Second is the refusal of Turkey - a key country straddling the Western world and the Middle East - and Brazil a Western country whose foreign policy profile has risen steadily.
More often than not it is the weakest in any given society who end up paying the highest price.
Then the question needs asking: do economic sanctions produce the desired result?
Records for countries who've been targeted before show mostly they do not.
Except for South Africa whose political and social situation was quite unique I cannot think of any other country's rulers/regime that backed down to sanctions.
SA was ripe for change that became inevitable once the internal struggle reached boiling point.
Sanctions may have helped pushing it further into the pariah State category, therefore adding to existing difficulties.
Even the two who voted against aim for the same goal albeit pursuing a different path.
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