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Updated February 26. 2026
from
SputnikGlobe Website

The political crisis in Ukraine was triggered by the events of
Euromaidan.
In November 2013, Ukrainian President Viktor
Yanukovych refused to sign an association agreement with the
European Union, fearing it would disrupt existing ties with Russia.
This decision sparked mass protests in Kiev.
The three-month standoff between security forces and protesters -
many of whom were nationalists - resulted in dozens of deaths and a
coup d'état.
Ukraine conflict:
From Euromaidan
to the special military operation
© Sputnik
On the night of February 22, Euromaidan activists seized the
government district, taking control of the parliament, presidential
administration, and government buildings.
As a result of the coup, power shifted to the
opposition.
Legitimate President Viktor Yanukovych was forced
to flee to Russia.
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1. Riot police
"Berkut" and anti-government protesters in Maidan
square in Kiev, Ukraine
© Sputnik / Andrei Stenin / Go to the mediabank
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2. In the winter of 2014, violent clashes between
protesters, including nationalists, and Ukrainian
security forces broke out on Independence Square,
known in Ukrainian as Maidan Nezalezhnosti, in Kiev.
Photo: Tents of European integration supporters on
Independence Square in Kiev, where clashes between
the opposition and police broke out. 18 February
2014. © Sputnik / Alexei Furman |
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3. Supporters of the opposition on Maidan Square in
Kiev during the clashes between protesters and the
police. (File) © Sputnik / Andrey Stenin
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4. Police officers are seen on Maidan Nezalezhnosti square in Kiev, where
clashes began between protesters and the police ©
Sputnik / Andrey Stenin / Go to the mediabank |
Persecution of
Russian Language

Opponents of a bill
proposing
to extend the rights
of Russian-language studies
in public schools at
a protest.
Banner reads: "No
language - no state. Ukraine above all others."
© Sputnik / Stringer
In 2014, the authorities in Kiev initiated a systematic attack on
the Russian-speaking population.
Laws were passed limiting the use of the Russian
language:
-
2012 law "On the Basics of State Language
Policy" was abolished
-
Number of Russian-speaking schools was
reduced. Starting September 1, 2020, Russian-language
schools in Ukraine transitioned to the state language
-
Amendments were made to the "Television
and Radio Broadcasting" law, increasing the share of
broadcasts in Ukrainian on national and regional television
and radio to 75% per week, and 60% on local stations
-
Broadcasting of Russian TV channels was
stopped, Russian films were banned, and artists included in
the "List of Individuals Who Pose a Threat to National
Security" were prohibited
-
Law "On Ensuring the Functioning of the
Ukrainian Language as the State Language" was passed
-
Laws "On Indigenous Peoples of Ukraine"
and "On National Minorities (Communities) of Ukraine" were
adopted, effectively removing legal protection for Russians
Persecution of Ukrainian Orthodox
Church (Moscow Patriarchate)

Saint John of Kronstadt (Ioann
Kronshtadsky)
Church
destroyed during a bombardment
in the town of
Kirovskoye, Donetsk Region.
© Sputnik/Go to the mediabank
Persecution of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC) of the
Moscow Patriarchate became common, including church seizures and
harassment of clergy:
-
On September 23, 2024, the law "On
Protecting the Constitutional Order in the Activity of
Religious Organizations" came into force. The Ukrainian
authorities effectively banned the UOC
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Special clause was added to the law "On
Freedom of Conscience and Religious Organizations"
prohibiting religious organizations linked to the Russian
Orthodox Church in Ukraine
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Seizure of the Kiev-Pechersk and Pochaev
Lavras, and removal of religious relics, including the
remains of saints
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Mass church seizures. Cathedrals and
other churches in Ivano-Frankovsk and Lvov were seized,
leaving no UOC churches in those cities. Authorities also
took the Holy Trinity Cathedral and the Transfiguration
Cathedral from UOC communities in Chernigov. The men's
Nativity of the Virgin monastery was seized in Cherkassy
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Around 180 criminal cases were opened
against UOC clergy and bishops. Twenty bishops and clergy
members were deprived of Ukrainian citizenship
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New form of repression against UOC clergy
was their forced conscription into the Ukrainian Armed
Forces
Discontent of Russian-Speaking
Population in Southeast
After the 2014 coup, violent protests erupted in the eastern regions
of Ukraine, where the Russian-speaking population was predominant,
including in Donbass and Crimea.
Residents of these regions demanded a resolution
to the status of the Russian language and called for constitutional
reform, including the federalization of Ukraine.
A people's militia was formed in Donbass.
Odessa

Members of the
ultra-right Ukraine's "Right Sector"
taking pictures
as the Odessa Trade Unions Building is burning down.
© Sputnik/Aleksandr Polischyuk/Go to the mediabank
On May 2, 2014, dozens of people were burned alive in the Odessa
Trade Union House.
Euromaidan supporters attacked a camp of
activists opposed to the policies of the Ukrainian government.
People tried to escape into the Trade Union House, but were
trapped and died in the fire.
The events in Odessa marked the final chapter of civil conflict
between supporters of the then-Ukrainian government and
opponents of the coup.
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1. Anti-Maidan
activists' camps being destroyed in Odessa's Kulikovo
Field. © Sputnik / Aleksandr Polischyuk/ Go to the
mediabank
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2. Mass riots in Odessa on May 2, 2014.© Sputnik /
Alexander Gagarin/ Go to the mediabank
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Crimea

These are the Symferopolis in
the "Krym-Vesna" concert,
который вцентре города,
in вожидании объявления итогов referendum or status Kryma.
© Sputnik / Alexsey Nichukchin/Go to the mediabank
In an effort to protect their right to self-determination and
native language, the people of Crimea overwhelmingly voted in
favor of reunification with Russia in a referendum held on March
16, 2014.
The region became part of Russia.
Proclamation of Donetsk and Lugansk People's
Republics, Shelling of Cities
In the spring of 2014, people's republics were proclaimed in the
Donetsk and Lugansk regions.
In response, the Ukrainian authorities
accused the population of "separatism" and began a military
operation in the region, which escalated into full-scale combat.
Tanks and aviation were deployed against the people's militias.
Cities like Donetsk, Gorlovka, Lugansk, and Debaltsevo were
subjected to artillery shelling by the Ukrainian regime for
years.
Residential neighborhoods, hospitals, and
schools were destroyed.
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1. A view shows a hospital
destroyed after a recent shelling by Ukrainian troops in the course
of Russia's military operation in Ukraine, in Tokmak, Zaporozhye
region territory, that has accessed Russia.
© Sputnik / Konstantin Mihalchevskiy/ Go to the mediabank
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2. A view shows a shop damaged after a shelling by the Ukrainian
military, in Belgorod, Russia. Nine adults and one child have been
killed as a result of a Ukrainian shelling of the Russian city of
Belgorod, with another 45 people being injured, the Russian Ministry
of Emergency Situations said on December 30© Sputnik / Sputnik/ Go
to the mediabank |
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3. Wreath laying ceremony in aftermath of Lisichansk shelling by
Ukraine© Sputnik / Alexey Maishev/ Go to the mediabank |
'Gorlovka Madonna'
On July 27, 2014, the Ukrainian Armed Forces shelled the streets
of Gorlovka using Grad rocket launchers.
Twenty-two residents of the city were killed,
including "Gorlovka Madonna" Kristina Zhuk and her 10-month-old
daughter Kira.
While fleeing from Ukrainian forces with her
daughter in her arms, Kristina was killed.
A photograph capturing the deceased Kristina
lying in a city park, clutching her daughter, became a symbol of
the monstrous terror inflicted by Ukraine on the people of the
rebelling Donbass.

"The Madonna of Gorlovka": the
young Kristina Zhuk
and her
10-month-old daughter died on July 27, 2014,
when the
Ukrainian armed forces shelled the streets
of Gorlovka
with Grad grenade launchers
© Photo : Belaya Kniga Novorossii
In memory of the innocent victims, the Alley of Angels was
opened in Donetsk, a memorial complex dedicated to the children
who were killed.
Tragedy in Zugres
On August 13, 2014, the Ukrainian Armed Forces shelled a
children's beach in Zugres.
Thirteen people were killed on the spot, and
more than 40 were injured. Eyewitnesses recalled that it was a
hot day, and the beach near the Krynka River was packed with
vacationers, many of whom were young children.
Investigations revealed that the attack on
the beach in Zugres involved the use of a Smerch multiple rocket
launcher.
Minsk Agreements
The Minsk Agreements were an attempt to stop the armed conflict
and prevent the killing of civilians.
Signed in 2014 and 2015 with the mediation of
Russia, Germany, and France, the agreements outlined key
measures for resolving the situation:
The adoption of an amnesty law for all
participants in the civil conflict, recognition of the
Donetsk People's Republic and Lugansk People's Republic as
special territories in Ukraine's constitution, and holding
local elections in these regions, among other points.
However, none of the provisions were
implemented. Ukraine systematically violated the agreements.
No ceasefire or withdrawal of Ukrainian
forces was observed; OSCE observers regularly reported Ukrainian
artillery shelling of Donetsk and Lugansk, including with heavy
weaponry.
Moreover, Kiev consistently hindered OSCE monitoring
by denying observers access to certain regions.
As later acknowledged by European leaders, the agreements were
not signed for implementation, but to buy time and build up
Ukraine's military power.
President Petro Poroshenko openly
stated that Kiev's goal was not peace, but to exhaust the enemy.
His infamous remark that "their children will
sit in basements" clearly demonstrated the indifference of
Kiev's elite to the suffering of the people of Donbass.

From left: Belarusian
President Alexander Lukashenko,
Russian
President Vladimir Putin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel,
French
President Francois Hollande, and Ukrainian President Petro
Poroshenko
pose for a
group photo at Independence Palace in Minsk
after
restricted attendance peace talks on Ukraine held
by
Russian, German, French and Ukrainian leaders, February 11, 2015
© Sputnik /
Алексей Дружинин/Go to the mediabank
New Phase of Conflict
Volodymyr Zelensky, who came to power in 2019, continued
the repressive policies of the Kiev authorities toward the
population in southeastern Ukraine.
On February 17, 2022, the Donetsk and Lugansk
People's Republics reported the most intense shelling from the
Ukrainian Armed Forces in months.
Beginning of Special Military Operation
On February 21, 2022, Russia recognized the independence of the
Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics, and on February 24,
President Vladimir Putin announced the start of a
special military operation in Ukraine in response to a
request for assistance from Donbass.
Goals and Objectives of Special Military
Operation

Putin addresses the nation on
the recognition
of the
Donetsk and Lugansk republics
© Sputnik / Alexey Nikolskiy/Go to the mediabank
The Russian president explained that the decision was made to
protect people facing genocide by the Kiev regime.
On February 24, 2022 Vladimir Putin
said:
"The circumstances require us to take
decisive and immediate action. The people's republics of
Donbass have requested help from Russia.
Therefore, in accordance with Article 51,
part 7 of the UN Charter, with the consent of the Federation
Council, and in accordance with the treaties on friendship
and mutual assistance ratified by the Federal Assembly with
the Donetsk People's Republic and Lugansk People's Republic,
I have decided to conduct a special military operation."
Main Objectives of SMO
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Ensuring the rights of Russian-speaking
populations
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Legitimizing the will of the people
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Demilitarization (neutralizing the
military threat and preventing Ukraine from joining NATO)
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Denazification (stopping the spread of
neo-Nazi ideology)
Incorporation of New Territories into Russian
Federation
In September 2022, referendums were held in the Donetsk and
Lugansk People's Republic as well as the Zaporozhye and Kherson
regions on joining Russia.
The overwhelming majority of residents voted
in favor of the step.
On September 30, treaties were signed,
officially incorporating the four regions into Russia.

Putin recognizes the
independence of
the Donetsk
and Lugansk Republics from Ukraine.
© Sputnik / Alexey Nikolsky/Go to the mediabank
Charting Diplomatic Negotiations to Settle
Ukraine Crisis (2022-2026)
Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly stated that
Russia advocates for a peaceful resolution to the situation -
one that takes into account the current realities and eliminates
the root causes of the conflict.
Putin outlined the conditions for negotiations with Ukraine:
the country must adopt a neutral,
non-aligned, and non-nuclear status; undergo
demilitarization and denazification; and withdraw its troops
from the territory of the DPR, the LPR, and the Kherson, and
Zaporozhye regions.
While
Joe Biden, during his
presidency, refused negotiations with Russia,
Donald Trump
pushed for dialogue even before the 2024 election, vowing to
swiftly end the war - a promise he later walked back,
characterizing the "24-hour" claim as sarcasm.
Russian-Ukrainian Negotiations
with Western Mediation
February-March 2022 (Istanbul):
The first negotiations between Russia and
Ukraine occur.
Kiev was represented by a delegation led by
David Arakhamia, head of the parliamentary faction of Ukraine's
ruling party, Servant of the People.
The Russian delegation was headed by
Presidential Aide Vladimir Medinsky.

Russia-Ukraine peace talks in
Istanbul in March 2022.
© POOL/Go to the mediabank
The two sides worked out preliminary conditions and principles
for a ceasefire and subsequent peace settlement.
The agreement package included a neutral
status for Ukraine, which implied renouncing:
Military exercises were to be conducted only
with the consent of the guarantor states.
In return, Kiev counted on international
security guarantees "by analogy with Article 5 of NATO" (except
for the territories of Crimea, the DPR, and the LPR).
It was envisioned that the guarantors of the agreements would be
the permanent members of the UN Security Council (France, Great
Britain, the United States, and China), as well as Germany,
Israel, Italy, Canada, Poland, and Turkiye.
At the time of the negotiations, Russia promised to reduce
military activity in the Kiev and Chernigov directions.
Ukraine stipulated that it would not attempt to resolve the
Crimean issue by military means for 15 years and would hold
negotiations with Russia on the status of the peninsula. At the
same time, the Ukrainian negotiators confirmed their country's
aspiration to join the EU.
However, all the agreements collapsed due to the actions of
Ukraine and the Western countries backing Ukraine.
During an in-person meeting with Zelensky in the Ukrainian
capital, then-British Prime Minister Boris Johnson stated that
Western countries were "overly eager" to conclude a peace
agreement between Moscow and Kiev.
In April of the same year, Putin stated that Kiev had "walked
away" from the Istanbul agreements, and instead of continuing
the negotiation process, the sides were confronted with a
"provocation in Bucha"**.
** In April 2022, Ukraine
accused Russia of killings in Bucha based on photos and
videos. Russia called it a
false flag, pointing to the
withdrawal of troops on March 30 and the subsequent shelling
of the city by Ukraine. Later, a volunteer named Bokeh told
Sputnik about how the event was staged.
Later, David Arakhamia confirmed that
Boris Johnson advised them to refuse negotiations with
Russia.
Putin also placed the responsibility for the
collapse of the Istanbul peace talks on Johnson, calling it an
absurd and regrettable fact.
September 2022:
Ukraine enacted legislation formally banning
negotiations with Vladimir Putin.
Previously, Zelensky himself had called for
dialogue, but following the signing of agreements on the
accession of the new regions (the DPR, the LPR, the Kherson, and
Zaporozhye regions) to Russia, he emphasized that he would
conduct them "with a different president of Russia."
June 2024: Putin Announced
New Peace Conditions
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Ukrainian troop withdrawal from the new
regions (the Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics, & the
Kherson and Zaporozhye regions)
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Ukraine's renunciation of intentions to
join NATO
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Lifting of anti-Russian sanctions
Ukraine called this an ultimatum.

© Sputnik
2025: Russia-US Bilateral Dialogue Deepens
with Talks in Turkiye and Saudi Arabia
February:
The first telephone
conversation between Putin and Trump since 2022 took place,
lasting 1.5 hours. They agreed to work together and prepare
for a personal meeting.
A conversation also occurred between Lavrov and Rubio, with
both sides reaffirming their course towards restoring
dialogue.
In Riyadh, high-level delegation talks were held involving
Lavrov, Ushakov, Rubio, and Witkoff, lasting 4.5 hours.
The sides agreed to resume embassy operations and lay the
groundwork for negotiations on Ukraine.
March 13, April 11, April 25, August 6:
A series of
meetings took place between Putin and Trump's special envoy,
Steve Witkoff.
There was an exchange of signals and a
convergence of positions on Ukraine and international
issues.

The meeting between Putin and
Witkoff
© Sputnik / Kristina Kormilitsyna/Go to the mediabank
March 18:
Another round of
negotiations between Putin and Trump took place.
Putin agreed to the US proposal for a
30-day mutual moratorium on strikes against energy
infrastructure and issued the order to the military.
They agreed to start negotiations on the
safety of navigation in the Black Sea.
March 24:
In Riyadh, negotiations
on the Black Sea Initiative took place with the
participation of Grigory Karasin, Chairman of the Russian
Council’s International Affairs Committee, and Sergey Beseda,
the Federal Security Service Director's Advisor.
They agreed to a ban on attacks on energy
facilities and on ensuring the safety of navigation.
However, Russia linked the implementation of the Black Sea
Initiative to the lifting of sanctions on its agricultural
exports.
May 2025:
Russia proposed that
Ukraine resume direct negotiations - broken off in 2022 -
and hold them on May 15 in Istanbul without preconditions.
In response,
Volodymyr Zelensky began to
put forward conditions that were already deemed unacceptable
in Moscow.
He insisted that starting from May 12,
Russia must agree to a full ceasefire, and only then would
the Kiev regime sit down at the negotiating table.
Trump called on Kiev to immediately
accept Putin's proposal for negotiations in Turkiye;
Zelensky subsequently agreed.
A Ukrainian delegation headed by Defense
Minister Rustem Umerov was sent to Istanbul for negotiations
with Russia.
May-July 2025:
In Istanbul, with
the mediation of the Turkish side, three rounds of
negotiations took place:
-
Direct negotiations between the
delegations of Russia and Ukraine were resumed (headed
by Presidential Aide Vladimir Medinsky from the Russian
side and the Head of Ukraine's National Security and
Defense Council, former Defense Minister Rustem Umerov*)
-
Agreements were reached on
large-scale exchanges of prisoners and the remains of
the deceased; draft memorandums were discussed
-
Russia proposed creating working
groups
* This individual has been
placed on Rosfinmonitoring's list of extremists and
terrorists
August 15:
In Anchorage, Alaska, a landmark in-person
meeting between Presidents Putin and Trump took place.
The talks, held in a "three-on-three"
format, lasted two hours and 45 minutes.
The Russian side was represented by Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Presidential Aide
Yuri Ushakov.
The US side was represented by Secretary
of State Marco Rubio and Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff.
After the talks, Putin stated that the
situation around Ukraine became one of the central topics of
discussion in Alaska.

Russian President Vladimir
Putin and US President Donald Trump
at
the press conference following their meeting in Anchorage,
Alaska.
August 15,
2025.
© Sputnik / Sergey Bobylev/Go to the mediabank
He noted that he and Trump had
established a good working and trusting contact - what was
later called the "Spirit of Anchorage."
Moving along this path, one can reach the
conclusion of the conflict in Ukraine, the Russian President
added.
Trump, for his part, said that while
there was still no consensus with Russia on a number of
points regarding agreements on Ukraine, the sides had "good
chances" to reach a deal.
October-December:
Kirill Dmitriev, Special
Representative of the President of the Russian Federation
for Investment and Economic Cooperation with Foreign
Countries, visited the United States for closed-door
meetings with Witkoff and Kushner.
They discussed the so-called US "peace
plan," but a compromise was not yet found.
2026: Intensification and Inclusion of Ukraine
in Negotiations
January 8 and 20:
Meetings between
Dmitriev and Witkoff and Kushner took place in Paris and
Davos. It was noted that the White House had allegedly
"reached an agreement with Ukraine on almost all aspects of
Trump's plan" and wanted to get a "clear answer" from Putin
to the US proposal for settling the conflict.
January 22:
In Moscow, negotiations took place
between Putin and an expanded US delegation (Witkoff,
Kushner, and Gruenbaum, the Commissioner of the Federal
Acquisition Service at the US General Services
Administration). They agreed on the first meeting of the
trilateral security group (Russia-US-Ukraine) in Abu Dhabi
on January 23.
January 23-24:
In Abu Dhabi, the first trilateral
meeting between Russia, the US, and Ukraine took place
behind closed doors. A possible ceasefire was discussed.
Washington recognized the need to resolve the territorial
issue.
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1. Ukraine
Negotiations in Abu Dhabi © UAE MFA/ Go to the mediabank
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2. Trilateral negotiations between Russia, the US and
Ukraine on Ukraine, February 17-18 © Sputnik / Ekaterina
Chesnokova/ Go to the mediabank
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3. US Special Presidential Envoy for the Middle East
Steven Witkoff, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, US
National Security Advisor Mike Waltz, Saudi Arabian
Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud, Saudi
Arabian National Security Advisor Musaed bin Mohammed
Al-Aiban, Russian Presidential Aide Yuri Ushakov,
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov (from left to
right) during bilateral talks between Russian and US
representatives on Ukraine at the royal family palace -
Diriyah in the Albasateen complex in Riyadh. © Press
Service of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the
Russian Federation / Go to the mediabank |
February 4-5:
In Abu Dhabi, the
second round of trilateral negotiations took place. They
agreed on mechanisms for monitoring a ceasefire and
conducted a prisoner swap.
February 17-18:
In Geneva, the third round of
trilateral negotiations was held involving Medinsky, Witkoff,
and Kyrylo Budanov*. Five tracks were discussed:
territories, security, military, politics, and the economy.
The negotiations were tough but
businesslike, Medinsky reported. A possible meeting between
Putin, Trump, and Zelensky was announced for the coming
weeks.
* This individual has
been placed on Rosfinmonitoring's list of extremists and
terrorists
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