The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Key dates of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine: when and how it started

2022-02-22T22:45:59.338Z


The recognition of the Donetsk and Lugansk regions by Moscow and the announcement of the dispatch of Russian troops to the area adds more tension to relations between the West and Russia and fuels the fear of a new cold war


Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday gave a critical step in the confrontation with Ukraine and the West ordering sending Russian troops to the breakaway regions of eastern former Soviet republic.

After a fiery speech, riddled with historical references and criticisms of Kiev, the United States and NATO, the head of the Kremlin signed the recognition of independence of these regions.

It is the latest step in the escalation that began with the concentration of some 100,000 soldiers —Washington estimates that this figure is currently around 190,000 soldiers—, which raised alarm in the West in the face of a new aggression.

Ukraine fighting since 2014 against the pro-Russian separatists in the Donbas region, supported by Russia,

Recent movements raises the specter of the Cold War.

The background to this crisis is Russia's refusal to accept the approach of NATO and the European Union to the former Soviet republic, which Moscow considers part of its identity and its place of influence and whose vital judges control their safety.

Putin believes that the two countries make up "one people".

November of 2013

The president of Ukraine, the pro-Russian Victor Yanukovych, suspends the signing of an association agreement with the European Union, scheduled for November 29, due to pressure from Russia, which also offers him significant economic compensation for it, such as the reduction of the price of gas.

This announcement catalyzes the discontent of the population, especially in the west of the country.

On November 24, tens of thousands of Ukrainians demonstrate against the government in Kiev's Independence Square (Maidan).

A demonstrator uses a slingshot during the protests that degenerated into violent clashes between opponents and riot police in the center of Kiev, on February 19, 2014. SERGEY DOLZHENKO (EFE)

February 2014

Ukrainian security forces kill at least 100 people in protests.

Popular outrage and brutal repression force Yanukovych to flee.

Meanwhile, in Simferopol, the capital of the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea, pro-Russian militants are facing supporters of the unity of Ukraine.

At the same time, camouflaged Russian soldiers and Kremlin espionage agents penetrate Crimea to force its annexation to Russia.

A fighter from the self-proclaimed Republic of Donetsk, Friday in a trench near the town of Yasne.Alexei Alexandrov (AP)

March 16, 2014

A referendum is held in Crimea in which — amid accusations of fraud — Russia's annexation wins by more than 97% of the vote.

Two days later, Putin signs the incorporation of the Ukrainian peninsula into his territory, which the international community does not recognize.

NATO freezes its collaboration with Moscow, and the US and the EU impose sanctions on it.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, on the right of the image, signs the annexation of Crimea with representatives of the peninsula, on March 18, 2014 in Moscow.

KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV (AFP)

April-May 2014

The events in Crimea are reproduced in the Ukrainian region of Donbas.

In May, separatist groups in Donetsk and Lugansk proclaimed themselves "people's republics" and demanded integration into Russia.

Eastern Ukraine thus becomes the scene of the last war in Europe between pro-Russian separatists, with political and military support from Moscow, and the Ukrainian Army.

July 17, 2014

Buk missile demolishes Russian-made flight MH17 Malaysia Airlines and its 298 occupants killed when the plane flew over the region of Donetsk.

Flowers, letters and tribute gifts at the MH17 crash site in Donetsk in July 2014. MAXIM ZMEYEV (REUTERS)

September 5, 2015

Ukraine, Russia and separatist representatives from Donetsk and Luhansk sign an agreement in Minsk to end the war under the auspices of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

A week-long ceasefire goes into effect.

October 19, 2016

The meeting in Berlin of the Normandy Quartet —sponsored by France and Germany to resolve this conflict— ends without progress.

December 10, 2019

Putin and the new Ukrainian president, Volodímir Zelenski, agree in Paris to resume the peace process in Ukraine.

On December 29, Kiev and separatist representatives exchange 200 prisoners.

01:07

The exchange of 200 prisoners thaws relations between Ukraine and Russia

Photo: Atlas |

Video: Inmates are escorted by Ukrainian pro-Russian rebels in December 2019, near Donetsk (Ukraine).

January-April 2021

Russia begins to move troops to its borders with Ukraine and to the Crimean peninsula.

On April 13, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg defines the deployment as "the largest accumulation of Russian troops since the annexation of Crimea."

August 23, 2021

46 States and organizations, including NATO, sign the Crimean Platform in Kiev, in which the West demands that Russia return the Ukrainian peninsula.

The President of the European Council, Charles Michel, during the summit of the Crimea Platform, in Kiev, on August 23, 2021.- (AFP)

December 3, 2021

The United States believes that Moscow is preparing an invasion of Ukraine "in early 2022," according to

The Washington Post.

According to the US, the deployment of Russia on the borders with that country can reach 175,000 soldiers.

December 16, 2021

EU threatens Russia with "massive sanctions" if it invades Ukraine.

The president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, in an appearance in Brussels on December 16. POOL (Reuters)

11 and January 12, 2022

A meeting between Washington and Moscow —on January 11 in Geneva (Switzerland)— and another held the following day between NATO and Russia ended without progress.

Moscow reports the start of military maneuvers in southern Russia, the Caucasus and Crimea.

A Russian T-72B3 tank fired its cannon during military exercises at the Kadamovskiy firing range in southern Russia's Rostov region on January 12. AP

January 14, 2022

The US warns that Russia is planning "a false flag attack": a sabotage against its forces in eastern Ukraine to attribute it to Kiev and justify an invasion.

The previous morning, a massive cyber attack disabled the Ukrainian government's computer system for hours.

01:20

The Russian army conducts maneuvers near the border with Ukraine

Russian military transport vehicles on Tuesday for maneuvers in Belarus, a country bordering Ucrania.Foto: AFP |

Video: REUTERS

January 18, 2022

Russia sends troops to Belarus for joint exercises near the Ukrainian borders.

Meanwhile, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken begins a new round of meetings that will culminate on Friday with a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

The US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, this Wednesday in Kiev. POOL (REUTERS)

January 24, 2022

The State Department of the United States orders the relatives of diplomats from its embassy in Kiev to leave the country, the threat of an invasion of Russia.

It also authorizes non-essential workers out.

It also calls on the rest of their fellow citizens to consider "the opportunity to leave Ukraine using commercial flights or other private media" since the embassy will not be able to assist them in the event of an attack.

January 27, 2022

China sides with Russia over Ukraine.

The Chinese Foreign Minister, Wang Yi, breaks the administrative silence ―that of “he who is silent, grants”― of his country regarding Russia's threat to Ukraine.

And he does it to make it clear – as clear as diplomatic protocols allow, and just in case there was any doubt – that Beijing's sympathies are with Moscow.

In a telephone conversation with the US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, Wang assures that "Russia's security concerns must be taken into account and receive a solution".

On the other hand, those days Russia staged a remarkable rapprochement with Cuba, its former ally, and it does so in an atmosphere of growing tension.

A man wearing a cap with an American flag in Beijing on January 27. Andy Wong (AP)

January 28, 2022

To try to prevent Europe's energy dependency on Russia and grim supply shortage prospects from adding further tension to the Ukrainian crisis, US President Joe Biden and European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen are holding a joint statement in which they display unity to send a message of calm: there will be no shortages.

January 29, 2022

Joe Biden says he plans to deploy troops to Eastern Europe and NATO countries "in the short term," though it won't be a large number.

The Pentagon puts the number of troops at 8,500 soldiers, who are on "high alert" to move if necessary, as a result of the crisis in Ukraine.

“I will send troops to Eastern Europe and NATO countries at short notice.

Not too many”, assures the American president.

February 3, 2022

The United States and NATO refuse to sign a bilateral treaty on security in Europe with Russia and also close the door to a future incorporation of Ukraine into the Atlantic Alliance.

Those were two of the main demands put forward by Moscow to end the Ukraine crisis.

Instead, both Washington and the Alliance offer Putin to negotiate disarmament agreements and confidence-building measures in different forums (such as the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, OSCE, the US-Russia Strategic Stability Dialogue and the NATO Council). -Russia), whose success conditions the start of a de-escalation in the Russian military threat over Ukraine.

This is how it appears in two confidential documents sent by Washington and NATO to Moscow, to which EL PAÍS had access.

On day 3,

the Kremlin expels the German channel Deutsche Welle from Russia after the Berlin veto of Russia Today.

DW will not be able to broadcast in Russia and will be declared by the authorities as a “foreign agent”.

A camera records in front of the headquarters of the German channel Deutsche Welle on February 3 in Moscow. YURI KOCHETKOV (EFE)

February 7, 2022

Macron asks Putin to avoid war: "The coming days will be decisive".

Separated by a huge table almost as large as the distance away to Moscow today of NATO, the presidents of Russia and France meet in search of an answer to the Ukrainian hornet's nest.

Putin acted as host and listened Emmanuel Macron attempt to achieve a de-escalation to remove the threat of war.

The visit of the French president to Moscow failed to start any concessions from the Kremlin firmly around Ukraine.

February 12, 2022

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs recommends that Spanish residents in Ukraine temporarily leave the country by their own means.

“Spaniards currently in that country are recommended to seriously consider the possibility of temporarily leaving it through the available commercial means, while the current circumstances persist,” the Foreign Ministry statement said.

At the same time, it reiterates the recommendation not to travel to the country "given the volatile security situation."

The day before, the US, as well as other Western countries, had made a similar announcement.

February 15, 2022

The Russian Parliament passes a resolution urging President Vladimir Putin to recognize the independence of the Ukrainian regions of Donetsk and Lugansk, self-proclaimed republics in 2014. The decision of the State Duma (the Russian lower house) to “immediately send” Putin of the initiative is not binding, only the head of the Kremlin can dictate that Russia recognize the independence of the territories, but it offers a contradictory signal of the Russian position: on the same day Moscow announces the withdrawal of part of the troops deployed along with the Ukraine's borders and assures that the answers offered by the United States and NATO to its demands on the security architecture in Europe —and which EL PAÍS exclusively advanced— are an acceptable starting point for negotiations.

Putin and Scholz, during their meeting on February 15 in the Kremlin. Mikhail Klimentyev (AP)

February 17, 2022

The Ukrainian government and Moscow-backed pro-Russian separatists trade accusations of attacks along the Donbas front line.

Thus, artillery shells hit a nursery in the city of Stanytsia Luganska, in the part of the Lugansk region controlled by the Kiev government.

They wounded three civilians, according to the Ukrainian Army, which reported another 47 attacks in twenty points throughout the conflict zone and in which two more people suffered injuries.

In turn, leaders of the secessionist regions of Donetsk and Lugansk denounced attacks by Ukrainian forces.

February 18, 2022

The United States intelligence services reported that the Kremlin had already ordered the invasion of Ukraine, according to sources from the Joe Biden Administration cited by

The New York Times

and

The Washington Post

.

This fact is what led the president to point out, for the first time, that he considered that Vladimir Putin had already "made the decision" to attack the former Soviet republic.

That same day, the pro-Russian separatists gave the order to evacuate civilians in Donbas.

A resident of Stanytsia Luganska, in the eastern part controlled by Kiev, looks at her house destroyed by a bombing on February 18. ALEKSEY FILIPPOV (AFP)

February 21, 2022

Putin signs the recognition of the pro-Russian Ukrainian regions of Donetsk and Lugansk and orders the sending of Russian troops to the area.

The reaction of the West is not long in coming.

The EU condemns the movement as a whole and announces the launch of the mechanism to activate strong sanctions against Russia.

The US makes a similar move.

Putin's announcement intensifies the conflict in Ukraine and raises tension with the West, which was already at a critical point.

Putin, who had fervently defended the peace agreements for Donbas, dynamites part of the diplomatic action with this signature.

February 22, 2022

Germany suspends the certification of the controversial Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline after the announcement of Moscow's recognition of the breakaway regions of Ukraine.

Berlin announces that it will stop the approval of the infrastructure, controlled by the Russian gas giant Gazprom.

Chancellor Scholz announces that he has asked his Minister for the Economy, Robert Habeck, to take the necessary administrative measures to paralyze the gas pipeline certification process.

“Without this certification, Nord Stream cannot go into operation,” says Scholz.

Workers on the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, in an image taken on a pipeline in 2019 near the Russian town of Kingisepp. Anton Vaganov (Reuters)

Follow all the international information on

Facebook

and

Twitter

, or in

our weekly newsletter

.

Source: elparis

All news articles on 2022-02-22

You may like

News/Politics 2024-04-03T17:28:55.246Z

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.