Collective commitments on sanctions, non-normalisation, and full accountability for Russian aggression (PACE, NATO/EU/G7 statements).
VII. Conflict With the North Atlantic Treaty (Washington Treaty, 1949)
(Treaty establishing NATO)
The Witkoff–Dmitriev plan contradict both the letter and the foundational principles of the North Atlantic Treaty of 1949.
The United States, as a founding member and depositary of the Treaty, would violate its obligations were it to support or enforce such provisions.
1. Violation of Article 10 – The Open-Door Principle
Article 10 states:
“The Parties may, by unanimous agreement, invite any other European state… to accede to this Treaty.”
This means:
NATO membership is open to any European democracy able to contribute to security;
The choice belongs to NATO members and the applicant state;
No third state (Russia or otherwise) can veto membership.
Conflicts with the plan
– Point 7: requires Ukraine to amend its constitution to renounce NATO membership permanently.
– Point 3: requires NATO to halt enlargement.
– Point 7 (second part): demands NATO itself amend its charter to exclude Ukraine categorically.
Supporting these provisions would mean:
the US agrees to abolish Article 10 in practice;
the US accepts a Russian veto over NATO membership, contradicting the Treaty;
the US repudiates NATO’s legally binding open-door policy.
This would be a direct contradiction of the US-endorsed principle that “each state has the right to choose or change its security arrangements,” embedded in the 1949 Treaty and reaffirmed in every major NATO summit declaration. 2. Violation of Article 1 – Peaceful Settlement and Prohibition of Threat or Use of Force
Article 1 requires Parties to:
“settle any international dispute… by peaceful means”
and
“refrain from the threat or use of force in any manner inconsistent with the purposes of the United Nations.”
Conflicts with the plan
Supporting a settlement that:
ratifies territorial gains obtained through aggression;
legitimises Russian coercion of Ukraine’s foreign-policy orientation;
imposes security constraints on Ukraine under threat of resumed force;
…would align the United States with an outcome produced by the illegal use of force, contrary to the spirit and purpose of Article 1.
NATO’s legal framework cannot be used to validate the consequences of aggression. 3. Violation of Article 2 – Strengthening Free Institutions
Article 2 commits Allies to:
“strengthen their free institutions.”
Imposing a forced constitutional arrangement on Ukraine — dictating its alliance choices from outside — is incompatible with:
democratic self-determination,
sovereignty,
independence of foreign policy choices.
Support for such a provision would put the US against the principle of free institutions the Treaty requires it to promote. 4. Violation of NATO Summit Declarations (binding political commitments)
While not formal treaty law, NATO Summit Declarations—from London (1990) to Madrid (2022)—are binding political commitments that interpret the Treaty.
All reaffirm:
the open-door policy;
no third-country veto;
sovereign equality of partners;
support for Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Supporting the Witkoff–Dmitriev plan would contradict multiple clear statements of the North Atlantic Council. 5. Violation of US commitments as depositary of the Treaty
The United States, as depositary of the North Atlantic Treaty, bears special responsibility for upholding:
the validity of the Treaty,
the integrity of Article 10,
the independence of NATO decision-making.
Agreeing to outside constraints on NATO enlargement would be incompatible with that role. 6. Summary of NATO-Related Conflicts
Supporting the Witkoff–Dmitriev plan would put the United States in contradiction or tension with:
Article 10 – by accepting a Russian veto and abolishing NATO’s open-door policy.
Article 1 – by legitimising territorial gains from aggression.
Article 2 – by forcing political/constitutional restrictions on Ukraine’s free institutions.
Decades of NATO acquis – by reversing principles repeatedly reaffirmed by the North Atlantic Council.
US obligations as Treaty depositary – by endorsing external constraints on the Treaty’s functioning.
In short:
The plan requires the United States to violate the foundational principles of the North Atlantic Treaty, especially the open-door policy, sovereign equality, and collective defence architecture.
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A chapter has closed in Estonian history. Ovid Avarmaa, the last surviving World War II resistance figure and operative of the Estonian National Committee—which fought against both Nazi and Soviet occupations—passed away in Montreal, Canada, at the age of 104.
Avarmaa was born in Tartu, Estonia, on September 24, 1920. The only child of merchant navy captain Niilo Avarmaa (originally Nikolai Akkermann until Estonianization in 1937) and Elizabeth Sokk. His father, a notable mariner who survived a celebrated shipwreck in 1911, was later arrested by Soviets and spent over a decade in prison camps. Ovid’s wider family included figures such as Taavet Avarmaa (David Akkermann), a jurist and political notable, and cpt Juhan Avarmaa, a military officer
Avarmaa attended Hugo Treffner Gymnasium in Tartu, graduating from the humanities track in 1938, with particular achievements in music, religious studies, languages, and history. He then entered the law faculty at the University of Tartu in 1938.
The current attitude of the US administration to small states has been compared to the Athenians, described by Thucydides in the The Peloponnesian War. 1/
The famous para by Thucydides is this (5:89):
"For ourselves (=Athenians), we shall not trouble you (Island of Melos, ally of Sparta) with specious pretences—either of how we have a right to our empire because we overthrew the Mede (Persia), ; 2/
"or are now attacking you because of wrong that you have done us—and make a long speech which would not be believed; " ( in short, we don't bother with moral arguments because we are strong) 3/
80 years ago 17 East European nations were sold out to communist tyranny so that the West could enjoy peace and liberal democracy. 30 years ago Eastern Europe won back its freedom despite efforts of our friends to “keep stability”. 1/6
Now it seems its up to Europe to decide. Do we want to be united and win or be divided between the “great powers” again. 2/6
Its not time to be shocked, insulted nor afraid. Its time for Europe to raise to the challenge. Putin united Ukraine, Ukraine cemented itself in Europe and Trump, albeit accidentally, is uniting Europe 3/6
A bit about the constitutional crises in Georgia.
President @Zourabichvili_S has 1. declared Parliamentary elections illegitimate. 2. declared the a Russian operation is ongoing attempting to take over Georgia 3. said the sitting government is illegitimate
1/n
This has sever constitutional consequences.
Article 49.1 of Georgian Constitution states:
The President of Georgia is the Head of the state of Georgia and is the guarantor of the country’s unity and national independence.
2/n
The President has stated that the independence of the nation is under threat.
She should declare the state of Emergency, but she cannot because the Prime Minister should propose this.
Its obvious the illegitimate PM will not do it.
3/n
As a reminder to my friend @vkaramurza, this is what Solzhenitsyn wrote on "Russian guilt."
"But who, if not we ourselves, constitutes society? This realm of darkness, of falsehood, of brute force, of justice denied and distrust of the good, this slimy swamp was formed by us, and no one else. We grew used to the idea that we must submit and lie in order to survive-and we brought up our children to do so."
"A n d if we now long - - and there is a glimmer of hope that we do - t o go forward at last into a just,
clean, honest society- how else can we do so except
by shedding the burden of our past, except by repen- tance, for we are all guilty, all besmirched?"
"We cannot convert the kingdom of universal falsehood into a kingdom of universal truth by even
the cleverest and most skillfully contrived economic and social reforms: these are the wrong building bricks."