• Physical Sciences
  • Optical Devices

The Russian-Ukrainian war: An explanatory essay through the theoretical lens of international relations.

Rokoua Mataiciwa

Discover the world's research

  • 25+ million members
  • 160+ million publication pages
  • 2.3+ billion citations

Anders Wivel

  • Maria Bengtsson

France Meslé

  • James L Richardson
  • Chin J Int Polit
  • Zhang Ruizhuang
  • Sven Gunnar Simonsen
  • REV INT STUD

Matthew Rendall

  • Recruit researchers
  • Join for free
  • Login Email Tip: Most researchers use their institutional email address as their ResearchGate login Password Forgot password? Keep me logged in Log in or Continue with Google Welcome back! Please log in. Email · Hint Tip: Most researchers use their institutional email address as their ResearchGate login Password Forgot password? Keep me logged in Log in or Continue with Google No account? Sign up

Foreign Policy Research Institute

A nation must think before it acts.

Foreign Policy Research Institute

  • America and the West
  • Middle East
  • National Security
  • Central Asia
  • China & Taiwan
  • Expert Commentary
  • Conversations
  • Intern Corner
  • Newsletters
  • Press Contact
  • Upcoming Events
  • People, Politics, and Prose
  • Briefings, Booktalks, and Conversations
  • The Benjamin Franklin Award
  • Event and Lecture Archive
  • Ties That Bind: NATO at 75 and Beyond
  • Chain Reaction
  • Bear Market Brief
  • Baltic Ways
  • Report in Short
  • Our Mission
  • Board of Trustees
  • Board of Advisors
  • Research Programs
  • Audited Financials
  • PA Certificate of Charitable Registration
  • Corporate Partnership

Understanding Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine

Understanding Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine

  • Aaron Stein
  • Maia Otarashvili
  • February 24, 2022
  • Eurasia Program

Introduction 

On February 24, 2022 Russia began its invasion of Ukraine. 

In times of crisis, balanced, in-depth analysis and trusted expertise is paramount. The Foreign Policy Research Institute (FPRI) remains committed in its mission to provide expert analysis to policy makers and the public on the most pressing foreign policy challenges.

To help you understand this evolving crisis, we have compiled a list of publications, event recordings, and podcasts to help explain current events in Ukraine. FPRI has also included resources about other protracted conflicts, the neighboring Baltic states, and the role of NATO in managing the fallout from the war.

If you have not already done so, be sure to follow the FPRI fellows listed below for further reading and resources. For press inquiries, please contact [email protected]

Russian Aggression in Ukraine & Russian Defense 

  • Moscow’s Mind Games: Finding Ideology in Putin’s Russia – February 2023
  • The Confrontation with Russia and US Grand Strategy – February 2023
  • Tanks a Lot (Well, Actually Not That Many for Ukraine) – February 2023
  • Wagner Group Redefined: Threats and Responses – January 2023
  • ‘Let’s Make a Deal’? Ukraine and the Poor Prospects for Negotiations with Putin – January 2023
  • Will Russia Survive Until 2084? – December 2022 
  • How the Battle for the Donbas Shaped Ukraine’s Success – December 2022 
  • Ecological Path to Peace Is Possible in Ukraine – November 2022 
  • Putin’s Philosophers: Reading Vasily Grossman in the Kremlin – November 2022 
  • The Russian-Ukrainian War Triggers an Energy Revolution – September 2022 
  • Ukraine’s Defense Industry and the Prospect of a Long War – September 2022
  • Understanding Russia’s Efforts at Technological Sovereignty – September 2022
  • Watching the War on Russian Television – August 2022
  • War Crimes in Ukraine: In Search of a Response – August 2022
  • Why Russian Elites Are Standing By Putin – July 2022
  • Climate Action Meets Energy Security: The Russian Invasion of Ukraine Adds a New Dimension to Energy Transition – June 2022
  • The War’s Impact on Russia’s Economy and Ukrainian Politics – June 2022
  • The Evolving Political-Military Aims in the War in Ukraine After 100 Days   – June 2022
  • How Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine has Affected Kazakh Politics – June 2022
  • Russia’s Use of Cyberattacks: Lessons from the Second Ukraine War – June 2022
  • What’s Next for Ukraine’s (and its Neighbors’) Domestic and Foreign Policy? – June 2022
  • Reviving the Prospects for Coercive Diplomacy in Ukraine – May 2022
  • Food Prices, Elections, and the Wagner Group in Africa – April 2022
  • Appraising the War in Ukraine and Likely Outcomes – April 2022
  • Ukraine War Sparks Suspicion over Russia’s Designs on Kazakhstan – April 2022
  • Do Russians Really “Long for War” in Ukraine? – March 2022
  • Kadyrov’s Ukraine Gamble – March 2022
  • Lukashenka’s Fatal Mistake – March 2022
  • What We Can Learn about Russian Strategy from Ivan III – March 2022
  • The Russian Navy in the Russia-Ukraine War Scare – February 2022
  • How Will China Respond to the Russia-Ukraine Crisis? – January 2022
  • Moscow’s Compellence Strategy – January 2022
  • Zapad 2021 and Russia’s Potential for Warfighting – September 2021 
  • Russia’s Coercive Diplomacy – August 2021 
  • Russia’s Forever Wars: Syria and Pursuit of Great Power Status – September 2021
  • Understanding Russia’s Cyber Strategy – July 2021
  • Russia’s Nuclear Strategy: A Show of Strength Despite COVID-19 – May 2021
  • Even Thieves Need a Safe: Why the Putin Regime Causes, Deplores, and Yet Relies on Capital Flight for its Survival – November 2021
  • Five Years of War in the Donbas – October 2019 
  • Coal Mines, Land Mines and Nuclear Bombs: The Environmental Cost of the War in Eastern Ukraine – September 2019
  • ​​ Volodymyr Zelensky: Ukraine’s Servant of the People? – September 2019 
  • Russia’s Tragic Great Power Politics – March 2019
  • Ukraine’s Presidential Election and the Future of its Foreign Policy – March 2019
  • Bond of War: Russian Geo-Economics in Ukraine’s Sovereign Debt Restructuring – September 2018
  • The Ukrainian Military: From Degradation to Renewal – August 2018
  • Reflecting on a Year of War – February 2023
  • Will Russia Survive Until 2084? – January 2023
  • The Russia-Ukraine War and Implications for Azerbaijan – July 2022
  • Russia’s War in Ukraine: Uncompromising Objectives and an Uncertain Future – June 2022 
  • The State of Play in Ukraine – May 2022
  • Russia’s War in Ukraine: Nukes, Negotiations, and Neutrality – April 2022 
  • Russia’s War in Ukraine: Implications for China  – March 2022
  • What the West Needs to Know About Russia’s War in Ukraine – March 2022
  • Russia’s War in Ukraine: Analyzing the Western Military and Economic Response – March 2022
  • Russia’s War in Ukraine: The Humanitarian Crisis and Prospects for Resolution – March 2022
  • Russia’s Long Shadow and the Future of Europe – February 2022
  • Russia-Ukraine Tensions: Will Moscow’s Compellence Strategy Work? – January 2022 
  • Interview with Russian Dissident Ilya & Former Duma Member Ilya Ponomarev – January 2022
  • Russia’s Coercive Diplomacy  – August 2021
  • FPRI Special Briefing: U.S. Sanctions Against Russia – March 2021
  • FPRI Special Briefing: Alexeyi Navalny and U.S.-Russia Relations – February 2021
  • Don’t Mention the War – April 2023
  • Torn in the USA: How Important is the War in Ukraine for the United States? – March 2023
  • Ukraine One Year In: The Helpers – March 2023
  • Reflecting on a Year of War – February 2023 
  • Mobilize This – January 2023
  • War in Ukraine: A Firsthand Account – December 2022 
  • Public Opinion in Russia: What Do We Know, What Can We Know? – November 2022
  • Russia’s War in Ukraine: The Strategic Picture – September 2022
  • Russia’s Manpower Conundrum in Ukraine – May 2022
  • The Air War Over Ukraine – March 2022 
  • Debating a No Fly Zone: The Risk of Escalation with Moscow – March 2022
  • Examining Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine – March 2022
  • The Risk of War: Russia’s Options for War in Ukraine – February 2022
  • The Risk of War in Ukraine: Moscow’s Military Posture – February 2022
  • Tensions Over Ukraine: Russia’s Rationale for War – February 2022
  • Russian Perceptions of Military AI and Automation – February 2022
  • Russia’s Anti-Satellite Weapon: Understanding Russia’s ASAT Test – November 2021
  • How Do You Solve a Problem Like Navalny? – September 2021
  • Russia’s Coercive Diplomacy: Looking Back at the Ukraine Crisis – August 2021
  • Russian-Turkish Relations and Their Implications for the West – May 2021
  • Learning From Our Adversaries: Russian Aerial Operations in Syria – April 2021

Protracted Conflicts: Moldova and Georgia

  • War As a Neighbor: Moldova and the Challenges of Facing Russian Aggression in Ukraine – April 2023
  • Strategic Connectivity in the Black Sea: A Focus on Georgia – December 2021
  • Taking Stock of U.S. Military Assistance to Georgia – December 2021 
  • Georgia’s Democracy is in Trouble, It’s Time for Closer Engagement – November 2021 
  • Russia’ Permanent War Against Georgia – March 2021
  • Georgia’s Doomed Deep-Sea Port Ambitions: Geopolitics of the Canceled Anaklia Project – October 2020
  • Anatomy of a Fraud: The Moldovan Parliamentary Elections – March 2019
  • Geopolitical Games Expected Ahead of Moldova’s 2018 Elections – October 2017 
  • The Future of US Strategic Interests in the South Caucasus: Challenges and Opportunities for the Biden Administration – October 2021
  • Tug of War in the Black Sea: Defending NATO’s Eastern Flank – July 2021
  • The Turkish Veto: Why Erdogan Is Blocking Finland and Sweden’s Path to NATO – March 2023
  • Article 5 for the Next Decade of NATO – December 2022 
  • The Art of the Possible: Minimizing Risks as a New European Order Takes Shape – November 2022 
  • The Baltics Predicted the Suspension of the Ukraine Grain Deal — and Contributed to its Resumption – November 2022
  • Good and Bad Neighbors: Perceptions in Latvian Society – September 2022
  • Europe’s Wait for Turkmen Natural Gas Continues – September 2022 
  • From the Migrant Crisis to Aggression in Ukraine: Belarus is Still on the Baltic Agenda – July 2022 
  • Two Less Obvious Lessons for Baltic Defense from Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine – June 2022
  • The Baltic Road to Energy Independence from Russia Is Nearing Completion – May 2022
  • America Needs a Comprehensive Compellence Strategy Against Russia – April 2022
  • Baltic Sea Mining as an Extension of the Russian Gray Zone – April 2022
  • The Significance of the Turkish Straits to the Russian Navy – March 2022
  • Fear, Solidarity, and Calls for Further Action in the Baltics as Russia Invades Ukraine – March 2022
  • Latvia’s First Response to Russia’s War in Ukraine – March 2022
  • Turkey’s Careful and Risky Fence-Sitting between Ukraine and Russia – February 2022
  • At the Double: Poland’s Military Expansion – January 2022 
  • Turkey’s Response to the Russia-Ukraine Crisis – January 2022 
  • Afghanistan was a Turbulent NATO Proving Ground for the Baltic States – December 2021
  • Crowded Pond: NATO and Russian Maritime Power in the Baltic Sea – December 2021 
  • Baltic Perspectives on U.S. and Transatlantic Nuclear Negotiations with Russia – October 2021
  • Namejs vs. Zapad: Military Exercises on Both Sides of the Frontline – September 2021 
  • Reconceptualizing Lithuania’s Importance for U.S Foreign Policy – July 2021
  • Russian-Turkish Relations and Their Implications for the West – April 2021
  • Nord Stream 2: Germany’s Faustian Bargain with Gazprom and Why it Matters for the Baltics – December 2020
  • Cooperation, Competition, and Compartmentalization: Russian-Turkish Relations and Their Implications for the West – May 2021
  • America’s Approach to the Three Seas Initiative – May 2021
  • The Baltic States as NATO Heavyweights – March 2023 
  • The Future of European Energy – February 2023
  • What’s Happening With Russian Speakers in Latvia? – January 2023
  • We Can France if We Want To: What Does Paris Want for Ukraine and Europe? – November 2022 
  • Giorgia on My Mind: Italy’s Rightward Turn and Its Implications – October 2022 
  • Stuck in the Magyar: Why is Hungary the “Bad Boy” of Europe? – October 2022 
  • Bloc Party: The EU and the War in Ukraine – September 2022 
  • The View from Ukraine: An interview with Dr. Volodymyr Dubovyk – August 2022 
  • What Does Erdogan, Erdo-want? – July 2022
  • Baltic Power Hour – July 2022
  • No More Niinistö Nice Guy: Has Finland’s Security Calculus Changed? – June 2022
  • Swedening the Deal: Stockholm Turns to NATO – June 2022
  • The Energy Trilemma: An interview with Dr. Andrei Belyi – May 2022
  • The Sejm Difference? Poland and the New, Old Europe – May 2022
  • Bundes-where? Germany’s Politics and Security in Changing Times – May 2022
  • Ukrainian Refugees in Latvia: An interview with Agnese Lāce  – April 2022
  • Who Speaks For Eastern Europe? – February 2022
  • Foreign Minister Edgars Rinkēvičs on Latvia’s Foreign Policy Challenges – November 2021 
  • Reframing the Baltic states: An Interview with Dr. Andres Kasekamp – October 2021

FPRI Experts to Follow 

  • Rob Lee – @RALee85   Eurasia Senior Fellow, PhD Student at King’s College, London
  • Bob Hamilton – @BobHam88   Black Sea Fellow, Research Professor at the U.S. Army War College  
  • Maia Otarashvili – @MaiaVanRijn Deputy Director of Research
  • Aaron Stein – @aaronstein1  
  • Chris Miller – @crmiller1 Director of Eurasia Program, Assistant Professor at The Fletcher School, Tufts University
  • Nikolas Gvosdev @FPRI_Orbis   Editor, Orbis: FPRI’s Journal of World Affairs, Captain Jerome E. Levy Chair in Economic Geography and National Security at the U.S. Naval War College
  • Clint Watts – @SelectedWisdom Distinguished Research Fellow , National Security Contributor for NBC News and MSNBC
  • Indra Ekmanis – @indraekmanis Baltic Sea Fellow and Editor of the Baltic Bulletin
  • Una Bergmane @UnaBergmane Baltic Sea Fellow, Researcher at the University of Helsinki
  • Mitchell Orenstein @m_orenstein   Eurasia Senior Fellow, Professor of East European and Russian Studies, University of Pennsylvania
  • Stephanie Petrella @sdpetrella  Eurasia Fellow
  • Sara Ashbaugh @sara_ashbaugh Editor in Chief, BMB Russia
  • Eilish Hart @EilishHart    Eurasia F ellow, Eurasia Program
  • Clara Marchaud @ClaraMarchaud Editor of BMB Ukraine

You May Also be Interested in

Engaging russia over syria: managing peripheral conflict and narrowing interests.

  Executive Summary The United States is examining how to narrow core objectives in the Middle East to focus...

Russia’s Forever Wars: Syria and the Pursuit of Great Power Status

September 2021 marks the sixth anniversary of the Russian Federation’s intervention in the Syrian civil war. A patient, flexible...

Zapad 2021 and Russia’s Potential for Warfighting

  According to press information, on 10 September 2021, the Russian Armed Forces plan to start the one-week-long active...

A Ukrainian military vehicle passing through a destroyed Russian border post this month, with destroyed structures around it.

Deception and a Gamble: How Ukrainian Troops Invaded Russia

Planned in secrecy, the incursion was a bold move to upend the war’s dynamics and put Moscow on the defensive — a gambit that could also leave Ukraine exposed.

A Ukrainian military vehicle passing through a destroyed Russian border post this month. Credit... David Guttenfelder for The New York Times

Supported by

  • Share full article

By Kim Barker Anton Troianovski Andrew E. Kramer Constant Méheut Alina Lobzina Eric Schmitt and Sanjana Varghese

  • Published Aug. 13, 2024 Updated Aug. 14, 2024

The scenes were decidedly Russian. A Gazprom facility. Flags with the country’s signature three horizontal stripes of white, blue and red. A Pyatyorochka supermarket.

The soldiers posting the videos, verified by The New York Times, were Ukrainian, almost giddily showing off just how easily they had pushed over the border and through Russian lines of defense in the past week.

In the Russian town of Sverdlikovo , a Ukrainian soldier climbed onto another’s shoulders, broke off the wooden post anchored to a town council building and threw the Russian flag to the ground. In Daryino , a town five miles to the west, other soldiers also grabbed a Russian flag. “Just throw it away,” a Ukrainian soldier said, grinning, as another flexed his muscles.

Video player loading

On Aug. 6, Ukraine launched an audacious military offensive , planned and executed in secrecy, with the aim of upending the dynamics of a war it has appeared to be losing, town by town, as Russian troops have ground forward in the east. The operation surprised even Kyiv’s closest allies, including the United States, and has pushed the limits of how Western military equipment would be permitted to be used inside Russian territory.

For Russia, it was a moment nearly as shocking as the mercenary Yevgeny V. Prigozhin’s march on Moscow in June 2023: the vaunted security state that President Vladimir V. Putin had built crumbled in the face of the surprise attack, failing in its basic task of protecting its citizens. And the unwritten social contract that has largely accompanied Mr. Putin’s 30-month campaign — that most Russians could get on with their normal lives even as he waged war — was cast into question anew.

Held by Ukraine

as of Aug. 13

Sverdlikovo

Sievierodonetsk

Area controlled

Zaporizhzhia

Sea of Azov

Ukrainian incursion

Source: Institute for the Study of War with American Enterprise Institute’s Critical Threats Project

By Veronica Penney

We are having trouble retrieving the article content.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and  log into  your Times account, or  subscribe  for all of The Times.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber?  Log in .

Want all of The Times?  Subscribe .

Advertisement

Hindenburg alleges India market regulator chief held stake in offshore funds used by Adani Group

  • Medium Text

The logo of the Adani Group is seen on the facade of its Corporate House on the outskirts of Ahmedabad, India

  • Adani Enterprises Ltd Follow
  • Adani Group Follow
  • Hindenburg Research LLC Follow

Sign up here.

Reporting by Jayshree.P. Upadhyay; Additional reporting by Ira Dugal, Neha Arora and Jahnavi Nidumolu; Editing by Jacqueline Wong, William Mallard, David Goodman and Toby Chopra

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. , opens new tab

Branding is displayed for mobile company Three at one of its stores in London

Faulty power cable may have caused Greece's worst wildfire this year, sources say

Investigators suspect a faulty power cable may have caused Greece's worst wildfire this year, said sources close to a probe over the blaze that killed one woman and torched 10,000 hectares near Athens, covering a total area about the size of Paris.

Israeli tank manouvers near the Israel-Gaza border, in Israel

IMAGES

  1. 'Russia strikes Ukraine': Front covers of newspapers around the world

    research paper on russia ukraine war pdf

  2. Book offers valuable insights into Russia-Ukraine war

    research paper on russia ukraine war pdf

  3. Powerful newspaper front pages day after Russia invades Ukraine

    research paper on russia ukraine war pdf

  4. Key findings from our poll on the Russia-Ukraine conflict

    research paper on russia ukraine war pdf

  5. U.S. Intelligence Document on Russian Military Movements

    research paper on russia ukraine war pdf

  6. 10 months of Ukraine's war for its independence: a summaryEuromaidan

    research paper on russia ukraine war pdf

VIDEO

  1. Ukraine War: Why is Russia attacking Lviv?

  2. Ukraine War: How the conflict has developed over the past year

  3. Russia's Invasion of Ukraine: An Assessment of the State of the War

  4. Has Russia achieved its war objectives in Ukraine?

  5. How Russia Prepared for Ukraine’s Counteroffensive

  6. How is the Russia-Ukraine war affecting the environment?

COMMENTS

  1. (PDF) The Russo-Ukrainian Conflict

    should be considered as the immediate cause of the current war between Russia and Ukraine. Putin's decision to annex the Crimea in March 2014 and then support the pro-Russian. demonstrations in ...

  2. (PDF) The Russian-Ukrainian war: An explanatory essay through the

    PDF | This essay seeks to explains Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022, along with the subsequent response made by western countries, through the lens... | Find, read and cite all the research ...

  3. Russia's War Against Ukraine: Context, Causes, and Consequences

    She notes that while Russia's war against Ukraine has reinforced the EU's commitment to support these "in-between" states, it has also resulted in increased pressure from Moscow. ... "The Minsk Conundrum: Western Policy and Russia's War in Eastern Ukraine." Chatham House Research Paper, May 2020. https://www.chathamhouse.org ...

  4. Russia's War in Ukraine

    Since February 24, 2022, Russia has been waging a war of aggression in Ukraine and blatantly attacking civilians and civilian infrastructure. The recent shift in Russian strategy to a war of ...

  5. PDF The Ukraine Russia Conflict

    www.usip.org. , NW • Washington, DC 20037 • 202.457.1700 • fax 202.429.6063About the RepoRtAs the Ukraine crisis escalated, staff at the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP) with experience in the region mobilized for a comprehensive conflict analysis with the aim of identifying plausible conflict scenarios and the forces and factors that ...

  6. Russia's War Against Ukraine: Context, Causes, and Consequences

    Intermediate Causes: Kyiv's Westward Drift and Russia's Dwindling Influence Inside Ukraine. The intermediate causes of Russia's 2022 attack are Kyiv's increasingly pro-Western stance and the loss of Russian influ-ence to shape Ukrainian politics, and thus its foreign-policy orientation, from within.

  7. PDF A Strategic Assessment Two Years into the Conflict

    LAND WARFARE PAPER 158 - THE RUSSO-UKRAINIAN WAR: A STRATEGIC ASSESSMENT. ... His research and writing focus on the theory of war and warfare, proxy war, future armed conflict, urban warfare, armored warfare ... Russia and Ukraine are locked in a long war of attri-tion, which is fueling the stalemate to which Zaluzhny refers and Watling ...

  8. PDF Conflict in Ukraine: A timeline (current conflict, 2022-present)

    Ukraine between Ukrainian Government forces and Russia-backed separatists. This paper provides a timeline of the major events that happened in the conflict in Ukraine since the 2022 Russian invasion. A timeline covering events during the prior eight years is available in Commons Library research briefing CBP-9476, Conflict in Ukraine: A timeline

  9. PDF Latest analyses of Russia's war on Ukraine

    Latest analyses of Russia's war on Ukraine. Russia's armed forces have increased their bombardment and shelling of Ukrainian cities, stepping up the war launched on 24 February. However, new talks between Moscow and Kiev about a future status for Ukraine outside NATO have raised hopes about a possible breakthrough in the biggest military ...

  10. Russia-Ukraine War: Harbinger of a Global Shift A Perspective from Ukraine

    l, Egypt, and Algeria. For Ukraine, the Russian invasionRussia-Ukraine Waraccelerated the process of switching off Russia's energy grid syste. and integrating into the European energy network, which happened in March.Th. global oil market was particularly hit by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. A surge in global oil prices, which had begun ...

  11. PDF c Russia's War in Ukraine

    Ukraine's determined resistance of the massive sudden offensive is without doubt the main cause of the setbacks experienced by Russia, but, as the war continues into its seventh month (the moment of writing), the depth of misjudgment underpinning the decision to launch the invasion becomes all the more astounding.

  12. Russia's War Against Ukraine: The Whole Story on JSTOR

    On 24 February 2022, Russia went to war against Ukraine. Throwing caution to the wind and shocking even his closest associates, Russian President Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin, just four months and two weeks after turning sixty-nine, ordered an all-out onslaught on the country, with which Russia had been engaged in a smouldering proxy war ever ...

  13. Understanding Russia's Invasion of Ukraine

    On February 24, 2022 Russia began its invasion of Ukraine. In times of crisis, balanced, in-depth analysis and trusted expertise is paramount. The Foreign Policy Research Institute (FPRI) remains committed in its mission to provide expert analysis to policy makers and the public on the most pressing foreign policy challenges.

  14. PDF Conflict in Ukraine: A timeline (2014

    27 February 2014: Dozens of pro-Russia gunmen seize . government buildings in the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea . and raise the Russian flag. The move comes a day after . President Putin put Russia's military on high alert. 1 March 2014: Russia's parliament approves President Putin's request for Russian forces to be used in Ukraine.

  15. Full article: War in Ukraine

    War in Ukraine. On February 24, 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine. After the 2008 war in Georgia, the 2014 annexation of Crimea, and the continuous conflict in Donbas for nearly eight years, Russia's massive military buildup in the fall of 2021, including in Belarus, the actual invasion should not have come as a surprise. For many of us, it did.

  16. PDF Russia's war on Ukraine: Background

    4 July 2022. After months of threatening military manoeuvres and negotiations in bad faith, on 24 February 2022, Russia launched an all-out assault on Ukraine. European leaders and the European Parliament have condemned this unprovoked and unjustified military aggression in the strongest possible terms, as it grossly violates international law ...

  17. The Ukraine/Russia conflict: Geopolitical and international business

    Russia was perceived in the global economy. In 2001, Putin focused on a European integration strategy in terms of unifying European cul-ture (Haukkala, 2015). This strategy changed with the 2022 invasion into Ukraine by Russia that has been perceived as a threat to global peace and security.

  18. PDF Ukraine: Background, Conflict with Russia, and U.S. Policy

    This report provides an overview of Ukraine's domestic politics and reform challenges; Ukraine's conflict with Russia; the Ukrainian economy; and Ukraine's relations with the United States, the European Union (EU), and NATO. Political Developments Ukraine, an independent country since 1991, is one of the largest successors, by territory,

  19. PDF Understanding Russia Actions in Ukraine as the Crime of Genocide

    Russia's aggression against Ukraine began in 2014, when Russia unlawfully annexed Crimea and started the proxy war in the Donbas and Luhansk regions in the east of Ukraine.1On 24 February 2022, Russia commenced its overt full-scale invasion of Ukraine, thus escalating the war that had been ongoing for eight years.

  20. PDF August 2024 Frederick W. Kagan and Kimberly Kagan with Mason Clark

    Riley Bailey is a Russia Analyst on the Russia/Ukraine portfolio at ISW. His research interests include Russia's relationship with Central Asia, Russian hybrid warfare, and Russia's role in Great Power Competition. He graduated from Georgetown University in May of 2022 with an M.A. in Security Studies and a concen-tration in Intelligence.

  21. PDF 202203171300 An Analysis of the RussiaUkraine Conflict TLPWHITE

    2022 Conflict. On February 24, Russia invaded Ukraine. In response, Ukraine declared a 30-day state of emergency as cyberattacks knocked out government institutions and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy declared martial law. The foreign minister called the attacks "a full-scale invasion" and called on the world to "stop Putin.".

  22. Russia's War Aims in Ukraine

    In this report, the authors analyze Russia's official public narrative regarding its war aims in Ukraine in the first year of its full-scale invasion. They begin by investigating Russian strategic writings and pre-2022 Russian practice of objective-setting when using force abroad.

  23. PDF Russian War Against Ukraine Lessons Learned Curriculum Guide

    Since Russia's fully-fledged invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, NATO Allies have provided more than a hundred billion dollars of humanitarian, financial and military support to ensure Ukraine's enduring freedom and the security of the Euro-Atlantic. Putin's illegal aggression means NATO-Ukraine relations are closer than ever.

  24. PDF The Russian Air War and Ukrainian Requirements for Air Defence

    Russian Su-35S and Su-30SM fighters flew numerous high-altitude CAPs at around 30,000 ft in support of the medium-altitude Russian strike aircraft operating widely during the first three days. They scored multiple air-to-air kills against Ukrainian Mig-29 and Su-27 fighters, as well. 17.

  25. Rethinking Ukraine's culture and history during the war

    3. A New York Times editorial suggested on 19 May 2022 that a decisive military victory was not realistic and a negotiated peace involving hard decisions might be needed. Former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger at the World Economic Forum in Davos proposed that Ukraine should let Russia keep Crimea, which it annexed in 2014, see "Ukraine Savages Idea."

  26. How Ukrainian Troops Invaded Russia

    The governor of Russia's Kursk region said on Monday that Ukraine controls 28 towns and villages there. More than 132,000 people have been evacuated from nearby areas, Russian officials said.

  27. A New Era of Financial Warfare Has Begun

    Nearly two and a half years into the war, support for aid from the United States and Europe is flagging, Kyiv's forces are exhausted, Russia's economy is still looking fairly robust, and a new ...

  28. Kairos of resilience: Ukraine's cultural response to Russia's invasion

    Alexandre Zaezjev is a film and media researcher, course lecturer, and multimedia artist currently pursuing his doctoral studies at McGill University. Ever since completing his MA thesis on the role of new media in the Ukrainian Euromaidan Revolution at the University of Geneva, Switzerland, he has been delving into the cultural and political landscape of the post-Soviet region.

  29. Hindenburg alleges India market regulator chief held stake in offshore

    Ukraine shot down 17 out of 23 Russia-launched drones during an overnight attack which damaged infrastructure in several regions, the country's air force and local authorities said on Wednesday.

  30. Impacts of the Russia-Ukraine war on energy prices: evidence from OECD

    This study applies the PSM-DID approach to investigate whether the energy price has been impacted by the Russia-Ukraine war among OECD countries during 1999-2022. ... it is feasible to analyze the treatment group and the control group by using the difference-difference method for the war evaluation in this paper. In this paper, the treatment ...