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But now there's finally been a breakthrough in opening the bottleneck and getting the blocked food to the outside world. At least hopefully. In what he optimistically called a "beacon of hope" in a world that desperately needs it, U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres help broker a complicated diplomatic deal between warring parties Russia and Ukraine.
Speaking in Istanbul, Turkey, in that great city on the Bosporus, Guterres intoned, "Today there is a beacon on the Black Sea…a beacon of hope, a beacon of possibility, a beacon of relief in a world that needs it more than ever." Guterres stressed, "The question has not been what is good for one side or the other…the focus has been what matters most for the people of our world."
The deal was facilitated by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan whose country controls the narrow and strategic maritime chokepoints connecting the Black Sea to the Mediterranean. Naturally the accord is clearly in Turkey's interest too as so much shipping transits Turkish waters. Brokering the grain accords helps Erdogan's tarnished global image too.
But while the landmark accord helps Ukraine regain its export markets slowly, a parallel agreement between the U.N. and Russia allows for reopening markets for Russian grain and fertilizer. Predictably Russia was not willing to help Ukraine unilaterally without gaining something substantial in return.
Still the U.N. was wise to keep this standalone agreement out of the deadlocked Security Council, where a plethora of competing political interests would have slowed or stopped any progress. Yet at the same time United States diplomacy was largely bypassed by this accord.
Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine that began five months ago now, global food markets have been buffered by spiraling prices, shortages and bottlenecks. Ukraine's food production is mostly exported to North African and Middle Eastern countries thus causing new rounds of food security instability and as importantly political reverberations.
Look at the numbers; Ukraine supplies 81 percent of Lebanon's wheat, 64 percent of Qatar's and approximately half of the supplies for Tunisia, Libya and Pakistan. Fully 80 percent of Egypt's wheat imports comes from Ukraine and Russia.
Following the Istanbul accords, at least 22 million tons of wheat from Ukraine's breadbasket is due to be shipped to international markets. According to the African Development Bank, both Ukraine and Russia supply nearly 40 percent of Africa's wheat. Since the war began, such shortages have seen food prices spike 40 percent.
Prior to the conflict Ukraine exported 7 million tonnes of grain per month; now the number has cascaded to 1.5 million.
Ukraine is among the world's largest grain exporters supplying 45 million tons to global markets according to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. Since Russia began its invasion, much of the grain has been bottled up and backlogged in grain silos. In other words the food is already produced, but Moscow's actions are blocking it from entering the open markets.
Following the agreement, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy stressed the U.N. was responsible for guaranteeing the accord; "We must trust the United Nations. Now it is their responsibility to guarantee the deal."
The Black Sea Grain agreement allows for a complex process of registering cargoes and ships which will be allowed to leave three Ukrainian ports including Odesa. The ports are mined by both belligerents and thus safe passage must transit through narrow channels.
Within hours of the humanitarian agreement, Russian missiles hit Odesa port sending a stark reminder that Moscow can still set the agenda. Ukraine's foreign ministry called the Russian action a "spit in the face" to the U.N. and Turkish efforts to reopen humanitarian corridors.
At the same time Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov visited Egypt in a bid to maintain close if strained ties to the Cairo government. Moscow is courting a number of African "fence-sitting" governments that have not strongly condemned the Russian invasion.
So shall this work? As it appears that it's in the mutual interest of both countries, there's just the chance that humanitarian food corridors may operate. The alternative remains wider instability in places far from Ukraine's shores.
John J. Metzler (jjmcolumn@eathlink.net) is a United Nations correspondent covering diplomatic and defense issues. He is the author of "Divided Dynamism: The Diplomacy of Separated Nations: Germany, Korea, China."