Zelensky urges US mayors to end sister city ties with Russia – which towns have had them?

In this handout photo from the Ukrainian Presidential Press Office, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky meets with a delegation including U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on April 24, 2022 in Kyiv, Ukraine. The meeting represented the first visit to Kyiv by senior U.S. government officials since the start of the war. (Photo by Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via Getty Images)
In this handout photo from the Ukrainian Presidential Press Office, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky meets with a delegation including U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on April 24, 2022 in Kyiv, Ukraine. The meeting represented the first visit to Kyiv by senior U.S. government officials since the start of the war. Photo credit (Photo by Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via Getty Images)

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky implored mayors in the U.S. to end sister city relationships with Russian cities in an address to the United States Conference of Mayors posted to Facebook Saturday.

“Don’t help it justify itself,” said Zelensky of Russia. “Don’t maintain ties with it, and please do not allow those who have become murderers to call you their brothers and sisters.”

Zelensky noted that the first day of the annual United States Conference of Mayors began on the 100th day of the invasion initiated by Russian President Vladimir Putin in February, which has been condemned as a breach of international law by the Council on Foreign Relations think tank. From the start of the invasion at 4 a.m. Feb. 24 through midnight June 2, 4,183 civilians have been killed in Ukraine due to the attacks and 5,104 have been injured, according to the United Nations Officer of the High Commissioner on Human Rights.

Victims of the attacks include people who died due to the impact of 2,500 different missiles launched at infrastructure in Ukrainian cities.

“Some of the most deadly Russian missiles are designed and manufactured in Ekaterinburg, which by the way is still a sister city of San Jose,” in California, Zelensky said.

U.S. municipalities have “sister city” relationships with towns and cities abroad through the Sister Cities International program created at former President Dwight Eisenhower’s 1956 White House summit on citizen diplomacy.

Eisenhower, who served as supreme commander of the Allied Forces in Europe during World War II, “envisioned a network that would be a champion for peace and prosperity by fostering bonds between people from different communities around the world.”

Often, larger cities have many different “sister” relationships. For example, Moscow – the capital of Russia – and Kyiv – the capital of Ukraine – are among the 28 sister cities for Chicago, Ill., according to Chicago Sister Cities International. However, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced the suspension of Moscow’s sister city status on March 1.

“This suspension will be upheld until the end of hostilities against Ukraine and the Putin regime is held accountable for its crimes,” she said. “We must continue to support freedom-loving people everywhere and ordinary Russians in their desire to be free.”

San Jose decided to go in another direction, according to The San Jose Spotlight.

“Mayor Sam Liccardo said in a statement that rather than seeking to isolate Ekaterinburg, San Jose should forge stronger bonds with them, and support their dissent,” said the outlet.

In a letter, Sister Cities International discouraged ending sister city relationships with Russian municipalities.

“While suspending or ending a sister city relationship to register disapproval of a foreign government's actions may seem, on the surface, like a positive policy protest action, it has the complete opposite effect – closing a vital and, ofttimes, last channel of communication with vulnerable or isolated populations,” said the organization.

As of April 21, around 10% of the U.S. cities with sister city ties to Russia had suspended or ended their relationships, said The San Diego Times.

According to the U.S.- Russia Chamber of Commerce, U.S.-Russian sister city relationships have included:

Alaska

Juneau – Vladivostok

California

Livermore – Snezhinsk

Long Beach – Sochi

Los Angeles – St. Petersburg

Oakland – Nakhodka

San Bernardino – Zavolzhie

San Diego – Vladivostok

San Jose – Ekaterinburg

Santa Clara County – Moscow

Colorado

Colorado Springs – Smolensk

Florida

Gainesville – Novorossiisk

Jacksonville – Murmansk

Sarasota – Vladimir

St. Petersburg – St. Petersburg

Tallahassee – Krasnodar

Georgia

Macon – Ulyanovsk

Illinois

Bloomington-Normal – Vladimir

Chicago – Moscow

Dixon – Dikson

Iowa

Council Bluffs – Tobolsk

Des Moines – Stavropol

Dubuque – Pyatigorsk

Grinnel – Zaheleznovodsk

Muscatine – Kislovodsk

Osage – Lermontov

Kentucky

Louisville – Perm

Maine

Portland – Arkhangelsk

Waterville – Kotlas

Maryland

Maryland State – Leningrad Region, St. Petersburg

Massachusetts

Newburyport – Zelenogorsk

Minnesota

Duluth – Petrozavodsk

Minneapolis – Novosibirsk

Missouri

St. Louis – Samara

New Hampshire:

Portsmouth – Severodvinsk

New Jersey

Montclair – Cherepovets

New Mexico

Los-Alamos – Sarov

New York

Albany – Tula

Buffalo – Tver

Northport – Sochi

Rochester – Velikiy Novgorod

North Carolina

Asheville – Vladikavkaz

Charlotte – Voronezh

Durham – Kostroma

Ohio

Cleveland – Volgograd

Oklahoma

Edmond – Engels

Oklahoma City – Ulyanovsk

Tulsa – Zelenograd

Oregon

Beaverton – Birobidzhan

Eugene – Irkutsk

Grants Pass – Rubtsovsk

Portland – Khabarovsk

Pennsylvania

Philadelphia – Nizhny Novgorod

South Carolina

Columbia – Chelyabinsk

Tennessee

Chattanooga – Nizhni Tagil

Greater Tri-Cities – Rybinsk

Oak Ridge – Obninsk

Texas

Dallas – Saratov

Bryan-College Station – Kazan

Houston – Tyumen

Utah

Salt Lake City – Izhevsk

Vermont

Burlington – Yaroslavl

Virginia

Norfolk – Kaliningrad

Roanoke – Pskov

Washington

Anacortes – Lomonosov

Bellingham – Nakhodka

Tacoma – Vladivostok

Wisconsin

La Crosse – Dubna

Menomonie – Konakovo

Stevens Point – Rostov Velikiy

Zelensky also asked U.S. cities to partner with Ukraine to help his country rebuild from the Russian invasion. Russian troops continued to pummel Ukraine this weekend.

“This may be the largest economic project of our time,” Zelensky said.

Featured Image Photo Credit: (Photo by Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via Getty Images)