Category: Security and Intelligence
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Happy Sunday to all! 🖤
Since the implosion of that state in 1991, Ukraine has developed a vibrant, if often troubled, democracy. For an increasingly dictatorial Russian political elite, including but not limited to Vladimir Putin, Ukraine has appeared more and more threatening. Humiliated by the degradation of Russia’s international standing, feeling betrayed by an expanding NATO and anxious about democratic revolutions in the former Soviet space, Putin and his allies have increasingly retreated into a resentful ultra-nationalism. Dreams of past imperial glory stand in place of any attempt to solve the problems of the present.
Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine came as a shock to most of the world. In order to understand why this happened, a growing army of self-declared experts provided explanations often mis-representing the history of Ukraine and of Russia and mis-representing the pre-history of this war and the role of outside forces. As a historian of the Soviet Union and its successor states, Mark felt compelled to set the record straight. Watching this talk will provide insight into one of the most geopolitically significant and complex conflicts of our time.
Previous FBI specialist Charles McGonigal is set to confess for a situation denouncing the specialist who was engaged with the examination concerning the Trump lobby’s supposed connections to Russia, of illicitly working for a Russian oligarch.
The fifth episode of “Ukraine’s True History” explains how Russia stole Ukrainian history and uses it to justify its all-out war.
Read the story here: https://kyivindependent.com/how-russia-steals-and-rewrites-ukrainian-history-to-justify-its-claims-in-ukraine/
This material is funded by the Institute for War and Peace Reporting within the program “Ukraine Forward: Amplifying Analysis.”
The program is financed by the MATRA Programme of the Embassy of the Netherlands in Ukraine.
Producer: Natalia Chekotun
Scriptwriters: Oleg Sukhov, Natalia Chekotun
Story editors: Oleksiy Sorokin, Toma Istomina
Illustration: Alina Radomska
Animation, sound: Anastasia Nevmerzhytska
Narrator: Anthony Bartaway
Project coordinator: Anna Yakutenko
00:00 – Intro
00:42 – Where was Kyivan Rus located?
00:56 – Russia and Kyivan Rus
01:17 – The word “Rus”
01:25 – The word “Rus” and Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia
01:44 – The word “Rus” and Moscow Tsardom
02:17 – Is Ukraine or Russia the main successor of Kyivan Rus?
02:37 – Little Russia, Great Russia and White Russia
02:57 – The term “Little Rus”
03:06 – Why does Moscow call Ukraine “Little Russia”?
03:17 – The name “Ukraine”
03:33 – What is “New Russia”?
04:27 – Is Odesa “historically Russian”?
04:37 – Monument to Russian Empress Catherine II in Odesa
04:57 – Greek settlements in Odesa
05:10 – The town of Hadhibey
05:39 – Is Kharkiv “historically Russian”?
05:55 – Kharkiv and Sloboda Cossacks
06:08 – Is “Crimea” historically Russian?
06:20 – Greeks and Crimean Tatars
06:52 – Russia appropriates Ukrainian scientists and artists
07:02 – Writer Mykola Gogol
07:45 – Scientist Serhiy Korolov
08:34 – Aviation engineer Ihor Sikorsky
09:16 – Russia appropriating Ukrainian history
09:26 – Ukraine reclaims its history
09:42 – Kuindzhi, Repin and Malevych recognized as Ukrainian artists
Photos and videos used in the story:
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
Ivan Honchar Museum
YouTube/Odesa City Council
facebook/Kharkiv City Council
facebook/Serhiy Hutsaliuk
Anton Novoderezhkin/TASS
Kremlin.ru
telegram/Margarita Simonyan
YouTube/Vladimir Rodin
YouTube/Anatoliy Myrhorod
YouTube/Andrey Kochurov
YouTube/Zhytomyr
YouTube/Dark Skies
YouTube/Oleg Prylutskyi
Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images
blogpost.com
Kyiv International Airport
Kyiv Polytechnic Institute
facebook/Sergíy Kyslytsya
facebook/Oksana Semenik
Dean Conger/Corbis via Getty Images
AFP via Getty Images
YouTube/Ukraine & Volyn history
British Film Institute
Getty Images
In the first episode of the Kyiv Independent’s new series – “Ukraine’s True History” – we explain and debunk the 10 most common misconceptions about Ukrainian history that Russian propaganda has been spreading for years.
This material is funded by the Institute for War and Peace Reporting within the program “Ukraine Forward: Amplifying Analysis.”
The program is financed by the MATRA Programme of the Embassy of the Netherlands in Ukraine.
Producer and scriptwriter: Iryna Matviyishyn
Illustration, animation, sound: Hanna Naronina
Narrator: Anthony Bartaway
Story editors: Oleksiy Sorokin, Olga Rudenko, Toma Istomina
Opener: Illustration by Alina Radomska. Motion design by Anastasia Nevmerzhytska.
Project coordinator: Anna Yakutenko
00:00 – Intro
00:35 – Myth 1: Moscow is the legitimate successor of Kyivan Rus
01:35 – Myth 2: Ukrainians and Russians are one people
02:50 – Myth 3: Crimea is Russian
04:10 – Myth 4: The Holodomor famine was result of bad harvest
05:37 – Myth 5: Communism was a good idea with bad implementation
06:40 – Myth 6: Ukrainians are ‘Nazis’
07:51 – Myth 7: Russia liberated Europe from the Nazis
08:38 – Myth 8: Ukraine is divided: east vs. west
09:27 – Myth 9: Ukraine is a project of the West
10:21 – Myth 10: Ukraine is culturally poor
Read the story here: https://kyivindependent.com/10-popular-misconceptions-about-ukrainian-history-debunked/
Support the Kyiv Independent on Patreon – https://www.patreon.com/kyivindependent
The Kyiv Independent:
Twiter – https://twitter.com/KyivIndependent
Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/kyivindependent
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/kyivindependent_official/?hl=en
Photos used in a video:
Maximilian Clarke/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
Oleksandr Gimanov / AFP via Getty Images
Photo by Narciso Contreras/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
AFP via Getty Images
Photo by Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images
Ukrainian Mission to EU/Twitter
President’s Office/Telegram
Honchar Museum
Holodomor Museum
#ukraine #history #historyfacts #historyofukraine #ukrainianhistory #ukrainehistory
This video presents the brief history of Ukraine, the second-largest European country after Russia.
Chapter
00:00 Introduction
00:32 The Kievan Rus’
02:07 The Cossacks
03:23 Ukraine under the Soviet Union
05:18 Modern-day Ukraine
With a unique geography, Ukraine is a crucial pawn in the strategic and economic games of the European larger powers, namely Russia and the West.
The dawn of Ukraine’s history dates back to more than a thousand years ago when Ukraine did not even exist, at least not as an independent sovereign state.
The Rus’ are claimed to be the cultural ancestors of Ukraine and also Belarus and Russia. From the 10th to 11th centuries, Kievan Rus’ became the largest and most powerful state in Europe.
During the 14th and 15th centuries, the Kievan Rus’ state was divided and ruled by the Golden Horde, the Crimean Khanate, and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
The Cossacks, the most important piece of Ukraine’s identity, became particularly strong in the 17th century.
Following the partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1795, most of modern-day Central Ukraine was incorporated into the Russian Empire while the western part was split between Russia and Habsburg-ruled Austria.
In the wake of the Russian Revolution in 1917, the Ukrainian People’s Republic (UPR) was proclaimed but only existed til 1920.
In late 1922, following the Russian Civil War, four Soviet republics: Ukraine, Belarus, Russia, and Transcaucasia formed the Soviet Union (or USSR) via a treaty.
In 1939, as part of a Non-Aggression Pact with Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union invaded and annexed the eastern regions of Poland, expanding the Ukrainian SSR’s territory to the west.
In 1954, the Crimea Peninsula’s government was transferred from the Soviet Union to the Ukraine SSR, expanding the territory to the south.
In 1991, with the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Ukraine regained independence.
In 2014, following the Ukrainian Revolution of Dignity, war broke out between Russia and Ukraine.
On February 24, 2022, Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, escalating the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian War.
What do you think about the Russo-Ukrainian War?
Tell us in the comment section below.
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Sources in our video:
https://commons.wikimedia.org
https://upload.wikimedia.org
https://www.pexels.com
https://en.wikipedia.org
https://cdn10.picryl.com
https://www.flaticon.com
https://www.freepik.com
https://www.pexels.com
#history #ukraine #ukrainewar #russiaukrainewar #ukraineunderattack #ukraineunderattack #ukrainecrisis #ukrai #ukrainerussia #ukrainevsrussiawarupdate

