Northern Eurasia 2014: Crimean Crisis

Successors of the Soviet Union
1816–1914 Late Tsarist Russia
1914–1918 The Great War and the Revolution
1918–1921 The Russian Civil War: The White Phase
1921–1927 The Russian Civil War: The Green Phase
1927–1941 The Soviet Union under Stalin
1941–1943 The Great Patriotic War: Germany Invades
1943–1945 The Great Patriotic War: Germany at Bay
1945–1991 Soviet Superpower
1991–pres Successors of the Soviet Union
Crimean Crisis
6 Sep 1991 Baltic Indepedence
12 Dec 1991 Belavezha Accords
25 Dec 1991 Dissolution of the Soviet Union
4 Oct 1993 Russian Constitutional Crisis
18 Jun 1995 First Chechen War
6 Feb 2000 Second Chechen War
13 Nov 2001 US invasion of Afghanistan
23 Mar 2005 Color Revolutions
7 Aug 2008 South Ossetia War
27 Feb 2014 Crimean Crisis
30 Jun 2014 Donbass Rebellion
30 Sep 2015 Syrian Civil War
9 Nov 2016 Russian Electoral Interventions
15 Jan 2020 Northern Eurasia Today
In 2010 Ukraine elected a pro-Russian president, only to overthrow him in a revolution four years later when he rejected reforms and closer ties with Europe in favor of a Russian loan. Russia responded by massing troops on the Ukrainian border and providing covert military support for a separatist revolt in the Ukrainian republic of Crimea.