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Russo-Ukrainian War

Russo-Ukrainian War
Part of the conflicts in territory of the former Soviet Union
Clockwise from top left:
Ukrainian tanks during the 2022 Kharkiv counteroffensive; Russian military vehicles with Z markings during the 2022 invasion; Russian-backed forces during the Donbas war; Russian bombing during the Siege of Mariupol; Russian soldiers during the invasion of Crimea; Civilians killed by Russian missile strikes on Kyiv
Date27 February 2014[b] – present
(10 years, 2 months and 1 day)
Location
Ukraine, Russia, and Black Sea (spillover into Romania,[1] Poland, Moldova, Belarus)
Status Ongoing
Territorial
changes
Belligerents

 Ukraine

Supplied by:
For countries providing aid to Ukraine since 2022, see military aid to Ukraine

 Russia

Supplied by:
For details, see Russian military suppliers
Commanders and leaders

 Ukraine

 Russia

Strength
For details of strengths and units involved at key points in the conflict, see:
Casualties and losses
Reports vary widely, but tens of thousands at a minimum.[3][4] See Casualties of the Russo-Ukrainian War for details.

The Russo-Ukrainian War[c] is an ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine, which began in February 2014. Following Ukraine's Revolution of Dignity, Russia occupied and annexed Crimea from Ukraine and supported pro-Russian separatists fighting the Ukrainian military in the Donbas war. The first eight years of conflict also included naval incidents, cyberwarfare, and heightened political tensions. In February 2022, Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine and began occupying more of the country.

In early 2014, the Euromaidan protests led to the Revolution of Dignity and the ousting of Ukraine's pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovych. Shortly after, pro-Russian unrest erupted in eastern and southern Ukraine, while unmarked Russian troops occupied Crimea. Russia soon annexed Crimea after a highly disputed referendum. In April 2014, Russian-backed militants seized towns in Ukraine's eastern Donbas region and proclaimed the Donetsk People's Republic (DPR) and the Luhansk People's Republic (LPR) as independent states, starting the Donbas war. The separatists received considerable but covert support from Russia, and Ukrainian attempts to fully retake separatist-held areas failed. Although Russia denied involvement, Russian troops took part in the fighting. In February 2015, Russia and Ukraine signed the Minsk II agreements to end the conflict, but they were never fully implemented in the years that followed. The Donbas war settled into a violent but static conflict between Ukraine and the Russian and separatist forces, with many brief ceasefires but no lasting peace and few changes in territorial control.

Beginning in 2021, Russia built up a large military presence near its border with Ukraine, including within neighbouring Belarus. Russian officials repeatedly denied plans to attack Ukraine. Russian president Vladimir Putin expressed irredentist views and denied Ukraine's right to exist. He criticized the enlargement of NATO and demanded that Ukraine be barred from ever joining the military alliance. Russia recognized the DPR and LPR as independent states.

On 24 February 2022, Putin announced a "special military operation" to "demilitarize and denazify" Ukraine, claiming Russia had no plans to occupy the country. The Russian invasion that followed was internationally condemned; many countries imposed sanctions against Russia and increased existing sanctions. In the face of fierce resistance, Russia abandoned an attempt to take Kyiv in early April. From August, Ukrainian forces began recapturing territories in the north-east and south. In late September, Russia declared the annexation of four partially-occupied regions, which was internationally condemned. Russia spent the winter conducting inconclusive offensives in the Donbas. In spring 2023, Russia dug into positions ahead of another Ukrainian counteroffensive, which failed to gain significant ground. The war has resulted in a refugee crisis and tens of thousands of deaths.

Background

Independent Ukraine and the Orange Revolution

 
The signing ceremony of the Belovezha Accords by the heads of states and governments of Belarus, Russia and Ukraine in 1991

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union (USSR) in 1991, Ukraine and Russia maintained close ties. In 1994, Ukraine agreed to accede to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons as a non-nuclear-weapon state.[5] Former Soviet nuclear weapons in Ukraine were removed and dismantled.[6] In return, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States agreed to uphold the territorial integrity and political independence of Ukraine through the Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances.[7][8] In 1999, Russia was one of the signatories of the Charter for European Security, which "reaffirmed the inherent right of each and every participating State to be free to choose or change its security arrangements, including treaties of alliance, as they evolve."[9] In the years after the dissolution of the USSR, several former Eastern Bloc countries joined NATO, partly in response to regional security threats involving Russia such as the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis, the War in Abkhazia (1992–1993) and the First Chechen War (1994–1996). Putin claimed Western powers broke promises not to let any Eastern European countries join.[10][11]

 
Protesters in Independence Square in Kyiv during the Orange Revolution, November 2004

The 2004 Ukrainian presidential election was controversial. During the election campaign, opposition candidate Viktor Yushchenko was poisoned by TCDD dioxin;[12][13] he later accused Russia of involvement.[14] In November, Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych was declared the winner, despite allegations of vote-rigging by election observers.[15] During a two-month period which became known as the Orange Revolution, large peaceful protests successfully challenged the outcome. After the Supreme Court of Ukraine annulled the initial result due to widespread electoral fraud, a second round re-run was held, bringing to power Yushchenko as president and Yulia Tymoshenko as prime minister, and leaving Yanukovych in opposition.[16] The Orange Revolution is often grouped together with other early-21st century protest movements, particularly within the former USSR, known as colour revolutions. According to Anthony Cordesman, Russian military officers viewed such colour revolutions as attempts by the US and European states to destabilise neighbouring countries and undermine Russia's national security.[17] Russian President Vladimir Putin accused organisers of the 2011–2013 Russian protests of being former advisors to Yushchenko, and described the protests as an attempt to transfer the Orange Revolution to Russia.[18] Rallies in favour of Putin during this period were called "anti-Orange protests".[19]

At the 2008 Bucharest summit, Ukraine and Georgia sought to join NATO. The response among NATO members was divided. Western European countries opposed offering Membership Action Plans (MAP) to Ukraine and Georgia in order to avoid antagonising Russia, while US President George W. Bush pushed for their admission.[20] NATO ultimately refused to offer Ukraine and Georgia MAPs, but also issued a statement agreeing that "these countries will become members of NATO" at some point. Putin strongly opposed Georgia and Ukraine's NATO membership bids.[21] By January 2022, the possibility of Ukraine joining NATO remained remote.[22]

In 2009, Yanukovych announced his intent to again run for president in the 2010 Ukrainian presidential election,[23] which he subsequently won.[24] In November 2013, a wave of large, pro-European Union (EU) protests erupted in response to Yanukovych's sudden decision not to sign the EU–Ukraine Association Agreement, instead choosing closer ties to Russia and the Eurasian Economic Union. On 22 February 2013, the Ukrainian parliament overwhelmingly approved of finalizing Ukraine's agreement with the EU.[25] Subsequently, Russia pressurized Ukraine to reject this agreement by threatening sanctions. Kremlin adviser Sergei Glazyev stated that if the agreement was signed, Russia could not guarantee Ukraine's status as a state.[26][27]

Euromaidan, Revolution of Dignity, and pro-Russian unrest

 
Protesters in Kyiv waving Ukrainian and European flags during the Euromaidan demonstrations in 2013

On 21 February 2014, following months of protests as part of the Euromaidan movement, Yanukovych and the leaders of the parliamentary opposition signed a settlement agreement that provided for early elections. The following day, Yanukovych fled from the capital ahead of an impeachment vote that stripped him of his powers as president.[28][29][30][31] On 23 February, the Rada (Ukrainian Parliament) adopted a bill to repeal the 2012 law which made Russian an official language.[32] The bill was not enacted,[33] but the proposal provoked negative reactions in the Russian-speaking regions of Ukraine,[34] intensified by Russian media claiming that the ethnic Russian population was in imminent danger.[35]

On 27 February, an interim government was established and early presidential elections were scheduled. The following day, Yanukovych resurfaced in Russia and in a press conference, declared that he remained the acting president of Ukraine, just as Russia was commencing a military campaign in Crimea. Leaders of Russian-speaking eastern regions of Ukraine declared continuing loyalty to Yanukovych,[29][36] triggering the 2014 pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine.

Russian military bases in Crimea

 
Russian cruiser Moskva (centre) at Sevastopol Bay in 2012

At the onset of the Crimean conflict, Russia had roughly 12,000 military personnel from the Black Sea Fleet,[35] in several locations in the Crimean peninsula such as Sevastopol, Kacha, Hvardiiske, Simferopol Raion, Sarych, and others. In 2005 a dispute broke out between Russia and Ukraine over control of the Sarych cape lighthouse near Yalta, and a number of other beacons.[37][38] Russian presence was allowed by the basing and transit agreement with Ukraine. Under this agreement, the Russian military in Crimea was constrained to a maximum of 25,000 troops. Russia was required to respect the sovereignty of Ukraine, honor its legislation, not interfere in the internal affairs of the country, and show their "military identification cards" when crossing the international border.[39] Early in the conflict, the agreement's generous troop limit allowed Russia to significantly strengthen its military presence, deploy special forces and other required capabilities to conduct the operation in Crimea, under the pretext of addressing security concerns.[35]

According to the original treaty on the division of the Soviet Black Sea Fleet signed in 1997, Russia was allowed to have its military bases in Crimea until 2017, after which it would evacuate all military units including its portion of the Black Sea Fleet from the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol. On 21 April 2010, former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych signed a new deal with Russia, known as the Kharkiv Pact, to resolve the 2009 Russia–Ukraine gas dispute. The pact extended Russia's stay in Crimea to 2042, with an option to renew.[40]

Legality and declaration of war

No formal declaration of war has been issued in the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian War. When Putin announced the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, he claimed to commence a "special military operation", side-stepping a formal declaration of war.[41] The statement was, however, regarded as a declaration of war by the Ukrainian government[42] and reported as such by many international news sources.[43][44] While the Ukrainian parliament refers to Russia as a "terrorist state" in regard to its military actions in Ukraine,[45] it has not issued a formal declaration of war on its behalf.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine violated international law (including the Charter of the United Nations).[53][54][55][56] The invasion has also been called a crime of aggression under international criminal law[57] and under some countries' domestic criminal codes – including those of Ukraine and Russia – although procedural obstacles exist to prosecutions under these laws.[58][59]

History

Russian annexation of Crimea (2014)

 
The Russian military buildup along Ukraine's eastern border in February–March 2014
 
The blockade of military units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine during the capture of Crimea by Russia in February–March 2014
 
Russian troops blocking the Ukrainian military base in Perevalne

In late February 2014, Russia began to occupy Crimea, marking the beginning of the Russo-Ukrainian War.[60][61][62][63] On 22 and 23 February, in the relative power vacuum immediately after the ousting of Yanukovych,[64] Russian troops and special forces were moved close to the border with Crimea.[62] On 27 February, Russian forces without insignia began to occupy Crimea.[65][66] Russia consistently denied that the soldiers were theirs, instead claiming they were local "self-defense" units. They seized the Crimean parliament and government buildings, as well as setting up checkpoints to restrict movement and cut off the Crimean peninsula from the rest of Ukraine.[67][68][69][70] In the following days, unmarked Russian special forces occupied airports and communications centers,[71] and blockaded Ukrainian military bases, such as the Southern Naval Base. Russian cyberattacks shut down websites associated with the Ukrainian government, news media, and social media. Cyberattacks also enabled Russian access to the mobile phones of Ukrainian officials and members of parliament, further disrupting communications.[72] On 1 March, the Russian parliament approved the use of armed forces in Crimea.[71]

While Russian special forces occupied Crimea's parliament, it dismissed the Crimean government, installed the pro-Russian Aksyonov government, and announced a referendum on Crimea's status. The referendum was held under Russian occupation and, according to the Russian-installed authorities, the result was in favor of joining Russia. It annexed Crimea on 18 March 2014. Following this, Russian forces seized Ukrainian military bases in Crimea and captured their personnel. On 24 March, Ukraine ordered its remaining troops to withdraw; by 30 March, all Ukrainian forces had left the peninsula.

On 15 April, the Ukrainian parliament declared Crimea a territory temporarily occupied by Russia.[73] After the annexation, the Russian government militarized the peninsula and made nuclear threats.[74] Putin said that a Russian military task force would be established in Crimea.[75] In November, NATO stated that it believed Russia was deploying nuclear-capable weapons to Crimea.[76] After the annexation of Crimea, some NATO members began providing training for the Ukrainian army.[77]

War in the Donbas (2014–2015)

 
Ukrainian troops deploy in response to Russian maneuvers. Early March 2014.

Pro-Russia unrest

From late February 2014, demonstrations by pro-Russian and anti-government groups took place in major cities across the eastern and southern regions of Ukraine.[78] The first protests across southern and eastern Ukraine were largely native expressions of discontent with the new Ukrainian government.[78][79] Russian involvement at this stage was limited to voicing support for the demonstrations.[79][80] Russia exploited this, however, launching a coordinated political and military campaign against Ukraine.[79][81] Putin gave legitimacy to the separatists when he described the Donbas as part of "New Russia" (Novorossiya), and expressed bewilderment as to how the region had ever become part of Ukraine.[82]

Russia continued to marshal forces near Ukraine's eastern border in late March, reaching 30–40,000 troops by April.[83][35] The deployment was used to threaten escalation and disrupt Ukraine's response.[35] This threat forced Ukraine to divert forces to its borders instead of the conflict zone.[35]

Ukrainian authorities cracked down on the pro-Russian protests and arrested local separatist leaders in early March. Those leaders were replaced by people with ties to the Russian security services and interests in Russian businesses.[84] By April 2014, Russian citizens had taken control of the separatist movement, supported by volunteers and materiel from Russia, including Chechen and Cossack fighters.[85][86][87][88] According to Donetsk People's Republic (DPR) commander Igor Girkin, without this support in April, the movement would have dissipated, as it had in Kharkiv and Odesa.[89] The separatist groups held disputed referendums in May,[90][91][92] which were not recognised by Ukraine or any other UN member state.[90]

Armed conflict

 
Ukrainian response to Russian activities in Donbas after seizure of Sloviansk on 12 April. April–May 2014.

In April 2014, armed conflict began in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed separatists and Ukraine. On 12 April, a fifty-man unit of pro-Russian militants seized the towns of Sloviansk and Kramatorsk.[93] The heavily armed men were Russian Armed Forces "volunteers" under the command of former GRU colonel Igor Girkin ('Strelkov').[93][94] They had been sent from Russian-occupied Crimea and wore no insignia.[93] Girkin said that this action sparked the Donbas War. He said "I'm the one who pulled the trigger of war. If our unit hadn't crossed the border, everything would have fizzled out".[95][96]

 
Ukrainian Armed Forces in Anti-Terrorist Operation Zone in 2014

In response, on 15 April the interim Ukrainian government launched an "Anti-Terrorist Operation" (ATO); however, Ukrainian forces were poorly prepared and ill-positioned and the operation quickly stalled.[97] By the end of April, Ukraine announced it had lost control of the provinces of Donetsk and Luhansk. It claimed to be on "full combat alert" against a possible Russian invasion and reinstated conscription to its armed forces.[98] During May, the Ukrainian campaign focused on containing the separatists by securing key positions around the ATO zone to position the military for a decisive offensive once Ukraine's national mobilization had completed.

As conflict between the separatists and the Ukrainian government escalated in May, Russia began to employ a "hybrid approach", combining disinformation tactics, irregular fighters, regular Russian troops, and conventional military support.[99][100][101] The First Battle of Donetsk Airport followed the Ukrainian presidential elections. It marked a turning point in conflict; it was the first battle between the separatists and the Ukrainian government that involved large numbers of Russian "volunteers".[102][103]: 15  According to Ukraine, at the height of the conflict in the summer of 2014, Russian paramilitaries made up between 15% and 80% of the combatants.[87] From June Russia trickled in arms, armor, and munitions.

On 17 July 2014, Russian-controlled forces shot down a passenger aircraft, Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, as it was flying over eastern Ukraine.[104] Investigations and the recovery of bodies began in the conflict zone as fighting continued.[105][106][107]

By the end of July, Ukrainian forces were pushing into cities, to cut off supply routes between the two, isolating Donetsk and attempting to restore control of the Russo-Ukrainian border. By 28 July, the strategic heights of Savur-Mohyla were under Ukrainian control, along with the town of Debaltseve, an important railroad hub.[108] These operational successes of Ukrainian forces threatened the existence of the DPR and LPR statelets, prompting Russian cross-border shelling targeted at Ukrainian troops on their own soil, from mid-July onwards.[109]

August 2014 Russian invasion

 
June–August 2014 progression map

After a series of military defeats and setbacks for the separatists, who united under the banner of "Novorossiya",[110][111] Russia dispatched what it called a "humanitarian convoy" of trucks across the border in mid-August 2014. Ukraine called the move a "direct invasion".[112] Ukraine's National Security and Defence Council reported that convoys were arriving almost daily in November (up to 9 convoys on 30 November) and that their contents were mainly arms and ammunition. Strelkov claimed that in early August, Russian servicemen, supposedly on "vacation" from the army, began to arrive in Donbas.[113]

By August 2014, the Ukrainian "Anti-Terrorist Operation" shrank the territory under pro-Russian control, and approached the border.[114] Igor Girkin urged Russian military intervention, and said that the combat inexperience of his irregular forces, along with recruitment difficulties amongst the local population, had caused the setbacks. He stated, "Losing this war on the territory that President Vladimir Putin personally named New Russia would threaten the Kremlin's power and, personally, the power of the president".[115]

In response to the deteriorating situation, Russia abandoned its hybrid approach, and began a conventional invasion on 25 August 2014.[114][116] On the following day, the Russian Defence Ministry said these soldiers had crossed the border "by accident".[117][118][119] According to Nikolai Mitrokhin's estimates, by mid-August 2014 during the Battle of Ilovaisk, between 20,000 and 25,000 troops were fighting in the Donbas on the separatist side, and only 40–45% were "locals".[120]

On 24 August 2014, Amvrosiivka was occupied by Russian paratroopers,[121] supported by 250 armoured vehicles and artillery pieces.[122] The same day, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko referred to the operation as Ukraine's "Patriotic War of 2014" and a war against external aggression.[123][124] On 25 August, a column of Russian military vehicles was reported to have crossed into Ukraine near Novoazovsk on the Azov sea coast. It appeared headed towards Ukrainian-held Mariupol,[125][126][127][128][129] in an area that had not seen pro-Russian presence for weeks.[130] Russian forces captured Novoazovsk.[131] and Russian soldiers began deporting Ukrainians who did not have an address registered within the town.[132] Pro-Ukrainian anti-war protests took place in Mariupol.[132][133] The UN Security Council called an emergency meeting.[134]

 
Residents of Kyiv with Sich Battalion volunteers on 26 August 2014

The Pskov-based 76th Guards Air Assault Division allegedly entered Ukrainian territory in August and engaged in a skirmish near Luhansk, suffering 80 dead. The Ukrainian Defence Ministry said that they had seized two of the unit's armoured vehicles near Luhansk, and reported destroying another three tanks and two armoured vehicles in other regions.[135]

The speaker of Russia's upper house of parliament and Russian state television channels acknowledged that Russian soldiers entered Ukraine, but referred to them as "volunteers".[136] A reporter for Novaya Gazeta, an opposition newspaper in Russia, stated that the Russian military leadership paid soldiers to resign their commissions and fight in Ukraine in the early summer of 2014, and then began ordering soldiers into Ukraine.[137] Russian opposition MP Lev Shlosberg made similar statements, although he said combatants from his country are "regular Russian troops", disguised as units of the DPR and LPR.[138]

In early September 2014, Russian state-owned television channels reported on the funerals of Russian soldiers who had died in Ukraine, but described them as "volunteers" fighting for the "Russian world". Valentina Matviyenko, a top United Russia politician, also praised "volunteers" fighting in "our fraternal nation".[136] Russian state television for the first time showed the funeral of a soldier killed fighting in Ukraine.[139]

Mariupol offensive and first Minsk ceasefire

 
A map of the line of control and buffer zone established by the Minsk Protocol on 5 September 2014

On 3 September, Poroshenko said he and Putin had reached a "permanent ceasefire" agreement.[140] Russia denied this, denying that it was a party to the conflict, adding that "they only discussed how to settle the conflict".[141][142] Poroshenko then recanted.[143][144] On 5 September Russia's Permanent OSCE Representative Andrey Kelin, said that it was natural that pro-Russian separatists "are going to liberate" Mariupol. Ukrainian forces stated that Russian intelligence groups had been spotted in the area. Kelin said 'there might be volunteers over there.'[145] On 4 September 2014, a NATO officer said that several thousand regular Russian forces were operating in Ukraine.[146]

On 5 September 2014, the Minsk Protocol ceasefire agreement drew a line of demarcation between Ukraine and separatist-controlled portions of Donetsk and Luhansk Oblasts.

End of 2014 and Minsk II agreement

On 7 and 12 November, NATO officials reconfirmed the Russian presence, citing 32 tanks, 16 howitzer cannons and 30 trucks of troops entering the country.[147] US general Philip M. Breedlove said "Russian tanks, Russian artillery, Russian air defence systems and Russian combat troops" had been sighted.[76][148] NATO said it had seen an increase in Russian tanks, artillery pieces and other heavy military equipment in Ukraine and renewed its call for Moscow to withdraw its forces.[149] The Chicago Council on Global Affairs stated that Russian separatists enjoyed technical advantages over the Ukrainian army since the large inflow of advanced military systems in mid-2014: effective anti-aircraft weapons ("Buk", MANPADS) suppressed Ukrainian air strikes, Russian drones provided intelligence, and Russian secure communications system disrupted Ukrainian communications intelligence. The Russian side employed electronic warfare systems that Ukraine lacked. Similar conclusions about the technical advantage of the Russian separatists were voiced by the Conflict Studies Research Centre.[150] In the 12 November United Nations Security Council meeting, the United Kingdom's representative accused Russia of intentionally constraining OSCE observation missions' capabilities, pointing out that the observers were allowed to monitor only two kilometers of border, and drones deployed to extend their capabilities were jammed or shot down.[151][non-primary source needed]

 
Pro-Russian rebels in Donetsk in May 2015. Ukraine declared the Russian-backed separatist republics from eastern Ukraine to be terrorist organizations.[152]

In January 2015, Donetsk, Luhansk, and Mariupol represented the three battle fronts.[153] Poroshenko described a dangerous escalation on 21 January amid reports of more than 2,000 additional Russian troops, 200 tanks and armed personnel carriers crossing the border. He abbreviated his visit to the World Economic Forum because of his concerns.[154]

A new package of measures to end the conflict, known as Minsk II, was agreed on 15 February 2015.[155] On 18 February, Ukrainian forces withdrew from Debatlseve, in the last high-intensity battle of the Donbas war until 2022. In September 2015 the United Nations Human Rights Office estimated that 8000 casualties had resulted from the conflict.[156]

Line of conflict stabilizes (2015–2021)

 
Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko inspects Ukrainian soldiers positions in the front line in the Donetsk Oblast in June 2016

After the Minsk agreements, the war settled into static trench warfare around the agreed line of contact, with few changes in territorial control. The conflict was marked by artillery duels, special forces operations, and trench warfare. Hostilities never ceased for a substantial period of time, but continued at a low level despite repeated attempts at ceasefire. In the months after the fall of Debaltseve, minor skirmishes continued along the line of contact, but no territorial changes occurred. Both sides began fortifying their position by building networks of trenches, bunkers and tunnels, turning the conflict into static trench warfare.[157][158] The relatively static conflict was labelled "frozen" by some,[159] but Russia never achieved this as the fighting never stopped.[160][161] Between 2014 and 2022 there were 29 ceasefires, each agreed to remain in force indefinitely. However, none of them lasted more than two weeks.[162]

US and international officials continued to report the active presence of Russian military in eastern Ukraine, including in the Debaltseve area.[163] In 2015, Russian separatist forces were estimated to number around 36,000 troops (compared to 34,000 Ukrainian), of whom 8,500–10,000 were Russian soldiers. Additionally, around 1,000 GRU troops were operating in the area.[164] Another 2015 estimate held that Ukrainian forces outnumbered Russian forces 40,000 to 20,000.[165] In 2017, on average one Ukrainian soldier died in combat every three days,[166] with an estimated 6,000 Russian and 40,000 separatist troops in the region.[167][168]

 
Casualties of the war in Donbas

Cases of killed and wounded Russian soldiers were discussed in local Russian media.[169] Recruiting for Donbas was performed openly via veteran and paramilitary organisations. Vladimir Yefimov, leader of one such organisation, explained how the process worked in the Ural area. The organisation recruited mostly army veterans, but also policemen, firefighters etc. with military experience. The cost of equipping one volunteer was estimated at 350,000 rubles (around $6500) plus salary of 60,000 to 240,000 rubles per month.[170] The recruits received weapons only after arriving in the conflict zone. Often, Russian troops traveled disguised as Red Cross personnel.[171][172][173][174] Igor Trunov, head of the Russian Red Cross in Moscow, condemned these convoys, saying they complicated humanitarian aid delivery.[175] Russia refused to allow OSCE to expand its mission beyond two border crossings.[176]

The volunteers were issued a document claiming that their participation was limited to "offering humanitarian help" to avoid Russian mercenary laws. Russia's anti-mercenary legislation defined a mercenary as someone who "takes part [in fighting] with aims counter to the interests of the Russian Federation".[170]

In August 2016, the Ukrainian intelligence service, the SBU, published telephone intercepts from 2014 of Sergey Glazyev (Russian presidential adviser), Konstantin Zatulin, and other people in which they discussed covert funding of pro-Russian activists in Eastern Ukraine, the occupation of administration buildings and other actions that triggered the conflict.[177] As early as February 2014, Glazyev gave direct instructions to various pro-Russian parties on how to take over local administration offices, what to do afterwards, how to formulate demands, and promised support from Russia, including "sending our guys".[178][179][180]

 
Russian-backed separatists in May 2016

2018 Kerch Strait incident

 
The Kerch Strait incident over the passage between the Black and Azov seas

Russia gained de facto control of the Kerch Strait in 2014. In 2017, Ukraine appealed to a court of arbitration over the use of the strait. By 2018 Russia had built a bridge over the strait, limiting the size of ships that could pass through, imposed new regulations, and repeatedly detained Ukrainian vessels.[181] On 25 November 2018, three Ukrainian boats traveling from Odesa to Mariupol were seized by Russian warships; 24 Ukrainian sailors were detained.[182][183] A day later on 26 November 2018, the Ukrainian parliament overwhelmingly backed the imposition of martial law along Ukraine's coastal regions and those bordering Russia.[184]

2019–2020

 
From left, Russian President Vladimir Putin, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Paris, France, December 2019

More than 110 Ukrainian soldiers were killed in the conflict in 2019.[185] In May 2019, newly elected Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy took office promising to end the war in Donbas.[185] In December 2019, Ukraine and pro-Russian separatists began swapping prisoners of war. Around 200 prisoners were exchanged on 29 December 2019.[186][187][188][189] According to Ukrainian authorities, 50 Ukrainian soldiers were killed in 2020.[190] Between 2019 and 2021, Russia issued over 650,000 internal Russian passports to Ukrainians.[191][192]

There were 27 conflict-related civilian deaths in 2019, 26 deaths in 2020, and 25 deaths in 2021, over half of them from mines and unexploded ordnance.[193]

Russian military buildup around Ukraine (2021–2022)

From March to April 2021, Russia commenced a major military build-up near the border, followed by a second build-up between October 2021 to February 2022 in Russia and Belarus.[194] Throughout, the Russian government repeatedly denied it had plans to attack Ukraine.[195][196]

In early December 2021, following Russian denials, the US released intelligence of Russian invasion plans, including satellite photographs showing Russian troops and equipment near the border.[197] The intelligence reported a Russian list of key sites and individuals to be killed or neutralized.[198] The US released multiple reports that accurately predicted the invasion plans.[198]

Russian accusations and demands

 
Ukrainian deputy prime minister Olha Stefanishyna with NATO secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg at a conference on 10 January 2022 regarding a potential Russian invasion

In the months preceding the invasion, Russian officials accused Ukraine of inciting tensions, Russophobia, and repressing Russian speakers. They made multiple security demands of Ukraine, NATO, and other EU countries. On 9 December 2021 Putin said that "Russophobia is a first step towards genocide".[199][200] Putin's claims were dismissed by the international community,[201] and Russian claims of genocide were rejected as baseless.[202][203][204] In a 21 February speech,[205] Putin questioned the legitimacy of the Ukrainian state, repeating an inaccurate claim that "Ukraine never had a tradition of genuine statehood".[206] He incorrectly stated that Vladimir Lenin had created Ukraine, by carving a separate Soviet Republic out of what Putin said was Russian land, and that Nikita Khrushchev "took Crimea away from Russia for some reason and gave it to Ukraine" in 1954.[207]

Putin falsely claimed that Ukrainian society and government were dominated by neo-Nazism, invoking the history of collaboration in German-occupied Ukraine during World War II,[208][209] and echoing an antisemitic conspiracy theory that cast Russian Christians, rather than Jews, as the true victims of Nazi Germany.[210][201] Ukraine does have a far-right fringe, including the neo-Nazi linked Azov Battalion and Right Sector.[211][209] Analysts described Putin's rhetoric as greatly exaggerated.[212][208] Zelenskyy, who is Jewish, stated that his grandfather served in the Soviet army fighting against the Nazis;[213] three of his family members were killed in the Holocaust.[212]

 
A U.S. intelligence assessment map and imagery on Russian military movement nearby the Ukrainian border, as on 3 December 2021. It assessed that Russia had deployed about 70,000 military personnel mostly about 100–200 kilometres (62–124 mi) from the Ukrainian border, with an assessment this could be increased to 175,000 personnel. Published by The Washington Post.[214]

During the second build-up, Russia demanded a treaty that would forbid Ukraine from ever joining NATO, and end all NATO activity in its Eastern European member states.[215] These demands were rejected.[216] A treaty to prevent Ukraine joining NATO would go against the alliance's "open door" policy and the principle of self-determination, although NATO made no efforts to comply with Ukraine's requests to join.[217] NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg replied that "Russia has no say" on whether Ukraine joins, and that "Russia has no right to establish a sphere of influence to try to control their neighbors".[218] NATO offered to improve communications with Russia and discuss missile placements and military exercises, as long as Russia withdrew troops from Ukraine's borders,[219] but Russia did not withdraw.

Prelude to full invasion

Fighting in Donbas escalated significantly from 17 February 2022 onwards.[220] The Ukrainians and the pro-Russian separatists each accused the other of attacks.[221][222] There was a sharp increase in artillery shelling by the Russian-led militants in Donbas, which was considered by Ukraine and its supporters to be an attempt to provoke the Ukrainian army or create a pretext for invasion.[223][224][225] On 18 February, the Donetsk and Luhansk people's republics ordered mandatory emergency evacuations of civilians from their respective capital cities,[226][227][228] although observers noted that full evacuations would take months.[229] The Russian government intensified its disinformation campaign, with Russian state media promoting fabricated videos (false flags) on a nearly hourly basis purporting to show Ukrainian forces attacking Russia.[230] Many of the disinformation videos were amateurish, and evidence showed that the claimed attacks, explosions, and evacuations in Donbas were staged by Russia.[230][231][232]

Putin's address to the nation on 21 February (English subtitles available)

On 21 February at 22:35 (UTC+3),[233] Putin announced that the Russian government would diplomatically recognize the Donetsk and Luhansk people's republics.[234] The same evening, Putin directed that Russian troops deploy into Donbas, in what Russia referred to as a "peacekeeping mission".[235][236] On 22 February, the Federation Council unanimously authorised Putin to use military force outside Russia.[237] In response, Zelenskyy ordered the conscription of army reservists;[238] The following day, Ukraine's parliament proclaimed a 30-day nationwide state of emergency and ordered the mobilisation of all reservists.[239][240][241] Russia began to evacuate its embassy in Kyiv.[242]

On the night of 23 February,[243] Zelenskyy gave a speech in Russian in which he appealed to the citizens of Russia to prevent war.[244][245] He rejected Russia's claims about neo-Nazis and stated that he had no intention of attacking the Donbas.[246] Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on 23 February that the separatist leaders in Donetsk and Luhansk had sent a letter to Putin stating that Ukrainian shelling had caused civilian deaths and appealing for military support.[247]

Full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine (2022–present)

 
Animated map of Russia's invasion of Ukraine through 5 December 2022 (click to play animation)
 
Ukrainian soldiers killed in the Russo-Ukrainian War in 2022

The Russian invasion of Ukraine began on the morning of 24 February 2022,[248] when Putin announced a "special military operation" to "demilitarise and denazify" Ukraine.[249][250] Minutes later, missiles and airstrikes hit across Ukraine, including Kyiv, shortly followed by a large ground invasion along multiple fronts.[251][252] Zelenskyy declared martial law and a general mobilisation of all male Ukrainian citizens between 18 and 60, who were banned from leaving the country.[253][254]

Russian attacks were initially launched on a northern front from Belarus towards Kyiv, a southern front from Crimea, and a south-eastern front from Luhansk and Donetsk and towards Kharkiv.[255][256] In the northern front, amidst heavy losses and strong Ukrainian resistance surrounding Kyiv, Russia's advance stalled in March, and by April its troops retreated. On 8 April, Russia placed its forces in southern and eastern Ukraine under the command of General Aleksandr Dvornikov, and some units withdrawn from the north were redeployed to the Donbas.[257] On 19 April, Russia launched a renewed attack across a 500 kilometres (300 mi) long front extending from Kharkiv to Donetsk and Luhansk.[258] By 13 May, a Ukraine counter-offensive had driven back Russian forces near Kharkiv. By 20 May, Mariupol fell to Russian troops following a prolonged siege of the Azovstal steel works.[259][260] Russian forces continued to bomb both military and civilian targets far from the frontline.[261][262] The war caused the largest refugee and humanitarian crisis within Europe since the Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s;[263][264] the UN described it as the fastest-growing such crisis since World War II.[265] In the first week of the invasion, the UN reported over a million refugees had fled Ukraine; this subsequently rose to over 7,405,590 by 24 September, a reduction from over eight million due to some refugees' return.[266][267]

 
Remnants of a destroyed Russian Army column on 27 February in Bucha

Ukrainian forces launched counteroffensives in the south in August, and in the northeast in September. On 30 September, Russia annexed four oblasts of Ukraine which it had partially conquered during the invasion.[268] This annexation was generally unrecognized and condemned by the countries of the world.[269] After Putin announced that he would begin conscription drawn from the 300,000 citizens with military training and potentially the pool of about 25 million Russians who could be eligible for conscription, one-way tickets out of the country nearly or completely sold out.[270][271] The Ukrainian offensive in the northeast successfully recaptured the majority of Kharkiv Oblast in September. In the course of the southern counteroffensive, Ukraine retook the city of Kherson in November and Russian forces withdrew to the east bank of the Dnieper River.[citation needed]

The invasion was internationally condemned as a war of aggression.[272][273] A United Nations General Assembly resolution demanded a full withdrawal of Russian forces, the International Court of Justice ordered Russia to suspend military operations and the Council of Europe expelled Russia. Many countries imposed new sanctions, which affected the economies of Russia and the world,[274] and provided humanitarian and military aid to Ukraine.[275] In September 2022, Putin signed a law that would punish anyone who resists conscription with a 10-year prison sentence[276] resulting in an international push to allow asylum for Russians fleeing conscription.[277]

As of August 2023, the total number of Russian and Ukrainian soldiers killed or wounded during the Russian invasion of Ukraine was nearly 500,000.[278] More than 10,000 civilians were killed during the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[279] According to a declassified US intelligence assessment, as of December 2023, Russia had lost 315,000 of the 360,000 troops that made up Russia's pre-invasion ground force, and 2,200 of the 3,500 tanks.[280]

Human rights violations

 
Executed Ukrainian civilians with wrists bound in plastic restraints, in a basement in Bucha, 3 April 2022

Violations of human rights and atrocity crimes have both occurred during the war. From 2014 to 2021, there were more than 3,000 civilian casualties, with most occurring in 2014 and 2015.[281] The right of movement was impeded for the inhabitants of the conflict zone.[282] Arbitrary detention was practiced by both sides in the first years of the conflict. It decreased after 2016 in government-held areas, while in the separatist-held ones it continued.[283] Investigations into the abuses committed by both sides made little progress.[284][285]

 
Killed Ukrainian civilians during the Zaporizhzhia civilian convoy attack by Russian Army in September 2022

Since the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Russian authorities and armed forces have committed multiple war crimes in the form of deliberate attacks against civilian targets,[286][287] massacres of civilians, torture and rape of women and children,[288][289] and indiscriminate attacks in densely populated areas. After the Russian withdrawal from areas north of Kyiv, overwhelming evidence of war crimes by Russian forces was discovered. In particular, in the town of Bucha, evidence emerged of a massacre of civilians perpetrated by Russian troops, including torture, mutilation, rape, looting and deliberate killings of civilians.[290][291][292] the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine (OHCHR) has documented the murder of at least 73 civilians – mostly men, but also women and children – in Bucha.[293] More than 1,200 bodies of civilians were found in the Kyiv region after Russian forces withdrew, some of them summarily executed. There were reports of forced deportations of thousands of civilians, including children, to Russia, mainly from Russian-occupied Mariupol,[294][295] as well as sexual violence, including cases of rape, sexual assault and gang rape,[296] and deliberate killing of Ukrainian civilians by Russian forces.[297] Russia has also systematically attacked Ukrainian medical infrastructure, with the World Health Organization reporting 1,422 attacks as of 21 December 2023.[298]

Ukrainian forces have also been accused of committing various war crimes, including mistreatment of detainees, though on a much smaller scale than Russian forces.[299][300]

Related issues

Spillover

On 19 September 2023, CNN reported that it was "likely" that Ukrainian Special Operations Forces were behind a series of drone strikes and a ground operation directed against the Wagner-backed RSF near Khartoum on 8 September.[301] Kyrylo Budanov, chief of the Main Directorate of Intelligence of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, stated in an interview on 22 September that he could neither deny nor confirm the involvement of Ukraine in the conflict in Sudan,[302] but said that Ukraine would punish Russian war criminals anywhere in the world.[303]

In September and October 2023, a series of fragments were reported found in Romania, a NATO member state, which were suspected to have been the remains of a Russian drone attack near the Romanian border with Ukraine.[304][305]

Gas disputes

 
Major Russian natural gas pipelines to Europe
 
  Europe TTF natural gas

Until 2014 Ukraine was the main transit route for Russian natural gas sold to Europe, which earned Ukraine about US$3 billion a year in transit fees, making it the country's most lucrative export service.[306] Following Russia's launch of the Nord Stream pipeline, which bypasses Ukraine, gas transit volumes steadily decreased.[306] Following the start of the Russo-Ukrainian War in February 2014, severe tensions extended to the gas sector.[307][308] The subsequent outbreak of war in the Donbas region forced the suspension of a project to develop Ukraine's own shale gas reserves at the Yuzivska gas field, which had been planned as a way to reduce Ukrainian dependence on Russian gas imports.[309] Eventually, the EU commissioner for energy Günther Oettinger was called in to broker a deal securing supplies to Ukraine and transit to the EU.[310]

An explosion damaged a Ukrainian portion of the Urengoy–Pomary–Uzhhorod pipeline in Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast in May 2014. Ukrainian officials blamed Russian terrorists.[311] Another section of the pipeline exploded in the Poltava Oblast on 17 June 2014, one day after Russia limited the supply of gas to Ukrainian customers due to non-payment. Ukraine's Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said the following day that the explosion had been caused by a bomb.[312]

In 2015, Russian state media reported that Russia planned to completely abandon gas supplies to Europe through Ukraine after 2018.[313][314] Russia's state-owned energy giant Gazprom had already substantially reduced the volumes of gas transited across Ukraine, and expressed its intention to reduce the level further by means of transit-diversification pipelines (Turkish Stream, Nord Stream, etc.).[315] Gazprom and Ukraine agreed to a five-year deal on Russian gas transit to Europe at the end of 2019.[316][317]

In 2020, the TurkStream natural gas pipeline running from Russia to Turkey changed the regional gas flows in South-East Europe by diverting the transit through Ukraine and the Trans Balkan Pipeline system.[318][319]

In May 2021, the Biden administration waived Trump's CAATSA sanctions on the company behind Russia's Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Germany.[320][321] Ukrainian President Zelenskyy said he was "surprised" and "disappointed" by Joe Biden's decision.[322] In July 2021, the U.S. urged Ukraine not to criticise a forthcoming agreement with Germany over the pipeline.[323][324]

In July 2021, Biden and German Chancellor Angela Merkel concluded a deal that the U.S. might trigger sanctions if Russia used Nord Stream as a "political weapon". The deal aimed to prevent Poland and Ukraine from being cut off from Russian gas supplies. Ukraine will get a $50 million loan for green technology until 2024 and Germany will set up a billion dollar fund to promote Ukraine's transition to green energy to compensate for the loss of the gas-transit fees. The contract for transiting Russian gas through Ukraine will be prolonged until 2034, if the Russian government agrees.[325][326][327]

In August 2021, Zelenskyy warned that the Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline between Russia and Germany was "a dangerous weapon, not only for Ukraine but for the whole of Europe."[328][329] In September 2021, Ukraine's Naftogaz CEO Yuriy Vitrenko accused Russia of using natural gas as a "geopolitical weapon".[330] Vitrenko stated that "A joint statement from the United States and Germany said that if the Kremlin used gas as a weapon, there would be an appropriate response. We are now waiting for the imposition of sanctions on a 100% subsidiary of Gazprom, the operator of Nord Stream 2."[331]

Hybrid warfare

The Russo-Ukrainian conflict has also included elements of hybrid warfare using non-traditional means. Cyberwarfare has been used by Russia in operations including successful attacks on the Ukrainian power grid in December 2015 and in December 2016, which was the first successful cyber attack on a power grid,[332] and the Mass hacker supply-chain attack in June 2017, which the US claimed was the largest known cyber attack.[333] In retaliation, Ukrainian operations have included the Surkov Leaks in October 2016 which released 2,337 e-mails in relation to Russian plans for seizing Crimea from Ukraine and fomenting separatist unrest in Donbas.[334] The Russian information war against Ukraine has been another front of hybrid warfare waged by Russia.

A Russian fifth column in Ukraine has also been claimed to exist among the Party of Regions, the Communist Party, the Progressive Socialist Party and the Russian Orthodox Church.[335][336][337]

Russian propaganda and disinformation campaigns

 
Pro-Kremlin TV and radio host Vladimir Solovyov voiced support for his country's invasion of Ukraine.[338]
 
Ukrainian protester with a poster portraying Russian presidents (Putin and Medvedev) as Nazis in 2014
 
Z symbol flash mob in Khabarovsk

False stories have been used to provoke public outrage during the war. In April 2014, Russian news channels Russia-1 and NTV showed a man saying he was attacked by a fascist Ukrainian gang on one channel and on the other channel saying he was funding the training of right-wing anti-Russia radicals.[339][340] A third segment portrayed the man as a neo-Nazi surgeon.[341] In May 2014, Russia-1 aired a story about Ukrainian atrocities using footage of a 2012 Russian operation in North Caucasus.[342] In the same month, the Russian news network Life presented a 2013 photograph of a wounded child in Syria as a victim of Ukrainian troops who had just retaken Donetsk International Airport.[343]

In June 2014, several Russian state news outlets reported that Ukraine was using white phosphorus using 2004 footage of white phosphorus being used by the United States in Iraq.[342] In July 2014, Channel One Russia broadcast an interview with a woman who said that a 3-year-old boy who spoke Russian was crucified by Ukrainian nationalists in a fictitious square in Sloviansk that turned out to be false.[344][345][340][342]

On 26 February 2020, Vladislav Surkov, who has previously served as Presidential Executive Office's personal adviser of Putin on relationships with Ukraine, gave an interview to Aktualnyie kommentarii where he acknowledged that he was primarily involved with Donbas and Ukraine and claimed that "Ukraine does not exist. There is Ukrainianness, that is, a special brain activity disorder... Such a bloody foreign view. Dusk instead of a country. There is borsch, Bandera, and bandura, but there is no nationality... Forcing them to a fraternal attitude towards Russians is the only method that has proven to be effective in Ukrainianness-oriented activities".[346][347]

In 2022, Russian state media told stories of genocide and mass graves full of ethnic Russians in eastern Ukraine. One set of graves outside Luhansk was dug when intense fighting in 2014 cut off the electricity in the local morgue. Amnesty International investigated 2014 Russian claims of mass graves filled with hundreds of bodies and instead found isolated incidents of extrajudicial executions by both sides.[348][349][350] The Russian censorship apparatus Roskomnadzor ordered the country's media to employ information only from Russian state sources or face fines and blocks,[351] and ordered media and schools to describe the war as a "special military operation".[352] On 4 March 2022, Putin signed into law a bill introducing prison sentences of up to 15 years for those who publish "fake news" about the Russian military and its operations,[353] leading to some media outlets to stop reporting on Ukraine.[354] Russia's opposition politician Alexei Navalny said the "monstrosity of lies" in the Russian state media "is unimaginable. And, unfortunately, so is its persuasiveness for those who have no access to alternative information."[355] He tweeted that "warmongers" among Russian state media personalities "should be treated as war criminals. From the editors-in-chief to the talk show hosts to the news editors, [they] should be sanctioned now and tried someday."[356]

 
Moscow rally of 18 March 2022, officially known in Russia as a rally "For a world without Nazism"

Putin and Russian media have described the government of Ukraine as being led by neo-Nazis persecuting ethnic Russians who are in need of protection by Russia, despite Ukraine's President Zelenskyy being Jewish.[357][358][349] According to journalist Natalia Antonova, "Russia's present-day war of aggression is refashioned by propaganda into a direct continuation of the legacy of the millions of Russian soldiers who died to stop" Nazi Germany in World War II.[359] Ukraine's rejection of the adoption of Russia-initiated General Assembly resolutions on combating the glorification of Nazism, the latest iteration of which is General Assembly Resolution A/C.3/76/L.57/Rev.1 on Combating Glorification of Nazism, Neo-Nazism and other Practices that Contribute to Fueling Contemporary Forms of Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance, serve to present Ukraine as a pro-Nazi state, and indeed likely forms the basis for Russia's claims, with the only other state rejecting the adoption of the resolution being the US.[360][361] The Deputy US Representative for ECOSOC describes such resolutions as "thinly veiled attempts to legitimize Russian disinformation campaigns denigrating neighboring nations and promoting the distorted Soviet narrative of much of contemporary European history, using the cynical guise of halting Nazi glorification".[362]

 
Pro-Ukrainian rally in Berlin, one of the signs saying "Denazify Putin"

Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of the Security Council of Russia and former Russian president, publicly wrote that "Ukraine is NOT a country, but artificially collected territories" and that Ukrainian "is NOT a language" but a "mongrel dialect" of Russian.[363] Medvedev has also said that Ukraine should not exist in any form and that Russia will continue to wage war against any independent Ukrainian state.[364] Moreover, Medvedev claimed in July 2023 that Russia would have had to use a nuclear weapon if 2023 Ukrainian counteroffensive was a success.[365] According to Medvedev, the "existence of Ukraine is fatally dangerous for Ukrainians and that they will understand that life in a large common state is better than death. Their deaths and the deaths of their loved ones. And the sooner Ukrainians realize this, the better".[366] On 22 February 2024, Medvedev described the future plans of Russia in the Russo-Ukrainian War when he claimed that the Russian Army will go further into Ukraine, taking the southern city of Odesa and may again push on to the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, and stated that "Where should we stop? I don't know".[367] For his claims Medvedev has been described as "Russian rashist (Russian fascist)" by Ukrainian and American media.[368]

NAFO (North Atlantic Fella Organization), a loose cadre of online shitposters vowing to fight Russian disinformation generally identified by cartoon Shiba Inu dogs in social media, gained notoriety after June 2022, in the wake of a Twitter quarrel with Russian diplomat Mikhail Ulyanov.[369]

In February 2024, Putin claimed that the Russo-Ukrainian War has the "elements of a civil war" and that the "Russian people will be reunited", while the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (a branch of the Russian Orthodox Church, which mostly supports the Russian invasion of Ukraine and mandatory publicly pray for military victory over Ukraine) "brings together our souls".[370][371][372] Nevertheless, in the official governmental website of Ukraine it is stated that the Ukrainians and Russians are not "one nation" and that the Ukrainians identify themselves as an independent nation.[373] A poll conducted in April 2022 by "Rating" found that the vast majority (91%) of Ukrainians (excluding the Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine) do not support the thesis that "Russians and Ukrainians are one people".[374]

Islamic State claimed responsibility for the March 22 Crocus City Hall attack, a terrorist attack in a music venue in Krasnogorsk, Moscow Oblast, Russia, and published a corroborating video.[375] Putin and the Russian security service, the FSB, blamed Ukraine for the attack, but did not provide evidence for the attribution.[376] On 3 April 2024, Russia's Defense Ministry announced that "around 16,000 citizens" had signed military contracts in the last 10 days to fight as contract soldiers in the war against Ukraine, with most of them saying they were motivated to "avenge those killed" in the Crocus City Hall attack.[377]

Role of the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine

 
The 2020 consecration ceremony of the Main Cathedral of the Russian Armed Forces, which previously had a mosaic depicting the 2014 annexation of Crimea and featured Putin and Shoigu, but it was later removed[378]

The Russian Orthodox Church and its hierarch Patriarch Kirill of Moscow have shown their full support of the war against Ukraine.[379] Not one of the approximately 400 Russian Orthodox Church bishops in Russia has spoken out against the war.[380] The role of the Russian Orthodox Church in advancing Putin's war messaging is a vivid illustration of the complex interplay between religion and politics.[381] A Russia expert and fellow of Germany's University of Bremen, told Al Jazeera that the ROC's participation in the war means it “faces the prospect of losing its ‘universal character’ and clout, and of reducing its borders to those of [Russian President Vladimir] Putin's political empire”.[382]

On 27 March 2024 the World Russian People's Council took place in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow where was adopted a "Nakaz" (decree) of the council "The Present and the Future of the Russian World".[383] According to some experts such as the ROC protodeacon Andrei Kurayev it has similarities with the program articles of the German Christians.[384] The decree talks about the so-called "Special Military Operation" in Ukraine, development of the Russian World globally and other issues.[385]

Russia–NATO relations

 
The NATO-Russia Council meets in January 2022 to discuss the 2021–2022 Russo-Ukrainian crisis

NATO and Russia had co-operated until Russia annexed Crimea 2014.[386] In his 2022 speech justifying the invasion of Ukraine, Putin falsely claimed that NATO military infrastructure was being built up inside Ukraine and was a threat to Russia.[387] Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov characterized the conflict as a proxy war started by NATO.[388] He said: "We don't think we're at war with NATO ... Unfortunately, NATO believes it is at war with Russia".[389]

NATO says it is not at war with Russia; its official policy is that it does not seek confrontation, but rather its members support Ukraine in "its right to self-defense, as enshrined in the UN Charter".[386] In 2022, NATO has condemned Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 'the strongest possible terms', and calls it 'the biggest security threat in a generation' which led to deployment of additional NATO units in its eastern members.[390] Former CIA director Leon Panetta told the ABC that the U.S. is 'without question' involved in a proxy war with Russia.[391]

Russian military aircraft flying over the Baltic and Black Seas often do not indicate their position or communicate with air traffic controllers, thus posing a potential risk to civilian airliners. NATO aircraft scrambled many times to track and intercept these aircraft near alliance airspace. The Russian aircraft intercepted never entered NATO airspace, and the interceptions were conducted in a safe and routine manner.[392]

Reactions

Reactions to the Russian annexation of Crimea

Ukrainian response

 
Following Russia's annexation of Crimea, Ukraine blocked the North Crimean Canal, which provided 85% of Crimea's drinking and irrigation water.[393]

Interim Ukrainian President Oleksandr Turchynov accused Russia of "provoking a conflict" by backing the seizure of the Crimean parliament building and other government offices on the Crimean peninsula. He compared Russia's military actions to the 2008 Russo-Georgian War, when Russian troops occupied parts of the Republic of Georgia and the breakaway enclaves of Abkhazia and South Ossetia were established under the control of Russian-backed administrations. He called on Putin to withdraw Russian troops from Crimea and stated that Ukraine will "preserve its territory" and "defend its independence".[394] On 1 March, he warned, "Military intervention would be the beginning of war and the end of any relations between Ukraine and Russia."[395] On 1 March, Acting President Oleksandr Turchynov placed the Armed Forces of Ukraine on full alert and combat readiness.[396]

The Ministry of Temporarily Occupied Territories and IDPs was established by Ukrainian government on 20 April 2016 to manage occupied parts of Donetsk, Luhansk and Crimea regions affected by Russian military intervention of 2014.[397]

NATO and United States military response

 
A U.S. Army convoy in Vilseck, Germany during Operation Atlantic Resolve, NATO's efforts to reassert its military presence in central and eastern Europe that began in April 2014.

On 4 March 2014, the United States pledged $1 billion in aid to Ukraine.[398] Russia's actions increased tensions in nearby countries historically within its sphere of influence, particularly the Baltic and Moldova. All have large Russian-speaking populations, and Russian troops are stationed in the breakaway Moldovan territory of Transnistria.[399] Some devoted resources to increasing defensive capabilities,[400] and many requested increased support from the U.S. and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which they had joined in recent years.[399][400] The conflict "reinvigorated" NATO, which had been created to face the Soviet Union, but had devoted more resources to "expeditionary missions" in recent years.[401]

In addition to diplomatic support in its conflict with Russia, the U.S. provided Ukraine with US$1.5 billion in military aid during the 2010s.[402] In 2018 the U.S. House of Representatives passed a provision blocking any training of Azov Battalion of the Ukrainian National Guard by American forces. In previous years, between 2014 and 2017, the U.S. House of Representatives passed amendments banning support of Azov, but due to pressure from the Pentagon, the amendments were quietly lifted.[403][404][405]

Financial markets

 
Euro/RUB exchange rate
 
USD/Russian Ruble Exchange Rate
 
Russian bonds
Inverted yield curves to tame inflation during their wars (Russo-Georgian War, Russo-Ukrainian War, 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine)
  20 year bond
  10 year bond
  1 year bond
  3 month bond

The initial reaction to the escalation of tensions in Crimea caused the Russian and European stock market to tumble.[406] The intervention caused the Swiss franc to climb to a 2-year high against the dollar and 1-year high against the Euro. The Euro and the US dollar both rose, as did the Australian dollar.[407] The Russian stock market declined by more than 10 percent, while the Russian ruble hit all-time lows against the US dollar and the Euro.[408][409][410] The Russian central bank hiked interest rates and intervened in the foreign exchange markets to the tune of $12 billion[clarification needed] to try to stabilize its currency.[407] Prices for wheat and grain rose, with Ukraine being a major exporter of both crops.[411]

Later in March 2014, the reaction of the financial markets to the Crimea annexation was surprisingly mellow, with global financial markets rising immediately after the referendum held in Crimea, one explanation being that the sanctions were already priced in following the earlier Russian incursion.[412] Other observers considered that the positive reaction of the global financial markets on Monday 17 March 2014, after the announcement of sanctions against Russia by the EU and the US, revealed that these sanctions were too weak to hurt Russia.[413] In early August 2014, the German DAX was down by 6 percent for the year, and 11 percent since June, over concerns Russia, Germany's 13th biggest trade partner, would retaliate against sanctions.[414]

Reactions to the war in Donbas

Ukrainian public opinion

 
Pro-Russian supporters in Donetsk, 20 December 2014

A poll of the Ukrainian public, excluding Russian-annexed Crimea, was taken by the International Republican Institute from 12 to 25 September 2014.[415] 89% of those polled opposed 2014 Russian military intervention in Ukraine. As broken down by region, 78% of those polled from Eastern Ukraine (including Dnipropetrovsk Oblast) opposed said intervention, along with 89% in Southern Ukraine, 93% in Central Ukraine, and 99% in Western Ukraine.[415] As broken down by native language, 79% of Russian speakers and 95% of Ukrainian speakers opposed the intervention. 80% of those polled said the country should remain a unitary country.[415]

A poll of the Crimean public in Russian-annexed Crimea was taken by the Ukrainian branch of Germany's biggest market research organization, GfK, on 16–22 January 2015. According to its results: "Eighty-two percent of those polled said they fully supported Crimea's inclusion in Russia, and another 11 percent expressed partial support. Only 4 percent spoke out against it."[416][417][418]

A joint poll conducted by Levada and the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology from September to October 2020 found that in the breakaway regions controlled by the DPR/LPR, just over half of the respondents wanted to join Russia (either with or without some autonomous status) while less than one-tenth wanted independence and 12% wanted reintegration into Ukraine. It contrasted with respondents in Kyiv-controlled Donbas, where a vast majority felt the separatist regions should be returned to Ukraine.[419] According to results from Levada in January 2022, roughly 70% of those in the breakaway regions said their territories should become part of the Russian Federation.[420]

Russian public opinion

 
Peace march in Moscow, 21 September 2014

An August 2014 survey by the Levada Centre reported that only 13% of those Russians polled would support the Russian government in an open war with Ukraine.[421] Street protests against the war in Ukraine arose in Russia. Notable protests first occurred in March[422][423] and large protests occurred in September when "tens of thousands" protested the war in Ukraine with a peace march in downtown Moscow on Sunday, 21 September 2014, "under heavy police supervision".[424]

Reactions to the Russian invasion of Ukraine

Ukrainian public opinion

 
Ukrainian refugees in Kraków protest against the war, 6 March 2022

In March 2022, a week after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, 98% of Ukrainians – including 82% of ethnic Russians living in Ukraine – said they did not believe that any part of Ukraine was rightfully part of Russia, according to Lord Ashcroft's polls which did not include Crimea and the separatist-controlled part of Donbas. 97% of Ukrainians said they had an unfavourable view of Russian President Vladimir Putin, with a further 94% saying they had an unfavourable view of the Russian Armed Forces.[425]

At the end of 2021, 75% of Ukrainians said they had a positive attitude toward ordinary Russians, while in May 2022, 82% of Ukrainians said they had a negative attitude toward ordinary Russians.[426]

Russian public opinion

 
   Russia
   Countries on Russia's "Unfriendly Countries List". The list includes countries that have imposed sanctions against Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.[427]

An April 2022 survey by the Levada Centre reported that approximately 74% of the Russians polled supported the "special military operation" in Ukraine, suggesting that Russian public opinion has shifted considerably since 2014.[428] According to some sources, a reason many Russians supported the "special military operation" has to do with the propaganda and disinformation.[429][430] In addition, it has been suggested that some respondents did not want to answer pollsters' questions for fear of negative consequences.[431][432] At the end of March, a poll conducted in Russia by the Levada Center concluded the following: When asked why they think the military operation is taking place, respondents said it was to protect and defend civilians, ethnic Russians or Russian speakers in Ukraine (43%), to prevent an attack on Russia (25%), to get rid of nationalists and "denazify" Ukraine (21%), and to incorporate Ukraine or the Donbas region into Russia (3%)."[433] According to polls, the Russian President's rating rose from 71% on the eve of the invasion to 82% in March 2023.[434]

The Kremlin's analysis concluded that public support for the war was broad but not deep, and that most Russians would accept anything Putin would call a victory. In September 2023, the head of the VTsIOM state pollster Valery Fyodorov said in an interview that only 10–15% of Russians actively supported the war, and that "most Russians are not demanding the conquest of Kyiv or Odesa."[435]

In 2023, Oleg Orlov, the chairman of the Board of Human Rights Center "Memorial", claimed that Russia under Vladimir Putin had descended into fascism and that the army is committing "mass murder".[436][437]

United States

 
American President Joe Biden holding a Ukrainian refugee at Warsaw's Stadion Narodowy in a meeting where he described Russian President Vladimir Putin as "butcher", 26 March 2022[438]

On 28 April 2022, US President Joe Biden asked Congress for an additional $33 billion to assist Ukraine, including $20 billion to provide weapons to Ukraine.[439] On 5 May, Ukraine's Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal announced that Ukraine had received more than $12 billion worth of weapons and financial aid from Western countries since the start of Russia's invasion on 24 February.[440] On 21 May 2022, the United States passed legislation providing $40 billion in new military and humanitarian foreign aid to Ukraine, marking a historically large commitment of funds.[441][442] In August 2022, U.S. defense spending to counter the Russian war effort exceeded the first 5 years of war costs in Afghanistan. The Washington Post reported that new U.S. weapons delivered to the Ukrainian war front suggest a closer combat scenario with more casualties.[443] The United States looks to build "enduring strength in Ukraine" with increased arms shipments and a record-breaking $3 billion military aid package.[443]

On 22 April 2022, professor Timothy D. Snyder published an article in The New York Times Magazine where he wrote that "we have tended to overlook the central example of fascism's revival, which is the Putin regime in the Russian Federation".[444] On the wider regime, Snyder writes that "[p]rominent Russian fascists are given access to mass media during wars, including this one. Members of the Russian elite, above all Putin himself, rely increasingly on fascist concepts", and states that "Putin's very justification of the war in Ukraine [...] represents a Christian form of fascism."[444]

On March 7, 2024, American President Joe Biden given the 2024 State of the Union Address where he compared Russia under Vladimir Putin to Adolf Hitler's conquests of Europe.[445]

Russian military suppliers

 
Kim Jong Un and Putin meeting at Vostochny Cosmodrome in 2023 where Kim gave his support for Russia's "sacred fight" against the West[446]

After expending large amounts of heavy weapons and munitions over months, the Russian Federation received combat drones, loitering munitions, and large amounts of artillery from Iran, deliveries of tanks and other armoured vehicles from Belarus, and reportedly planned to trade for artillery ammunition from North Korea and ballistic missiles from Iran.[447][448][449][450][451]

The U.S. has accused China of providing Russia with technology it needs for high-tech weapons, allegations which China has denied. The U.S. sanctioned a Chinese firm for providing satellite imagery to Russian mercenary forces fighting in Ukraine.[452]

In March 2023, Western nations had pressed the United Arab Emirates to halt re-exports of goods to Russia which had military uses, amidst allegations that the Gulf country exported 158 drones to Russia in 2022.[453] In May 2023, the U.S. accused South Africa of supplying arms to Russia in a covert naval operation,[454] allegations which have been denied by South African president Cyril Ramaphosa.[455]

United Nations

 
United Nations secretary-general António Guterres and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delegations meeting in April 2022

On 25 February 2022, the Security Council failed to adopt a draft resolution which would have "deplored, in the strongest terms, the Russian Federation's aggression" on Ukraine. Of the 15 member states on the Security Council, 11 were in support, whilst three abstained from voting. The draft resolution failed due to a Russian veto.[456][457]

Due to the deadlock, the Security Council passed a resolution to convene the General Assembly for the eleventh emergency special session.[458] On 2 March 2022, the General Assembly voted to deplore "in the strongest possible terms" Russia's aggression against Ukraine by a vote of 141 to 5, with 35 abstentions.[459] The resolution also called for the Russian Federation to "immediately cease its use of force against Ukraine" and "immediately, completely and unconditionally withdraw all of its military forces."[459] Only Russia, Belarus, Syria, North Korea and Eritrea voted against the resolution.[460]

On 4 March 2022, the UN Human Rights Council adopted a resolution by a vote of 32 to 2, with 13 abstentions, calling for the withdrawal of Russian troops and Russian-backed armed groups from Ukraine and humanitarian access to people in need. The resolution also established a commission to investigate alleged rights violations committed during Russia's military attack on Ukraine.[461]

In October 2022, the United Nations General Assembly had adopted a resolution condemning the 2022 annexation referendums in Russian-occupied Ukraine with 143 supporting votes, 5 opposing votes (Belarus, North Korea, Nicaragua, Russia, Syria), and 35 abstentions.[462]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b The Donetsk People's Republic and the Luhansk People's Republic were Russian-controlled puppet states that declared their independence from Ukraine in May 2014. In 2022 they received international recognition from each other, Russia, Syria and North Korea, and some other partially recognised states. On 30 September 2022 Russia declared it had formally annexed both entities.
  2. ^ There are "some contradictions and inherent problems" regarding the date on which the occupation began.[463] The Ukrainian Government maintains, and the European Court of Human Rights agrees, that Russia controlled Crimea from 27 February 2014,[464] when unmarked Russian special forces took control of its political institutions.[465] The Russian Government later made 27 February "Special Operations Forces Day".[65] In 2015, the Ukrainian parliament officially designated 20 February 2014 as "the beginning of the temporary occupation of Crimea and Sevastopol by Russia",[466] citing the date inscribed on the Russian medal "For the Return of Crimea".[467] On that date, Vladimir Konstantinov, then Chairman of the Supreme Council of Crimea, had said the region would be prepared to join Russia.[468] In 2018, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov claimed that the earlier "start date" on the medal was due to a "technical misunderstanding".[469] President Putin stated in a Russian film about the annexation that he ordered the operation to "restore" Crimea to Russia following an all-night emergency meeting on 22–23 February 2014.[463][470]
  3. ^ Russian: российско-украинская война, romanizedrossiysko-ukrainskaya voyna; Ukrainian: російсько-українська війна, romanizedrosiisko-ukrainska viina.

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russo, ukrainian, this, article, about, ongoing, since, 2014, escalation, since, 2022, russian, invasion, ukraine, other, wars, between, nations, list, wars, between, russia, ukraine, part, conflicts, territory, former, soviet, unionclockwise, from, left, ukra. This article is about the war ongoing since 2014 For the escalation since 2022 see Russian invasion of Ukraine For other wars between the two nations see List of wars between Russia and Ukraine Russo Ukrainian WarPart of the conflicts in territory of the former Soviet UnionClockwise from top left Ukrainian tanks during the 2022 Kharkiv counteroffensive Russian military vehicles with Z markings during the 2022 invasion Russian backed forces during the Donbas war Russian bombing during the Siege of Mariupol Russian soldiers during the invasion of Crimea Civilians killed by Russian missile strikes on KyivDate27 February 2014 b present 10 years 2 months and 1 day LocationUkraine Russia and Black Sea spillover into Romania 1 Poland Moldova Belarus StatusOngoingTerritorialchangesRussian annexation of Crimea and parts of four southeast Ukrainian oblasts in 2014 and 2022 respectivelyRussian occupation of more than 18 of Ukrainian territory as of March 2024 2 Belligerents Ukraine Supplied by For countries providing aid to Ukraine since 2022 see military aid to Ukraine Russia Donetsk PR a Luhansk PR a Supplied by For details see Russian military suppliersCommanders and leaders Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy 2019 present Petro Poroshenko 2014 2019 Oleksandr Turchynov acting 2014 Andrii Zahorodniuk 2019 2020 Stepan Poltorak 2014 2019 Valeriy Heletey 2014 Ihor Tenyukh 2014 Oleksandr Syrskyi 2024 present Valerii Zaluzhnyi 2021 2024 Ruslan Khomchak 2019 2021 Arsen Avakov 2014 2021 Russia Vladimir Putin Sergei Shoigu Valery Gerasimov Yevgeny Prigozhin 2014 2023 Alexander Zakharchenko 2014 2018 Denis Pushilin 2018 present Pavel Gubarev 2014 Igor Girkin 2014 Leonid Pasechnik 2017 present Igor Plotnitsky 2014 2017 Valery Bolotov 2014 StrengthFor details of strengths and units involved at key points in the conflict see Combatants of the war in Donbas 2014 2022 Order of battle for the Russian invasion of UkraineCasualties and lossesReports vary widely but tens of thousands at a minimum 3 4 See Casualties of the Russo Ukrainian War for details The Russo Ukrainian War c is an ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine which began in February 2014 Following Ukraine s Revolution of Dignity Russia occupied and annexed Crimea from Ukraine and supported pro Russian separatists fighting the Ukrainian military in the Donbas war The first eight years of conflict also included naval incidents cyberwarfare and heightened political tensions In February 2022 Russia launched a full scale invasion of Ukraine and began occupying more of the country In early 2014 the Euromaidan protests led to the Revolution of Dignity and the ousting of Ukraine s pro Russian president Viktor Yanukovych Shortly after pro Russian unrest erupted in eastern and southern Ukraine while unmarked Russian troops occupied Crimea Russia soon annexed Crimea after a highly disputed referendum In April 2014 Russian backed militants seized towns in Ukraine s eastern Donbas region and proclaimed the Donetsk People s Republic DPR and the Luhansk People s Republic LPR as independent states starting the Donbas war The separatists received considerable but covert support from Russia and Ukrainian attempts to fully retake separatist held areas failed Although Russia denied involvement Russian troops took part in the fighting In February 2015 Russia and Ukraine signed the Minsk II agreements to end the conflict but they were never fully implemented in the years that followed The Donbas war settled into a violent but static conflict between Ukraine and the Russian and separatist forces with many brief ceasefires but no lasting peace and few changes in territorial control Beginning in 2021 Russia built up a large military presence near its border with Ukraine including within neighbouring Belarus Russian officials repeatedly denied plans to attack Ukraine Russian president Vladimir Putin expressed irredentist views and denied Ukraine s right to exist He criticized the enlargement of NATO and demanded that Ukraine be barred from ever joining the military alliance Russia recognized the DPR and LPR as independent states On 24 February 2022 Putin announced a special military operation to demilitarize and denazify Ukraine claiming Russia had no plans to occupy the country The Russian invasion that followed was internationally condemned many countries imposed sanctions against Russia and increased existing sanctions In the face of fierce resistance Russia abandoned an attempt to take Kyiv in early April From August Ukrainian forces began recapturing territories in the north east and south In late September Russia declared the annexation of four partially occupied regions which was internationally condemned Russia spent the winter conducting inconclusive offensives in the Donbas In spring 2023 Russia dug into positions ahead of another Ukrainian counteroffensive which failed to gain significant ground The war has resulted in a refugee crisis and tens of thousands of deaths Contents 1 Background 1 1 Independent Ukraine and the Orange Revolution 1 2 Euromaidan Revolution of Dignity and pro Russian unrest 1 3 Russian military bases in Crimea 1 4 Legality and declaration of war 2 History 2 1 Russian annexation of Crimea 2014 2 2 War in the Donbas 2014 2015 2 2 1 Pro Russia unrest 2 2 2 Armed conflict 2 2 3 August 2014 Russian invasion 2 2 4 Mariupol offensive and first Minsk ceasefire 2 2 5 End of 2014 and Minsk II agreement 2 3 Line of conflict stabilizes 2015 2021 2 3 1 2018 Kerch Strait incident 2 3 2 2019 2020 2 4 Russian military buildup around Ukraine 2021 2022 2 4 1 Russian accusations and demands 2 4 2 Prelude to full invasion 2 5 Full scale Russian invasion of Ukraine 2022 present 3 Human rights violations 4 Related issues 4 1 Spillover 4 2 Gas disputes 4 3 Hybrid warfare 4 4 Russian propaganda and disinformation campaigns 4 5 Role of the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine 4 6 Russia NATO relations 5 Reactions 5 1 Reactions to the Russian annexation of Crimea 5 1 1 Ukrainian response 5 1 2 NATO and United States military response 5 1 3 Financial markets 5 2 Reactions to the war in Donbas 5 2 1 Ukrainian public opinion 5 2 2 Russian public opinion 5 3 Reactions to the Russian invasion of Ukraine 5 3 1 Ukrainian public opinion 5 3 2 Russian public opinion 5 3 3 United States 5 3 4 Russian military suppliers 5 3 5 United Nations 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackgroundMain article Russia Ukraine relations See also Historical background of the 2014 pro Russian unrest in Ukraine Independent Ukraine and the Orange Revolution Further information Orange Revolution nbsp The signing ceremony of the Belovezha Accords by the heads of states and governments of Belarus Russia and Ukraine in 1991 After the dissolution of the Soviet Union USSR in 1991 Ukraine and Russia maintained close ties In 1994 Ukraine agreed to accede to the Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons as a non nuclear weapon state 5 Former Soviet nuclear weapons in Ukraine were removed and dismantled 6 In return Russia the United Kingdom and the United States agreed to uphold the territorial integrity and political independence of Ukraine through the Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances 7 8 In 1999 Russia was one of the signatories of the Charter for European Security which reaffirmed the inherent right of each and every participating State to be free to choose or change its security arrangements including treaties of alliance as they evolve 9 In the years after the dissolution of the USSR several former Eastern Bloc countries joined NATO partly in response to regional security threats involving Russia such as the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis the War in Abkhazia 1992 1993 and the First Chechen War 1994 1996 Putin claimed Western powers broke promises not to let any Eastern European countries join 10 11 nbsp Protesters in Independence Square in Kyiv during the Orange Revolution November 2004 The 2004 Ukrainian presidential election was controversial During the election campaign opposition candidate Viktor Yushchenko was poisoned by TCDD dioxin 12 13 he later accused Russia of involvement 14 In November Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych was declared the winner despite allegations of vote rigging by election observers 15 During a two month period which became known as the Orange Revolution large peaceful protests successfully challenged the outcome After the Supreme Court of Ukraine annulled the initial result due to widespread electoral fraud a second round re run was held bringing to power Yushchenko as president and Yulia Tymoshenko as prime minister and leaving Yanukovych in opposition 16 The Orange Revolution is often grouped together with other early 21st century protest movements particularly within the former USSR known as colour revolutions According to Anthony Cordesman Russian military officers viewed such colour revolutions as attempts by the US and European states to destabilise neighbouring countries and undermine Russia s national security 17 Russian President Vladimir Putin accused organisers of the 2011 2013 Russian protests of being former advisors to Yushchenko and described the protests as an attempt to transfer the Orange Revolution to Russia 18 Rallies in favour of Putin during this period were called anti Orange protests 19 At the 2008 Bucharest summit Ukraine and Georgia sought to join NATO The response among NATO members was divided Western European countries opposed offering Membership Action Plans MAP to Ukraine and Georgia in order to avoid antagonising Russia while US President George W Bush pushed for their admission 20 NATO ultimately refused to offer Ukraine and Georgia MAPs but also issued a statement agreeing that these countries will become members of NATO at some point Putin strongly opposed Georgia and Ukraine s NATO membership bids 21 By January 2022 the possibility of Ukraine joining NATO remained remote 22 In 2009 Yanukovych announced his intent to again run for president in the 2010 Ukrainian presidential election 23 which he subsequently won 24 In November 2013 a wave of large pro European Union EU protests erupted in response to Yanukovych s sudden decision not to sign the EU Ukraine Association Agreement instead choosing closer ties to Russia and the Eurasian Economic Union On 22 February 2013 the Ukrainian parliament overwhelmingly approved of finalizing Ukraine s agreement with the EU 25 Subsequently Russia pressurized Ukraine to reject this agreement by threatening sanctions Kremlin adviser Sergei Glazyev stated that if the agreement was signed Russia could not guarantee Ukraine s status as a state 26 27 Euromaidan Revolution of Dignity and pro Russian unrest Main articles Euromaidan Revolution of Dignity and 2014 pro Russian unrest in Ukraine nbsp Protesters in Kyiv waving Ukrainian and European flags during the Euromaidan demonstrations in 2013 On 21 February 2014 following months of protests as part of the Euromaidan movement Yanukovych and the leaders of the parliamentary opposition signed a settlement agreement that provided for early elections The following day Yanukovych fled from the capital ahead of an impeachment vote that stripped him of his powers as president 28 29 30 31 On 23 February the Rada Ukrainian Parliament adopted a bill to repeal the 2012 law which made Russian an official language 32 The bill was not enacted 33 but the proposal provoked negative reactions in the Russian speaking regions of Ukraine 34 intensified by Russian media claiming that the ethnic Russian population was in imminent danger 35 On 27 February an interim government was established and early presidential elections were scheduled The following day Yanukovych resurfaced in Russia and in a press conference declared that he remained the acting president of Ukraine just as Russia was commencing a military campaign in Crimea Leaders of Russian speaking eastern regions of Ukraine declared continuing loyalty to Yanukovych 29 36 triggering the 2014 pro Russian unrest in Ukraine Russian military bases in Crimea Main article Political status of Crimea nbsp Russian cruiser Moskva centre at Sevastopol Bay in 2012 At the onset of the Crimean conflict Russia had roughly 12 000 military personnel from the Black Sea Fleet 35 in several locations in the Crimean peninsula such as Sevastopol Kacha Hvardiiske Simferopol Raion Sarych and others In 2005 a dispute broke out between Russia and Ukraine over control of the Sarych cape lighthouse near Yalta and a number of other beacons 37 38 Russian presence was allowed by the basing and transit agreement with Ukraine Under this agreement the Russian military in Crimea was constrained to a maximum of 25 000 troops Russia was required to respect the sovereignty of Ukraine honor its legislation not interfere in the internal affairs of the country and show their military identification cards when crossing the international border 39 Early in the conflict the agreement s generous troop limit allowed Russia to significantly strengthen its military presence deploy special forces and other required capabilities to conduct the operation in Crimea under the pretext of addressing security concerns 35 According to the original treaty on the division of the Soviet Black Sea Fleet signed in 1997 Russia was allowed to have its military bases in Crimea until 2017 after which it would evacuate all military units including its portion of the Black Sea Fleet from the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol On 21 April 2010 former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych signed a new deal with Russia known as the Kharkiv Pact to resolve the 2009 Russia Ukraine gas dispute The pact extended Russia s stay in Crimea to 2042 with an option to renew 40 Legality and declaration of war Further information On conducting a special military operation No formal declaration of war has been issued in the ongoing Russo Ukrainian War When Putin announced the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine he claimed to commence a special military operation side stepping a formal declaration of war 41 The statement was however regarded as a declaration of war by the Ukrainian government 42 and reported as such by many international news sources 43 44 While the Ukrainian parliament refers to Russia as a terrorist state in regard to its military actions in Ukraine 45 it has not issued a formal declaration of war on its behalf The Russian invasion of Ukraine violated international law including the Charter of the United Nations 53 54 55 56 The invasion has also been called a crime of aggression under international criminal law 57 and under some countries domestic criminal codes including those of Ukraine and Russia although procedural obstacles exist to prosecutions under these laws 58 59 HistoryRussian annexation of Crimea 2014 For a chronological guide see Timeline of the annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation nbsp The Russian military buildup along Ukraine s eastern border in February March 2014 nbsp The blockade of military units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine during the capture of Crimea by Russia in February March 2014 nbsp Russian troops blocking the Ukrainian military base in Perevalne In late February 2014 Russia began to occupy Crimea marking the beginning of the Russo Ukrainian War 60 61 62 63 On 22 and 23 February in the relative power vacuum immediately after the ousting of Yanukovych 64 Russian troops and special forces were moved close to the border with Crimea 62 On 27 February Russian forces without insignia began to occupy Crimea 65 66 Russia consistently denied that the soldiers were theirs instead claiming they were local self defense units They seized the Crimean parliament and government buildings as well as setting up checkpoints to restrict movement and cut off the Crimean peninsula from the rest of Ukraine 67 68 69 70 In the following days unmarked Russian special forces occupied airports and communications centers 71 and blockaded Ukrainian military bases such as the Southern Naval Base Russian cyberattacks shut down websites associated with the Ukrainian government news media and social media Cyberattacks also enabled Russian access to the mobile phones of Ukrainian officials and members of parliament further disrupting communications 72 On 1 March the Russian parliament approved the use of armed forces in Crimea 71 While Russian special forces occupied Crimea s parliament it dismissed the Crimean government installed the pro Russian Aksyonov government and announced a referendum on Crimea s status The referendum was held under Russian occupation and according to the Russian installed authorities the result was in favor of joining Russia It annexed Crimea on 18 March 2014 Following this Russian forces seized Ukrainian military bases in Crimea and captured their personnel On 24 March Ukraine ordered its remaining troops to withdraw by 30 March all Ukrainian forces had left the peninsula On 15 April the Ukrainian parliament declared Crimea a territory temporarily occupied by Russia 73 After the annexation the Russian government militarized the peninsula and made nuclear threats 74 Putin said that a Russian military task force would be established in Crimea 75 In November NATO stated that it believed Russia was deploying nuclear capable weapons to Crimea 76 After the annexation of Crimea some NATO members began providing training for the Ukrainian army 77 War in the Donbas 2014 2015 Main article War in Donbas For a chronological guide see Timeline of the war in Donbas 2014 See also Combatants of the war in Donbas 2014 2022 and List of equipment used by Russian people s militias in Ukraine nbsp Ukrainian troops deploy in response to Russian maneuvers Early March 2014 Pro Russia unrest Main article 2014 pro Russian unrest in Ukraine From late February 2014 demonstrations by pro Russian and anti government groups took place in major cities across the eastern and southern regions of Ukraine 78 The first protests across southern and eastern Ukraine were largely native expressions of discontent with the new Ukrainian government 78 79 Russian involvement at this stage was limited to voicing support for the demonstrations 79 80 Russia exploited this however launching a coordinated political and military campaign against Ukraine 79 81 Putin gave legitimacy to the separatists when he described the Donbas as part of New Russia Novorossiya and expressed bewilderment as to how the region had ever become part of Ukraine 82 Russia continued to marshal forces near Ukraine s eastern border in late March reaching 30 40 000 troops by April 83 35 The deployment was used to threaten escalation and disrupt Ukraine s response 35 This threat forced Ukraine to divert forces to its borders instead of the conflict zone 35 Ukrainian authorities cracked down on the pro Russian protests and arrested local separatist leaders in early March Those leaders were replaced by people with ties to the Russian security services and interests in Russian businesses 84 By April 2014 Russian citizens had taken control of the separatist movement supported by volunteers and materiel from Russia including Chechen and Cossack fighters 85 86 87 88 According to Donetsk People s Republic DPR commander Igor Girkin without this support in April the movement would have dissipated as it had in Kharkiv and Odesa 89 The separatist groups held disputed referendums in May 90 91 92 which were not recognised by Ukraine or any other UN member state 90 Armed conflict nbsp Ukrainian response to Russian activities in Donbas after seizure of Sloviansk on 12 April April May 2014 In April 2014 armed conflict began in eastern Ukraine between Russian backed separatists and Ukraine On 12 April a fifty man unit of pro Russian militants seized the towns of Sloviansk and Kramatorsk 93 The heavily armed men were Russian Armed Forces volunteers under the command of former GRU colonel Igor Girkin Strelkov 93 94 They had been sent from Russian occupied Crimea and wore no insignia 93 Girkin said that this action sparked the Donbas War He said I m the one who pulled the trigger of war If our unit hadn t crossed the border everything would have fizzled out 95 96 nbsp Ukrainian Armed Forces in Anti Terrorist Operation Zone in 2014 In response on 15 April the interim Ukrainian government launched an Anti Terrorist Operation ATO however Ukrainian forces were poorly prepared and ill positioned and the operation quickly stalled 97 By the end of April Ukraine announced it had lost control of the provinces of Donetsk and Luhansk It claimed to be on full combat alert against a possible Russian invasion and reinstated conscription to its armed forces 98 During May the Ukrainian campaign focused on containing the separatists by securing key positions around the ATO zone to position the military for a decisive offensive once Ukraine s national mobilization had completed As conflict between the separatists and the Ukrainian government escalated in May Russia began to employ a hybrid approach combining disinformation tactics irregular fighters regular Russian troops and conventional military support 99 100 101 The First Battle of Donetsk Airport followed the Ukrainian presidential elections It marked a turning point in conflict it was the first battle between the separatists and the Ukrainian government that involved large numbers of Russian volunteers 102 103 15 According to Ukraine at the height of the conflict in the summer of 2014 Russian paramilitaries made up between 15 and 80 of the combatants 87 From June Russia trickled in arms armor and munitions On 17 July 2014 Russian controlled forces shot down a passenger aircraft Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 as it was flying over eastern Ukraine 104 Investigations and the recovery of bodies began in the conflict zone as fighting continued 105 106 107 By the end of July Ukrainian forces were pushing into cities to cut off supply routes between the two isolating Donetsk and attempting to restore control of the Russo Ukrainian border By 28 July the strategic heights of Savur Mohyla were under Ukrainian control along with the town of Debaltseve an important railroad hub 108 These operational successes of Ukrainian forces threatened the existence of the DPR and LPR statelets prompting Russian cross border shelling targeted at Ukrainian troops on their own soil from mid July onwards 109 August 2014 Russian invasion See also Battle of Ilovaisk nbsp June August 2014 progression map After a series of military defeats and setbacks for the separatists who united under the banner of Novorossiya 110 111 Russia dispatched what it called a humanitarian convoy of trucks across the border in mid August 2014 Ukraine called the move a direct invasion 112 Ukraine s National Security and Defence Council reported that convoys were arriving almost daily in November up to 9 convoys on 30 November and that their contents were mainly arms and ammunition Strelkov claimed that in early August Russian servicemen supposedly on vacation from the army began to arrive in Donbas 113 By August 2014 the Ukrainian Anti Terrorist Operation shrank the territory under pro Russian control and approached the border 114 Igor Girkin urged Russian military intervention and said that the combat inexperience of his irregular forces along with recruitment difficulties amongst the local population had caused the setbacks He stated Losing this war on the territory that President Vladimir Putin personally named New Russia would threaten the Kremlin s power and personally the power of the president 115 In response to the deteriorating situation Russia abandoned its hybrid approach and began a conventional invasion on 25 August 2014 114 116 On the following day the Russian Defence Ministry said these soldiers had crossed the border by accident 117 118 119 According to Nikolai Mitrokhin s estimates by mid August 2014 during the Battle of Ilovaisk between 20 000 and 25 000 troops were fighting in the Donbas on the separatist side and only 40 45 were locals 120 On 24 August 2014 Amvrosiivka was occupied by Russian paratroopers 121 supported by 250 armoured vehicles and artillery pieces 122 The same day Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko referred to the operation as Ukraine s Patriotic War of 2014 and a war against external aggression 123 124 On 25 August a column of Russian military vehicles was reported to have crossed into Ukraine near Novoazovsk on the Azov sea coast It appeared headed towards Ukrainian held Mariupol 125 126 127 128 129 in an area that had not seen pro Russian presence for weeks 130 Russian forces captured Novoazovsk 131 and Russian soldiers began deporting Ukrainians who did not have an address registered within the town 132 Pro Ukrainian anti war protests took place in Mariupol 132 133 The UN Security Council called an emergency meeting 134 nbsp Residents of Kyiv with Sich Battalion volunteers on 26 August 2014 The Pskov based 76th Guards Air Assault Division allegedly entered Ukrainian territory in August and engaged in a skirmish near Luhansk suffering 80 dead The Ukrainian Defence Ministry said that they had seized two of the unit s armoured vehicles near Luhansk and reported destroying another three tanks and two armoured vehicles in other regions 135 The speaker of Russia s upper house of parliament and Russian state television channels acknowledged that Russian soldiers entered Ukraine but referred to them as volunteers 136 A reporter for Novaya Gazeta an opposition newspaper in Russia stated that the Russian military leadership paid soldiers to resign their commissions and fight in Ukraine in the early summer of 2014 and then began ordering soldiers into Ukraine 137 Russian opposition MP Lev Shlosberg made similar statements although he said combatants from his country are regular Russian troops disguised as units of the DPR and LPR 138 In early September 2014 Russian state owned television channels reported on the funerals of Russian soldiers who had died in Ukraine but described them as volunteers fighting for the Russian world Valentina Matviyenko a top United Russia politician also praised volunteers fighting in our fraternal nation 136 Russian state television for the first time showed the funeral of a soldier killed fighting in Ukraine 139 Mariupol offensive and first Minsk ceasefire Main articles Offensive on Mariupol September 2014 and Minsk agreements nbsp A map of the line of control and buffer zone established by the Minsk Protocol on 5 September 2014 On 3 September Poroshenko said he and Putin had reached a permanent ceasefire agreement 140 Russia denied this denying that it was a party to the conflict adding that they only discussed how to settle the conflict 141 142 Poroshenko then recanted 143 144 On 5 September Russia s Permanent OSCE Representative Andrey Kelin said that it was natural that pro Russian separatists are going to liberate Mariupol Ukrainian forces stated that Russian intelligence groups had been spotted in the area Kelin said there might be volunteers over there 145 On 4 September 2014 a NATO officer said that several thousand regular Russian forces were operating in Ukraine 146 On 5 September 2014 the Minsk Protocol ceasefire agreement drew a line of demarcation between Ukraine and separatist controlled portions of Donetsk and Luhansk Oblasts End of 2014 and Minsk II agreement See also 2014 Russian cross border shelling of UkraineOn 7 and 12 November NATO officials reconfirmed the Russian presence citing 32 tanks 16 howitzer cannons and 30 trucks of troops entering the country 147 US general Philip M Breedlove said Russian tanks Russian artillery Russian air defence systems and Russian combat troops had been sighted 76 148 NATO said it had seen an increase in Russian tanks artillery pieces and other heavy military equipment in Ukraine and renewed its call for Moscow to withdraw its forces 149 The Chicago Council on Global Affairs stated that Russian separatists enjoyed technical advantages over the Ukrainian army since the large inflow of advanced military systems in mid 2014 effective anti aircraft weapons Buk MANPADS suppressed Ukrainian air strikes Russian drones provided intelligence and Russian secure communications system disrupted Ukrainian communications intelligence The Russian side employed electronic warfare systems that Ukraine lacked Similar conclusions about the technical advantage of the Russian separatists were voiced by the Conflict Studies Research Centre 150 In the 12 November United Nations Security Council meeting the United Kingdom s representative accused Russia of intentionally constraining OSCE observation missions capabilities pointing out that the observers were allowed to monitor only two kilometers of border and drones deployed to extend their capabilities were jammed or shot down 151 non primary source needed nbsp Pro Russian rebels in Donetsk in May 2015 Ukraine declared the Russian backed separatist republics from eastern Ukraine to be terrorist organizations 152 In January 2015 Donetsk Luhansk and Mariupol represented the three battle fronts 153 Poroshenko described a dangerous escalation on 21 January amid reports of more than 2 000 additional Russian troops 200 tanks and armed personnel carriers crossing the border He abbreviated his visit to the World Economic Forum because of his concerns 154 A new package of measures to end the conflict known as Minsk II was agreed on 15 February 2015 155 On 18 February Ukrainian forces withdrew from Debatlseve in the last high intensity battle of the Donbas war until 2022 In September 2015 the United Nations Human Rights Office estimated that 8000 casualties had resulted from the conflict 156 Line of conflict stabilizes 2015 2021 Further information Timeline of the war in Donbas 2015 Timeline of the war in Donbas 2016 and Timeline of the war in Donbas 2017 nbsp Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko inspects Ukrainian soldiers positions in the front line in the Donetsk Oblast in June 2016 After the Minsk agreements the war settled into static trench warfare around the agreed line of contact with few changes in territorial control The conflict was marked by artillery duels special forces operations and trench warfare Hostilities never ceased for a substantial period of time but continued at a low level despite repeated attempts at ceasefire In the months after the fall of Debaltseve minor skirmishes continued along the line of contact but no territorial changes occurred Both sides began fortifying their position by building networks of trenches bunkers and tunnels turning the conflict into static trench warfare 157 158 The relatively static conflict was labelled frozen by some 159 but Russia never achieved this as the fighting never stopped 160 161 Between 2014 and 2022 there were 29 ceasefires each agreed to remain in force indefinitely However none of them lasted more than two weeks 162 US and international officials continued to report the active presence of Russian military in eastern Ukraine including in the Debaltseve area 163 In 2015 Russian separatist forces were estimated to number around 36 000 troops compared to 34 000 Ukrainian of whom 8 500 10 000 were Russian soldiers Additionally around 1 000 GRU troops were operating in the area 164 Another 2015 estimate held that Ukrainian forces outnumbered Russian forces 40 000 to 20 000 165 In 2017 on average one Ukrainian soldier died in combat every three days 166 with an estimated 6 000 Russian and 40 000 separatist troops in the region 167 168 nbsp Casualties of the war in Donbas Cases of killed and wounded Russian soldiers were discussed in local Russian media 169 Recruiting for Donbas was performed openly via veteran and paramilitary organisations Vladimir Yefimov leader of one such organisation explained how the process worked in the Ural area The organisation recruited mostly army veterans but also policemen firefighters etc with military experience The cost of equipping one volunteer was estimated at 350 000 rubles around 6500 plus salary of 60 000 to 240 000 rubles per month 170 The recruits received weapons only after arriving in the conflict zone Often Russian troops traveled disguised as Red Cross personnel 171 172 173 174 Igor Trunov head of the Russian Red Cross in Moscow condemned these convoys saying they complicated humanitarian aid delivery 175 Russia refused to allow OSCE to expand its mission beyond two border crossings 176 The volunteers were issued a document claiming that their participation was limited to offering humanitarian help to avoid Russian mercenary laws Russia s anti mercenary legislation defined a mercenary as someone who takes part in fighting with aims counter to the interests of the Russian Federation 170 In August 2016 the Ukrainian intelligence service the SBU published telephone intercepts from 2014 of Sergey Glazyev Russian presidential adviser Konstantin Zatulin and other people in which they discussed covert funding of pro Russian activists in Eastern Ukraine the occupation of administration buildings and other actions that triggered the conflict 177 As early as February 2014 Glazyev gave direct instructions to various pro Russian parties on how to take over local administration offices what to do afterwards how to formulate demands and promised support from Russia including sending our guys 178 179 180 nbsp Russian backed separatists in May 2016 2018 Kerch Strait incident Main article Kerch Strait incident See also List of Black Sea incidents involving Russia and Ukraine and Timeline of the war in Donbas 2018 nbsp The Kerch Strait incident over the passage between the Black and Azov seas Russia gained de facto control of the Kerch Strait in 2014 In 2017 Ukraine appealed to a court of arbitration over the use of the strait By 2018 Russia had built a bridge over the strait limiting the size of ships that could pass through imposed new regulations and repeatedly detained Ukrainian vessels 181 On 25 November 2018 three Ukrainian boats traveling from Odesa to Mariupol were seized by Russian warships 24 Ukrainian sailors were detained 182 183 A day later on 26 November 2018 the Ukrainian parliament overwhelmingly backed the imposition of martial law along Ukraine s coastal regions and those bordering Russia 184 2019 2020 Further information Timeline of the war in Donbas 2019 and Timeline of the war in Donbas 2020 nbsp From left Russian President Vladimir Putin French President Emmanuel Macron German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Paris France December 2019 More than 110 Ukrainian soldiers were killed in the conflict in 2019 185 In May 2019 newly elected Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy took office promising to end the war in Donbas 185 In December 2019 Ukraine and pro Russian separatists began swapping prisoners of war Around 200 prisoners were exchanged on 29 December 2019 186 187 188 189 According to Ukrainian authorities 50 Ukrainian soldiers were killed in 2020 190 Between 2019 and 2021 Russia issued over 650 000 internal Russian passports to Ukrainians 191 192 There were 27 conflict related civilian deaths in 2019 26 deaths in 2020 and 25 deaths in 2021 over half of them from mines and unexploded ordnance 193 Russian military buildup around Ukraine 2021 2022 Main article Prelude to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Further information Timeline of the war in Donbas 2021 and Timeline of the war in Donbas 2022 From March to April 2021 Russia commenced a major military build up near the border followed by a second build up between October 2021 to February 2022 in Russia and Belarus 194 Throughout the Russian government repeatedly denied it had plans to attack Ukraine 195 196 In early December 2021 following Russian denials the US released intelligence of Russian invasion plans including satellite photographs showing Russian troops and equipment near the border 197 The intelligence reported a Russian list of key sites and individuals to be killed or neutralized 198 The US released multiple reports that accurately predicted the invasion plans 198 Russian accusations and demands Further information Disinformation in the Russian invasion of Ukraine and Russian irredentism nbsp Ukrainian deputy prime minister Olha Stefanishyna with NATO secretary general Jens Stoltenberg at a conference on 10 January 2022 regarding a potential Russian invasion In the months preceding the invasion Russian officials accused Ukraine of inciting tensions Russophobia and repressing Russian speakers They made multiple security demands of Ukraine NATO and other EU countries On 9 December 2021 Putin said that Russophobia is a first step towards genocide 199 200 Putin s claims were dismissed by the international community 201 and Russian claims of genocide were rejected as baseless 202 203 204 In a 21 February speech 205 Putin questioned the legitimacy of the Ukrainian state repeating an inaccurate claim that Ukraine never had a tradition of genuine statehood 206 He incorrectly stated that Vladimir Lenin had created Ukraine by carving a separate Soviet Republic out of what Putin said was Russian land and that Nikita Khrushchev took Crimea away from Russia for some reason and gave it to Ukraine in 1954 207 Putin falsely claimed that Ukrainian society and government were dominated by neo Nazism invoking the history of collaboration in German occupied Ukraine during World War II 208 209 and echoing an antisemitic conspiracy theory that cast Russian Christians rather than Jews as the true victims of Nazi Germany 210 201 Ukraine does have a far right fringe including the neo Nazi linked Azov Battalion and Right Sector 211 209 Analysts described Putin s rhetoric as greatly exaggerated 212 208 Zelenskyy who is Jewish stated that his grandfather served in the Soviet army fighting against the Nazis 213 three of his family members were killed in the Holocaust 212 nbsp A U S intelligence assessment map and imagery on Russian military movement nearby the Ukrainian border as on 3 December 2021 It assessed that Russia had deployed about 70 000 military personnel mostly about 100 200 kilometres 62 124 mi from the Ukrainian border with an assessment this could be increased to 175 000 personnel Published by The Washington Post 214 During the second build up Russia demanded a treaty that would forbid Ukraine from ever joining NATO and end all NATO activity in its Eastern European member states 215 These demands were rejected 216 A treaty to prevent Ukraine joining NATO would go against the alliance s open door policy and the principle of self determination although NATO made no efforts to comply with Ukraine s requests to join 217 NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg replied that Russia has no say on whether Ukraine joins and that Russia has no right to establish a sphere of influence to try to control their neighbors 218 NATO offered to improve communications with Russia and discuss missile placements and military exercises as long as Russia withdrew troops from Ukraine s borders 219 but Russia did not withdraw Prelude to full invasion Main article Prelude to the Russian invasion of UkraineFighting in Donbas escalated significantly from 17 February 2022 onwards 220 The Ukrainians and the pro Russian separatists each accused the other of attacks 221 222 There was a sharp increase in artillery shelling by the Russian led militants in Donbas which was considered by Ukraine and its supporters to be an attempt to provoke the Ukrainian army or create a pretext for invasion 223 224 225 On 18 February the Donetsk and Luhansk people s republics ordered mandatory emergency evacuations of civilians from their respective capital cities 226 227 228 although observers noted that full evacuations would take months 229 The Russian government intensified its disinformation campaign with Russian state media promoting fabricated videos false flags on a nearly hourly basis purporting to show Ukrainian forces attacking Russia 230 Many of the disinformation videos were amateurish and evidence showed that the claimed attacks explosions and evacuations in Donbas were staged by Russia 230 231 232 source source source source source source source track track track track track track track track track track Putin s address to the nation on 21 February English subtitles available On 21 February at 22 35 UTC 3 233 Putin announced that the Russian government would diplomatically recognize the Donetsk and Luhansk people s republics 234 The same evening Putin directed that Russian troops deploy into Donbas in what Russia referred to as a peacekeeping mission 235 236 On 22 February the Federation Council unanimously authorised Putin to use military force outside Russia 237 In response Zelenskyy ordered the conscription of army reservists 238 The following day Ukraine s parliament proclaimed a 30 day nationwide state of emergency and ordered the mobilisation of all reservists 239 240 241 Russia began to evacuate its embassy in Kyiv 242 On the night of 23 February 243 Zelenskyy gave a speech in Russian in which he appealed to the citizens of Russia to prevent war 244 245 He rejected Russia s claims about neo Nazis and stated that he had no intention of attacking the Donbas 246 Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on 23 February that the separatist leaders in Donetsk and Luhansk had sent a letter to Putin stating that Ukrainian shelling had caused civilian deaths and appealing for military support 247 Full scale Russian invasion of Ukraine 2022 present For a chronological guide see Timeline of the Russian invasion of Ukraine nbsp Animated map of Russia s invasion of Ukraine through 5 December 2022 click to play animation nbsp Ukrainian soldiers killed in the Russo Ukrainian War in 2022 The Russian invasion of Ukraine began on the morning of 24 February 2022 248 when Putin announced a special military operation to demilitarise and denazify Ukraine 249 250 Minutes later missiles and airstrikes hit across Ukraine including Kyiv shortly followed by a large ground invasion along multiple fronts 251 252 Zelenskyy declared martial law and a general mobilisation of all male Ukrainian citizens between 18 and 60 who were banned from leaving the country 253 254 Russian attacks were initially launched on a northern front from Belarus towards Kyiv a southern front from Crimea and a south eastern front from Luhansk and Donetsk and towards Kharkiv 255 256 In the northern front amidst heavy losses and strong Ukrainian resistance surrounding Kyiv Russia s advance stalled in March and by April its troops retreated On 8 April Russia placed its forces in southern and eastern Ukraine under the command of General Aleksandr Dvornikov and some units withdrawn from the north were redeployed to the Donbas 257 On 19 April Russia launched a renewed attack across a 500 kilometres 300 mi long front extending from Kharkiv to Donetsk and Luhansk 258 By 13 May a Ukraine counter offensive had driven back Russian forces near Kharkiv By 20 May Mariupol fell to Russian troops following a prolonged siege of the Azovstal steel works 259 260 Russian forces continued to bomb both military and civilian targets far from the frontline 261 262 The war caused the largest refugee and humanitarian crisis within Europe since the Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s 263 264 the UN described it as the fastest growing such crisis since World War II 265 In the first week of the invasion the UN reported over a million refugees had fled Ukraine this subsequently rose to over 7 405 590 by 24 September a reduction from over eight million due to some refugees return 266 267 nbsp Remnants of a destroyed Russian Army column on 27 February in Bucha Ukrainian forces launched counteroffensives in the south in August and in the northeast in September On 30 September Russia annexed four oblasts of Ukraine which it had partially conquered during the invasion 268 This annexation was generally unrecognized and condemned by the countries of the world 269 After Putin announced that he would begin conscription drawn from the 300 000 citizens with military training and potentially the pool of about 25 million Russians who could be eligible for conscription one way tickets out of the country nearly or completely sold out 270 271 The Ukrainian offensive in the northeast successfully recaptured the majority of Kharkiv Oblast in September In the course of the southern counteroffensive Ukraine retook the city of Kherson in November and Russian forces withdrew to the east bank of the Dnieper River citation needed The invasion was internationally condemned as a war of aggression 272 273 A United Nations General Assembly resolution demanded a full withdrawal of Russian forces the International Court of Justice ordered Russia to suspend military operations and the Council of Europe expelled Russia Many countries imposed new sanctions which affected the economies of Russia and the world 274 and provided humanitarian and military aid to Ukraine 275 In September 2022 Putin signed a law that would punish anyone who resists conscription with a 10 year prison sentence 276 resulting in an international push to allow asylum for Russians fleeing conscription 277 As of August 2023 the total number of Russian and Ukrainian soldiers killed or wounded during the Russian invasion of Ukraine was nearly 500 000 278 More than 10 000 civilians were killed during the Russian invasion of Ukraine 279 According to a declassified US intelligence assessment as of December 2023 Russia had lost 315 000 of the 360 000 troops that made up Russia s pre invasion ground force and 2 200 of the 3 500 tanks 280 Human rights violationsSee also Casualties of the Russo Ukrainian War Humanitarian situation during the war in Donbas and Russian war crimes Ukraine nbsp Executed Ukrainian civilians with wrists bound in plastic restraints in a basement in Bucha 3 April 2022 Violations of human rights and atrocity crimes have both occurred during the war From 2014 to 2021 there were more than 3 000 civilian casualties with most occurring in 2014 and 2015 281 The right of movement was impeded for the inhabitants of the conflict zone 282 Arbitrary detention was practiced by both sides in the first years of the conflict It decreased after 2016 in government held areas while in the separatist held ones it continued 283 Investigations into the abuses committed by both sides made little progress 284 285 nbsp Killed Ukrainian civilians during the Zaporizhzhia civilian convoy attack by Russian Army in September 2022 Since the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 Russian authorities and armed forces have committed multiple war crimes in the form of deliberate attacks against civilian targets 286 287 massacres of civilians torture and rape of women and children 288 289 and indiscriminate attacks in densely populated areas After the Russian withdrawal from areas north of Kyiv overwhelming evidence of war crimes by Russian forces was discovered In particular in the town of Bucha evidence emerged of a massacre of civilians perpetrated by Russian troops including torture mutilation rape looting and deliberate killings of civilians 290 291 292 the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine OHCHR has documented the murder of at least 73 civilians mostly men but also women and children in Bucha 293 More than 1 200 bodies of civilians were found in the Kyiv region after Russian forces withdrew some of them summarily executed There were reports of forced deportations of thousands of civilians including children to Russia mainly from Russian occupied Mariupol 294 295 as well as sexual violence including cases of rape sexual assault and gang rape 296 and deliberate killing of Ukrainian civilians by Russian forces 297 Russia has also systematically attacked Ukrainian medical infrastructure with the World Health Organization reporting 1 422 attacks as of 21 December 2023 298 Ukrainian forces have also been accused of committing various war crimes including mistreatment of detainees though on a much smaller scale than Russian forces 299 300 Related issuesSpillover Further information 2014 Vrbetice ammunition warehouse explosions 2022 missile explosion in Poland War in Sudan 2023 and Nuclear threats during the Russian invasion of Ukraine This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2023 On 19 September 2023 CNN reported that it was likely that Ukrainian Special Operations Forces were behind a series of drone strikes and a ground operation directed against the Wagner backed RSF near Khartoum on 8 September 301 Kyrylo Budanov chief of the Main Directorate of Intelligence of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine stated in an interview on 22 September that he could neither deny nor confirm the involvement of Ukraine in the conflict in Sudan 302 but said that Ukraine would punish Russian war criminals anywhere in the world 303 In September and October 2023 a series of fragments were reported found in Romania a NATO member state which were suspected to have been the remains of a Russian drone attack near the Romanian border with Ukraine 304 305 Gas disputes See also Russia Ukraine gas disputes Nord Stream Nord Stream 2 and Russia in the European energy sector nbsp Major Russian natural gas pipelines to Europe nbsp Europe TTF natural gas Until 2014 Ukraine was the main transit route for Russian natural gas sold to Europe which earned Ukraine about US 3 billion a year in transit fees making it the country s most lucrative export service 306 Following Russia s launch of the Nord Stream pipeline which bypasses Ukraine gas transit volumes steadily decreased 306 Following the start of the Russo Ukrainian War in February 2014 severe tensions extended to the gas sector 307 308 The subsequent outbreak of war in the Donbas region forced the suspension of a project to develop Ukraine s own shale gas reserves at the Yuzivska gas field which had been planned as a way to reduce Ukrainian dependence on Russian gas imports 309 Eventually the EU commissioner for energy Gunther Oettinger was called in to broker a deal securing supplies to Ukraine and transit to the EU 310 An explosion damaged a Ukrainian portion of the Urengoy Pomary Uzhhorod pipeline in Ivano Frankivsk Oblast in May 2014 Ukrainian officials blamed Russian terrorists 311 Another section of the pipeline exploded in the Poltava Oblast on 17 June 2014 one day after Russia limited the supply of gas to Ukrainian customers due to non payment Ukraine s Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said the following day that the explosion had been caused by a bomb 312 In 2015 Russian state media reported that Russia planned to completely abandon gas supplies to Europe through Ukraine after 2018 313 314 Russia s state owned energy giant Gazprom had already substantially reduced the volumes of gas transited across Ukraine and expressed its intention to reduce the level further by means of transit diversification pipelines Turkish Stream Nord Stream etc 315 Gazprom and Ukraine agreed to a five year deal on Russian gas transit to Europe at the end of 2019 316 317 In 2020 the TurkStream natural gas pipeline running from Russia to Turkey changed the regional gas flows in South East Europe by diverting the transit through Ukraine and the Trans Balkan Pipeline system 318 319 In May 2021 the Biden administration waived Trump s CAATSA sanctions on the company behind Russia s Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Germany 320 321 Ukrainian President Zelenskyy said he was surprised and disappointed by Joe Biden s decision 322 In July 2021 the U S urged Ukraine not to criticise a forthcoming agreement with Germany over the pipeline 323 324 In July 2021 Biden and German Chancellor Angela Merkel concluded a deal that the U S might trigger sanctions if Russia used Nord Stream as a political weapon The deal aimed to prevent Poland and Ukraine from being cut off from Russian gas supplies Ukraine will get a 50 million loan for green technology until 2024 and Germany will set up a billion dollar fund to promote Ukraine s transition to green energy to compensate for the loss of the gas transit fees The contract for transiting Russian gas through Ukraine will be prolonged until 2034 if the Russian government agrees 325 326 327 In August 2021 Zelenskyy warned that the Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline between Russia and Germany was a dangerous weapon not only for Ukraine but for the whole of Europe 328 329 In September 2021 Ukraine s Naftogaz CEO Yuriy Vitrenko accused Russia of using natural gas as a geopolitical weapon 330 Vitrenko stated that A joint statement from the United States and Germany said that if the Kremlin used gas as a weapon there would be an appropriate response We are now waiting for the imposition of sanctions on a 100 subsidiary of Gazprom the operator of Nord Stream 2 331 Hybrid warfare The Russo Ukrainian conflict has also included elements of hybrid warfare using non traditional means Cyberwarfare has been used by Russia in operations including successful attacks on the Ukrainian power grid in December 2015 and in December 2016 which was the first successful cyber attack on a power grid 332 and the Mass hacker supply chain attack in June 2017 which the US claimed was the largest known cyber attack 333 In retaliation Ukrainian operations have included the Surkov Leaks in October 2016 which released 2 337 e mails in relation to Russian plans for seizing Crimea from Ukraine and fomenting separatist unrest in Donbas 334 The Russian information war against Ukraine has been another front of hybrid warfare waged by Russia A Russian fifth column in Ukraine has also been claimed to exist among the Party of Regions the Communist Party the Progressive Socialist Party and the Russian Orthodox Church 335 336 337 Russian propaganda and disinformation campaigns Main articles Russian information war against Ukraine Disinformation in the Russian invasion of Ukraine and Ruscism nbsp Pro Kremlin TV and radio host Vladimir Solovyov voiced support for his country s invasion of Ukraine 338 nbsp Ukrainian protester with a poster portraying Russian presidents Putin and Medvedev as Nazis in 2014 nbsp Z symbol flash mob in Khabarovsk False stories have been used to provoke public outrage during the war In April 2014 Russian news channels Russia 1 and NTV showed a man saying he was attacked by a fascist Ukrainian gang on one channel and on the other channel saying he was funding the training of right wing anti Russia radicals 339 340 A third segment portrayed the man as a neo Nazi surgeon 341 In May 2014 Russia 1 aired a story about Ukrainian atrocities using footage of a 2012 Russian operation in North Caucasus 342 In the same month the Russian news network Life presented a 2013 photograph of a wounded child in Syria as a victim of Ukrainian troops who had just retaken Donetsk International Airport 343 In June 2014 several Russian state news outlets reported that Ukraine was using white phosphorus using 2004 footage of white phosphorus being used by the United States in Iraq 342 In July 2014 Channel One Russia broadcast an interview with a woman who said that a 3 year old boy who spoke Russian was crucified by Ukrainian nationalists in a fictitious square in Sloviansk that turned out to be false 344 345 340 342 On 26 February 2020 Vladislav Surkov who has previously served as Presidential Executive Office s personal adviser of Putin on relationships with Ukraine gave an interview to Aktualnyie kommentarii where he acknowledged that he was primarily involved with Donbas and Ukraine and claimed that Ukraine does not exist There is Ukrainianness that is a special brain activity disorder Such a bloody foreign view Dusk instead of a country There is borsch Bandera and bandura but there is no nationality Forcing them to a fraternal attitude towards Russians is the only method that has proven to be effective in Ukrainianness oriented activities 346 347 In 2022 Russian state media told stories of genocide and mass graves full of ethnic Russians in eastern Ukraine One set of graves outside Luhansk was dug when intense fighting in 2014 cut off the electricity in the local morgue Amnesty International investigated 2014 Russian claims of mass graves filled with hundreds of bodies and instead found isolated incidents of extrajudicial executions by both sides 348 349 350 The Russian censorship apparatus Roskomnadzor ordered the country s media to employ information only from Russian state sources or face fines and blocks 351 and ordered media and schools to describe the war as a special military operation 352 On 4 March 2022 Putin signed into law a bill introducing prison sentences of up to 15 years for those who publish fake news about the Russian military and its operations 353 leading to some media outlets to stop reporting on Ukraine 354 Russia s opposition politician Alexei Navalny said the monstrosity of lies in the Russian state media is unimaginable And unfortunately so is its persuasiveness for those who have no access to alternative information 355 He tweeted that warmongers among Russian state media personalities should be treated as war criminals From the editors in chief to the talk show hosts to the news editors they should be sanctioned now and tried someday 356 nbsp Moscow rally of 18 March 2022 officially known in Russia as a rally For a world without Nazism Putin and Russian media have described the government of Ukraine as being led by neo Nazis persecuting ethnic Russians who are in need of protection by Russia despite Ukraine s President Zelenskyy being Jewish 357 358 349 According to journalist Natalia Antonova Russia s present day war of aggression is refashioned by propaganda into a direct continuation of the legacy of the millions of Russian soldiers who died to stop Nazi Germany in World War II 359 Ukraine s rejection of the adoption of Russia initiated General Assembly resolutions on combating the glorification of Nazism the latest iteration of which is General Assembly Resolution A C 3 76 L 57 Rev 1 on Combating Glorification of Nazism Neo Nazism and other Practices that Contribute to Fueling Contemporary Forms of Racism Racial Discrimination Xenophobia and Related Intolerance serve to present Ukraine as a pro Nazi state and indeed likely forms the basis for Russia s claims with the only other state rejecting the adoption of the resolution being the US 360 361 The Deputy US Representative for ECOSOC describes such resolutions as thinly veiled attempts to legitimize Russian disinformation campaigns denigrating neighboring nations and promoting the distorted Soviet narrative of much of contemporary European history using the cynical guise of halting Nazi glorification 362 nbsp Pro Ukrainian rally in Berlin one of the signs saying Denazify Putin Dmitry Medvedev deputy chairman of the Security Council of Russia and former Russian president publicly wrote that Ukraine is NOT a country but artificially collected territories and that Ukrainian is NOT a language but a mongrel dialect of Russian 363 Medvedev has also said that Ukraine should not exist in any form and that Russia will continue to wage war against any independent Ukrainian state 364 Moreover Medvedev claimed in July 2023 that Russia would have had to use a nuclear weapon if 2023 Ukrainian counteroffensive was a success 365 According to Medvedev the existence of Ukraine is fatally dangerous for Ukrainians and that they will understand that life in a large common state is better than death Their deaths and the deaths of their loved ones And the sooner Ukrainians realize this the better 366 On 22 February 2024 Medvedev described the future plans of Russia in the Russo Ukrainian War when he claimed that the Russian Army will go further into Ukraine taking the southern city of Odesa and may again push on to the Ukrainian capital Kyiv and stated that Where should we stop I don t know 367 For his claims Medvedev has been described as Russian rashist Russian fascist by Ukrainian and American media 368 NAFO North Atlantic Fella Organization a loose cadre of online shitposters vowing to fight Russian disinformation generally identified by cartoon Shiba Inu dogs in social media gained notoriety after June 2022 in the wake of a Twitter quarrel with Russian diplomat Mikhail Ulyanov 369 In February 2024 Putin claimed that the Russo Ukrainian War has the elements of a civil war and that the Russian people will be reunited while the Ukrainian Orthodox Church a branch of the Russian Orthodox Church which mostly supports the Russian invasion of Ukraine and mandatory publicly pray for military victory over Ukraine brings together our souls 370 371 372 Nevertheless in the official governmental website of Ukraine it is stated that the Ukrainians and Russians are not one nation and that the Ukrainians identify themselves as an independent nation 373 A poll conducted in April 2022 by Rating found that the vast majority 91 of Ukrainians excluding the Russian occupied territories of Ukraine do not support the thesis that Russians and Ukrainians are one people 374 Islamic State claimed responsibility for the March 22 Crocus City Hall attack a terrorist attack in a music venue in Krasnogorsk Moscow Oblast Russia and published a corroborating video 375 Putin and the Russian security service the FSB blamed Ukraine for the attack but did not provide evidence for the attribution 376 On 3 April 2024 Russia s Defense Ministry announced that around 16 000 citizens had signed military contracts in the last 10 days to fight as contract soldiers in the war against Ukraine with most of them saying they were motivated to avenge those killed in the Crocus City Hall attack 377 Role of the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine nbsp The 2020 consecration ceremony of the Main Cathedral of the Russian Armed Forces which previously had a mosaic depicting the 2014 annexation of Crimea and featured Putin and Shoigu but it was later removed 378 The Russian Orthodox Church and its hierarch Patriarch Kirill of Moscow have shown their full support of the war against Ukraine 379 Not one of the approximately 400 Russian Orthodox Church bishops in Russia has spoken out against the war 380 The role of the Russian Orthodox Church in advancing Putin s war messaging is a vivid illustration of the complex interplay between religion and politics 381 A Russia expert and fellow of Germany s University of Bremen told Al Jazeera that the ROC s participation in the war means it faces the prospect of losing its universal character and clout and of reducing its borders to those of Russian President Vladimir Putin s political empire 382 On 27 March 2024 the World Russian People s Council took place in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow where was adopted a Nakaz decree of the council The Present and the Future of the Russian World 383 According to some experts such as the ROC protodeacon Andrei Kurayev it has similarities with the program articles of the German Christians 384 The decree talks about the so called Special Military Operation in Ukraine development of the Russian World globally and other issues 385 Russia NATO relations Main article Russia NATO relations nbsp The NATO Russia Council meets in January 2022 to discuss the 2021 2022 Russo Ukrainian crisis NATO and Russia had co operated until Russia annexed Crimea 2014 386 In his 2022 speech justifying the invasion of Ukraine Putin falsely claimed that NATO military infrastructure was being built up inside Ukraine and was a threat to Russia 387 Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov characterized the conflict as a proxy war started by NATO 388 He said We don t think we re at war with NATO Unfortunately NATO believes it is at war with Russia 389 NATO says it is not at war with Russia its official policy is that it does not seek confrontation but rather its members support Ukraine in its right to self defense as enshrined in the UN Charter 386 In 2022 NATO has condemned Russia s invasion of Ukraine in the strongest possible terms and calls it the biggest security threat in a generation which led to deployment of additional NATO units in its eastern members 390 Former CIA director Leon Panetta told the ABC that the U S is without question involved in a proxy war with Russia 391 Russian military aircraft flying over the Baltic and Black Seas often do not indicate their position or communicate with air traffic controllers thus posing a potential risk to civilian airliners NATO aircraft scrambled many times to track and intercept these aircraft near alliance airspace The Russian aircraft intercepted never entered NATO airspace and the interceptions were conducted in a safe and routine manner 392 ReactionsFurther information International sanctions during the Russo Ukrainian War and List of military aid to Ukraine during the Russo Ukrainian War See also Second Cold War Reactions to the Russian annexation of Crimea Main article International reactions to the annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation Ukrainian response nbsp Following Russia s annexation of Crimea Ukraine blocked the North Crimean Canal which provided 85 of Crimea s drinking and irrigation water 393 Interim Ukrainian President Oleksandr Turchynov accused Russia of provoking a conflict by backing the seizure of the Crimean parliament building and other government offices on the Crimean peninsula He compared Russia s military actions to the 2008 Russo Georgian War when Russian troops occupied parts of the Republic of Georgia and the breakaway enclaves of Abkhazia and South Ossetia were established under the control of Russian backed administrations He called on Putin to withdraw Russian troops from Crimea and stated that Ukraine will preserve its territory and defend its independence 394 On 1 March he warned Military intervention would be the beginning of war and the end of any relations between Ukraine and Russia 395 On 1 March Acting President Oleksandr Turchynov placed the Armed Forces of Ukraine on full alert and combat readiness 396 The Ministry of Temporarily Occupied Territories and IDPs was established by Ukrainian government on 20 April 2016 to manage occupied parts of Donetsk Luhansk and Crimea regions affected by Russian military intervention of 2014 397 NATO and United States military response Further information Operation Atlantic Resolve European Deterrence Initiative NATO Enhanced Forward Presence and Russia NATO relations nbsp A U S Army convoy in Vilseck Germany during Operation Atlantic Resolve NATO s efforts to reassert its military presence in central and eastern Europe that began in April 2014 On 4 March 2014 the United States pledged 1 billion in aid to Ukraine 398 Russia s actions increased tensions in nearby countries historically within its sphere of influence particularly the Baltic and Moldova All have large Russian speaking populations and Russian troops are stationed in the breakaway Moldovan territory of Transnistria 399 Some devoted resources to increasing defensive capabilities 400 and many requested increased support from the U S and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization which they had joined in recent years 399 400 The conflict reinvigorated NATO which had been created to face the Soviet Union but had devoted more resources to expeditionary missions in recent years 401 In addition to diplomatic support in its conflict with Russia the U S provided Ukraine with US 1 5 billion in military aid during the 2010s 402 In 2018 the U S House of Representatives passed a provision blocking any training of Azov Battalion of the Ukrainian National Guard by American forces In previous years between 2014 and 2017 the U S House of Representatives passed amendments banning support of Azov but due to pressure from the Pentagon the amendments were quietly lifted 403 404 405 Financial markets nbsp Euro RUB exchange rate nbsp USD Russian Ruble Exchange Rate nbsp Russian bonds Inverted yield curves to tame inflation during their wars Russo Georgian War Russo Ukrainian War 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 20 year bond 10 year bond 1 year bond 3 month bond The initial reaction to the escalation of tensions in Crimea caused the Russian and European stock market to tumble 406 The intervention caused the Swiss franc to climb to a 2 year high against the dollar and 1 year high against the Euro The Euro and the US dollar both rose as did the Australian dollar 407 The Russian stock market declined by more than 10 percent while the Russian ruble hit all time lows against the US dollar and the Euro 408 409 410 The Russian central bank hiked interest rates and intervened in the foreign exchange markets to the tune of 12 billion clarification needed to try to stabilize its currency 407 Prices for wheat and grain rose with Ukraine being a major exporter of both crops 411 Later in March 2014 the reaction of the financial markets to the Crimea annexation was surprisingly mellow with global financial markets rising immediately after the referendum held in Crimea one explanation being that the sanctions were already priced in following the earlier Russian incursion 412 Other observers considered that the positive reaction of the global financial markets on Monday 17 March 2014 after the announcement of sanctions against Russia by the EU and the US revealed that these sanctions were too weak to hurt Russia 413 In early August 2014 the German DAX was down by 6 percent for the year and 11 percent since June over concerns Russia Germany s 13th biggest trade partner would retaliate against sanctions 414 Reactions to the war in Donbas Further information International reactions to the war in Donbas Ukrainian public opinion See also Putin khuylo nbsp Pro Russian supporters in Donetsk 20 December 2014 A poll of the Ukrainian public excluding Russian annexed Crimea was taken by the International Republican Institute from 12 to 25 September 2014 415 89 of those polled opposed 2014 Russian military intervention in Ukraine As broken down by region 78 of those polled from Eastern Ukraine including Dnipropetrovsk Oblast opposed said intervention along with 89 in Southern Ukraine 93 in Central Ukraine and 99 in Western Ukraine 415 As broken down by native language 79 of Russian speakers and 95 of Ukrainian speakers opposed the intervention 80 of those polled said the country should remain a unitary country 415 A poll of the Crimean public in Russian annexed Crimea was taken by the Ukrainian branch of Germany s biggest market research organization GfK on 16 22 January 2015 According to its results Eighty two percent of those polled said they fully supported Crimea s inclusion in Russia and another 11 percent expressed partial support Only 4 percent spoke out against it 416 417 418 A joint poll conducted by Levada and the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology from September to October 2020 found that in the breakaway regions controlled by the DPR LPR just over half of the respondents wanted to join Russia either with or without some autonomous status while less than one tenth wanted independence and 12 wanted reintegration into Ukraine It contrasted with respondents in Kyiv controlled Donbas where a vast majority felt the separatist regions should be returned to Ukraine 419 According to results from Levada in January 2022 roughly 70 of those in the breakaway regions said their territories should become part of the Russian Federation 420 Russian public opinion See also 2014 anti war protests in Russia nbsp Peace march in Moscow 21 September 2014 An August 2014 survey by the Levada Centre reported that only 13 of those Russians polled would support the Russian government in an open war with Ukraine 421 Street protests against the war in Ukraine arose in Russia Notable protests first occurred in March 422 423 and large protests occurred in September when tens of thousands protested the war in Ukraine with a peace march in downtown Moscow on Sunday 21 September 2014 under heavy police supervision 424 Reactions to the Russian invasion of Ukraine Main article Reactions to the Russian invasion of Ukraine Ukrainian public opinion See also Russian warship go fuck yourself Orc slang Ghost of Kyiv Saint Javelin Bayraktar song and Good Evening Where Are You From nbsp Ukrainian refugees in Krakow protest against the war 6 March 2022 In March 2022 a week after the Russian invasion of Ukraine 98 of Ukrainians including 82 of ethnic Russians living in Ukraine said they did not believe that any part of Ukraine was rightfully part of Russia according to Lord Ashcroft s polls which did not include Crimea and the separatist controlled part of Donbas 97 of Ukrainians said they had an unfavourable view of Russian President Vladimir Putin with a further 94 saying they had an unfavourable view of the Russian Armed Forces 425 At the end of 2021 75 of Ukrainians said they had a positive attitude toward ordinary Russians while in May 2022 82 of Ukrainians said they had a negative attitude toward ordinary Russians 426 Russian public opinion See also Anti war protests in Russia 2022 present nbsp Russia Countries on Russia s Unfriendly Countries List The list includes countries that have imposed sanctions against Russia for its invasion of Ukraine 427 An April 2022 survey by the Levada Centre reported that approximately 74 of the Russians polled supported the special military operation in Ukraine suggesting that Russian public opinion has shifted considerably since 2014 428 According to some sources a reason many Russians supported the special military operation has to do with the propaganda and disinformation 429 430 In addition it has been suggested that some respondents did not want to answer pollsters questions for fear of negative consequences 431 432 At the end of March a poll conducted in Russia by the Levada Center concluded the following When asked why they think the military operation is taking place respondents said it was to protect and defend civilians ethnic Russians or Russian speakers in Ukraine 43 to prevent an attack on Russia 25 to get rid of nationalists and denazify Ukraine 21 and to incorporate Ukraine or the Donbas region into Russia 3 433 According to polls the Russian President s rating rose from 71 on the eve of the invasion to 82 in March 2023 434 The Kremlin s analysis concluded that public support for the war was broad but not deep and that most Russians would accept anything Putin would call a victory In September 2023 the head of the VTsIOM state pollster Valery Fyodorov said in an interview that only 10 15 of Russians actively supported the war and that most Russians are not demanding the conquest of Kyiv or Odesa 435 In 2023 Oleg Orlov the chairman of the Board of Human Rights Center Memorial claimed that Russia under Vladimir Putin had descended into fascism and that the army is committing mass murder 436 437 United States nbsp American President Joe Biden holding a Ukrainian refugee at Warsaw s Stadion Narodowy in a meeting where he described Russian President Vladimir Putin as butcher 26 March 2022 438 On 28 April 2022 US President Joe Biden asked Congress for an additional 33 billion to assist Ukraine including 20 billion to provide weapons to Ukraine 439 On 5 May Ukraine s Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal announced that Ukraine had received more than 12 billion worth of weapons and financial aid from Western countries since the start of Russia s invasion on 24 February 440 On 21 May 2022 the United States passed legislation providing 40 billion in new military and humanitarian foreign aid to Ukraine marking a historically large commitment of funds 441 442 In August 2022 U S defense spending to counter the Russian war effort exceeded the first 5 years of war costs in Afghanistan The Washington Post reported that new U S weapons delivered to the Ukrainian war front suggest a closer combat scenario with more casualties 443 The United States looks to build enduring strength in Ukraine with increased arms shipments and a record breaking 3 billion military aid package 443 On 22 April 2022 professor Timothy D Snyder published an article in The New York Times Magazine where he wrote that we have tended to overlook the central example of fascism s revival which is the Putin regime in the Russian Federation 444 On the wider regime Snyder writes that p rominent Russian fascists are given access to mass media during wars including this one Members of the Russian elite above all Putin himself rely increasingly on fascist concepts and states that Putin s very justification of the war in Ukraine represents a Christian form of fascism 444 On March 7 2024 American President Joe Biden given the 2024 State of the Union Address where he compared Russia under Vladimir Putin to Adolf Hitler s conquests of Europe 445 Russian military suppliers nbsp Kim Jong Un and Putin meeting at Vostochny Cosmodrome in 2023 where Kim gave his support for Russia s sacred fight against the West 446 After expending large amounts of heavy weapons and munitions over months the Russian Federation received combat drones loitering munitions and large amounts of artillery from Iran deliveries of tanks and other armoured vehicles from Belarus and reportedly planned to trade for artillery ammunition from North Korea and ballistic missiles from Iran 447 448 449 450 451 The U S has accused China of providing Russia with technology it needs for high tech weapons allegations which China has denied The U S sanctioned a Chinese firm for providing satellite imagery to Russian mercenary forces fighting in Ukraine 452 In March 2023 Western nations had pressed the United Arab Emirates to halt re exports of goods to Russia which had military uses amidst allegations that the Gulf country exported 158 drones to Russia in 2022 453 In May 2023 the U S accused South Africa of supplying arms to Russia in a covert naval operation 454 allegations which have been denied by South African president Cyril Ramaphosa 455 United Nations nbsp United Nations secretary general Antonio Guterres and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delegations meeting in April 2022 On 25 February 2022 the Security Council failed to adopt a draft resolution which would have deplored in the strongest terms the Russian Federation s aggression on Ukraine Of the 15 member states on the Security Council 11 were in support whilst three abstained from voting The draft resolution failed due to a Russian veto 456 457 Due to the deadlock the Security Council passed a resolution to convene the General Assembly for the eleventh emergency special session 458 On 2 March 2022 the General Assembly voted to deplore in the strongest possible terms Russia s aggression against Ukraine by a vote of 141 to 5 with 35 abstentions 459 The resolution also called for the Russian Federation to immediately cease its use of force against Ukraine and immediately completely and unconditionally withdraw all of its military forces 459 Only Russia Belarus Syria North Korea and Eritrea voted against the resolution 460 On 4 March 2022 the UN Human Rights Council adopted a resolution by a vote of 32 to 2 with 13 abstentions calling for the withdrawal of Russian troops and Russian backed armed groups from Ukraine and humanitarian access to people in need The resolution also established a commission to investigate alleged rights violations committed during Russia s military attack on Ukraine 461 In October 2022 the United Nations General Assembly had adopted a resolution condemning the 2022 annexation referendums in Russian occupied Ukraine with 143 supporting votes 5 opposing votes Belarus North Korea Nicaragua Russia Syria and 35 abstentions 462 See also nbsp Modern history portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp Russia portal nbsp Ukraine portal nbsp Current events portal List of invasions in the 21st century Outline of the Russo Ukrainian War List of conflicts in Europe List of invasions and occupations of Ukraine List of ongoing armed conflicts List of wars involving Russia List of wars involving Ukraine Modern history of Ukraine New generation warfareNotes a b The Donetsk People s Republic and the Luhansk People s Republic were Russian controlled puppet states that declared their independence from Ukraine in May 2014 In 2022 they received international recognition from each other Russia Syria and North Korea and some other partially recognised states On 30 September 2022 Russia declared it had formally annexed both entities There are some contradictions and inherent problems regarding the date on which the occupation began 463 The Ukrainian Government maintains and the European Court of Human Rights agrees that Russia controlled Crimea from 27 February 2014 464 when unmarked Russian special forces took control of its political institutions 465 The Russian Government later made 27 February Special Operations Forces Day 65 In 2015 the Ukrainian parliament officially designated 20 February 2014 as the beginning of the temporary occupation of Crimea and Sevastopol by Russia 466 citing the date inscribed on the Russian medal For the Return of Crimea 467 On that date Vladimir Konstantinov then Chairman of the Supreme Council of Crimea had said the region would be prepared to join Russia 468 In 2018 Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov claimed that the earlier start date on the medal was due to a technical misunderstanding 469 President Putin stated in a Russian film about the annexation that he ordered the operation to restore Crimea to Russia following an all night emergency meeting on 22 23 February 2014 463 470 Russian rossijsko ukrainskaya vojna romanized rossiysko ukrainskaya voyna 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