Why Russia took Crimea first

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  • Опубліковано 28 лис 2024

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  • @fleekrushyt9410
    @fleekrushyt9410 Рік тому +112

    2:50 This wasnt anything that Yanukovych did. It was his predecessors who initiated it. He was the one who made Ukraine actually even MORE dependend on Russia for Energy resources.

    • @maxk4471
      @maxk4471 Рік тому

      this is true. Yanukovich was backed by putin since early 2000s. It was literally the kremlin's puppet. He was not trying to gain any independence for Ukraine. Actually the opposite.

    • @MrVasja46
      @MrVasja46 Рік тому

      Bankrupt Ukraine could not even afford other energy resources, except for Russian ones, because Ukrainian tycoons and oligarchs robbed the country to the point of absurdity! Ukrainians didn't even pay for cheap Russian energy!

    • @gabrielpalmones3980
      @gabrielpalmones3980 9 місяців тому +1

      This is true to a point. But we also have to understand that when the Soviet Union fell a sort of “post-cold war fallout” ensued that affected former Soviet States. What is meant by this is that western countries remained reluctant to support and even economically assist newly formed independent former-Soviet States due to two reasons. 1) The Soviet successor state of Russia may attempt to reclaim these states and therefore assert its influence, and 2) The poor economic conditions left behind by the fall of the Soviet Union made it less appealing for capitalist-centric countries to invest and aid. So with this, the Ukraine Government until the administration of Petro Poroshenko had no choice but to rely on Russia to repair its damaged economy. So I dont think the past administrations of Ukraine are entirely to blame for what was actually imposed to them.

    • @larrymorrison171
      @larrymorrison171 8 місяців тому

      What happened was that during those years Russian gas prices were unbearably high, leaving Ukraine without any choices. The video makes it sound like it was some kind of policy, but it was just pure economics.

    • @thebenevolentsun6575
      @thebenevolentsun6575 6 місяців тому

      ​@@gabrielpalmones3980Yeah we saw the same exact thing with Post-Stalinist Poland. The stain of Communism was stil there for the west and they were reluctant to get involved.

  • @ceemichel
    @ceemichel Рік тому +126

    Russia was able to take Crimea first because the Russian military (army, Air Force and navy) already had bases on the peninsula under a 99 year lease with Ukraine agreed to between 1991 and 1994. They were able to deploy the so-called "little green men" from those bases and seize most of the peninsula in a matter of hours.

    • @robertaurens5665
      @robertaurens5665 Рік тому +37

      Added to which the Yanks were pissed because they had been watering at the mouth to have a US naval base on the Black sea to continue to intimidate Russia

    • @mutluolmaknedir
      @mutluolmaknedir Рік тому +4

      ​@@robertaurens5665Crimea or Bosphorus which important

    • @mutluolmaknedir
      @mutluolmaknedir Рік тому

      @WarriorRunner777 Turkey is jealous of Russia Crimea is more important than the Bosphorus.Russian politic said this

    • @mutluolmaknedir
      @mutluolmaknedir Рік тому +4

      @WarriorRunner777 Russia attaches great importance to Crimea

    • @Ultra1036speed
      @Ultra1036speed Рік тому

      ​@@robertaurens5665Oh well with every civilized country in the world hateing Russia NATO will have more than enough places to slaughter Russia from when the time comes ! NATO doesn't "annex" other countries land like the Hitler wannabe Putin!

  • @angrydoggy9170
    @angrydoggy9170 Рік тому +121

    If Russia wants to keep its sphere of influence, they only need to make it an equally or better position to be in than joining the European side. As long as aligning with Russia means giving up sovereignty and signing on to a highly corrupt rather weak economy, people will want the better option.

    • @brianbozo2447
      @brianbozo2447 Рік тому +5

      Absolutely TRue Russia only has itself to blame for becoming corrupt and none 5:17 entrepreneurial and lazy.

    • @newcoatresurfacing5477
      @newcoatresurfacing5477 Рік тому +29

      So you think Ukraine is a better choice for Crimeans? By 2019 the economic output of Ukraine was half of what it was when the USSR collapsed. In the same period Russia had increased its output to ten times its 1990 level and restored its Great Power status after being on its knees and gasping for air. By any measure Ukraine is a failed state.

    • @newcoatresurfacing5477
      @newcoatresurfacing5477 Рік тому +14

      And Ukraine gave up its sovereignty in 2014.

    • @angrydoggy9170
      @angrydoggy9170 Рік тому +7

      @@newcoatresurfacing5477 Sure buddy.

    • @xelldincht4251
      @xelldincht4251 Рік тому

      This. Russia under Putin is corrupt and authoritarian. It has no "soft power". IF the Russian Federation survives this war; Russia will need to improve itself first (reduce corruption, become a Meritocracy) and maybe then it has a chance

  • @havareriksen1004
    @havareriksen1004 Рік тому +130

    A nice presentation, but it sounds like it supports russian claims that Krym had always been russian before Khrushchev gave it to Ukraina in 1954. In reality many cultures have lived on Crimea and dominated it, from the greeks, romans, kyivian rus, kossacks, mongols and tartars. Russia didn't arrive there before they annexed it in 1783, in violation with the Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca. This brought on a war with the Ottomans that Russia won, and the Ottomans ceded all claims to Krym in the Treaty of Jassy in 1792. Then Russia lost possession of Krym during the Crimean War, lost it again during the Revolution, when Ukraina first established itself as a republic and Krym was for a brief time part of the republic, and yet again lost it during WWII. So russian possession of Krym has neither been that long and has been interrupted several times. There is a majority of russian speaking peoples and ethinc russians there, but this is a result of the russification of the region, mass deportings of the Tatar population and moving ethinc russians in to fill all public roles. The same has happened in almost every other country Russia has invaded and conquered, thus there are russian minorities in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova etc. today. Even the Holodomor, Stalin's planned hunger in Ukraina, served this purpose. As millions of ukrainians died of starvation, ethinc russians from other parts of Russia was moved into the depopulated lands to farm the land. Thus the strong ethnic russian prescence in Donetsk and Luhansk.

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 Рік тому +9

      Couldn't have put it better myself.

    • @michaeldelisieux5252
      @michaeldelisieux5252 Рік тому +6

      Precisely!

    • @jaykolinsky7103
      @jaykolinsky7103 Рік тому +17

      The statistical truth of it is, in the late 1700s and part of the 1800s, Russians made up a very small % (4.6) of the total population in Crimea. Tartars by far were the dominant ethnic group, consisting of over 80%. Then Stalin came along, and in a very bloody and brutal way, shifted that balance entirely in the other direction.

    • @socrates6870
      @socrates6870 Рік тому +1

      Hopefully it will be Ukrainian in 2023...the year when the war ends...

    • @skepticalbadger
      @skepticalbadger Рік тому +1

      It doesn't support that at all. What it does is omit the earlier, non-Russian-influenced history of the region. It then says (0:46) "Incorporated into the Russian Empire in the late 18th Century, Ukraine briefly gained its independence in 1918, but three years later became part of the Soviet Republic."

  • @peteryokahui
    @peteryokahui 6 місяців тому +7

    check this out, the british can't even remember they attacked russia in crimea 1850

    • @StephenSeabird
      @StephenSeabird 5 місяців тому +1

      Or choose not to. As a British citizen, what needs to be pointed out is the passing over of British Imperialism, when the B. Empire was on its last legs, right at the end of the C19th and early C20th, to America. Cecil Rhodes and Alfred Milner (an important strategist) formed their Round Table around 1900, which foresaw that the old colonial Empire would not last, and presided over decisions to 'move the capital of Empire from London to Washington'. Thus was born the trans-Atlantic Anglo-American 'special relationship'. In this, it could be said that America inherited a 'Russo-phobia' from Britain, always seeing it as a threat to their interests. This, British conservatives have never been able to let go of, in spite of most British people not thinking much about it - the Empire seemed utterly dead to them and part of history like all other European colonial empires. After WW2, it was evident the Empire was truly over, but even so there came a succession of very old aristocratic Prime Ministers right up to 1964 (one brief exception was the socialist Labour Party govt of 1945-51), whose birth, background and way of thinking was rooted in the early C20th and Empire - including the aged Churchill. In 1956, the same year as the Hungarian Uprising by chance, a British Prime Minister Antony Eden made a foolish and in the end embarrassing decision to intervene in Egypt over the possession of the Suez Canal. It all blew up in his face, with public protests against the outmoded imperialistic sabre rattling. It failed - but more importantly, the U.S.A. first made it absolutely clear that it would not support the British (to Britain's shock and chagrin), and then gave the signals to the British establishment that from now on, America would be Leader and Britain would follow its coat tails - not the other way round. The next Prime Minister, McMillan, is famous for the phrase, ''We'll just have to be the Greeks to their Romans'', meaning (and the aristocracy have always known their Classical history), that like the ancient Greeks, they had been superseded by the Romans. In a perfect reversal of 1956, PM Tony Blair followed President Bush with an invasion of Iraq in 2003. The similarity of these two incidents is absolutely striking - for both were founded on lies and cover-ups, and this time (Iraq, 2003) the public indignation was immense - the public demnstrations and protests against the war, actually the largest ever seen in London, with it is estimated, possibly as many as a million people involved. Even so - Tony Blair went ahead. His name is blackened, he dare not show his face on TV in Britain to this day. Thus, supposed British democracy - many of us feel - still thinks it has carte blanche when it comes to foreign policy, as indeed does Washington and its treatment of the American public opinion. I rest my case for the prosecution.

  • @dariusz1031
    @dariusz1031 Рік тому +15

    This video doesn't explain anything

  • @Cptnbond
    @Cptnbond Рік тому +71

    A bit skimpy in parts. For example, what choices were on the vote in Crimea? One: Independent Crimea, Two: Become part of Russian Federation. No other option given, like continue to be part of Ukraine. I guess it does not matter, since Russian would have made option two the winning option anyway.

    • @pmayo7894
      @pmayo7894 Рік тому +17

      ​@@Mmjk_12 - which is debatable.

    • @Silver_Prussian
      @Silver_Prussian Рік тому

      Post-referendum polls
      The results of a survey by the U.S. government Broadcasting Board of Governors agency, conducted April 21-29, 2014, showed that 83% of Crimeans felt that the results of the March 16 referendum on Crimea's status likely reflected the views of most people there, whereas this view is shared only by 30% in the rest of Ukraine.[153]
      According to the Gallup's survey performed on April 21-27, 82.8% of Crimean people consider the referendum results reflecting most Crimeans' views,[154] and 73.9% of Crimeans say Crimea's becoming part of Russia will make life better for themselves and their families, while 5.5% disagree.[154]
      According to survey carried out by Pew Research Center in April 2014, the majority of Crimean residents say they believed the referendum was free and fair (91%) and that the government in Kyiv ought to recognize the results of the vote (88%).[155]
      According to a poll of the Crimeans by the Ukrainian branch of Germany's biggest market research organization, GfK, on January 16-22, 2015: "Eighty-two percent of those polled said they fully supported Crimea's inclusion in Russia, and another 11 percent expressed partial support. Only 4 percent spoke out against it. ... Fifty-one percent reported their well-being had improved in the past year."[156] Bloomberg's Leonid Bershidsky noted that "The calls were made on Jan. 16-22 to people living in towns with a population of 20,000 or more, which probably led to the peninsula's native population, the Tatars, being underrepresented because many of them live in small villages. On the other hand, no calls were placed in Sevastopol, the most pro-Russian city in Crimea. Even with these limitations, it was the most representative independent poll taken on the peninsula since its annexation."
      Cry

    • @williamthebonquerer9181
      @williamthebonquerer9181 Рік тому

      ​@@Mmjk_12 you lot believe maiden was a western colour revolution but Donbass and crimes was entirely organic

    • @no1DdC
      @no1DdC Рік тому

      @@Mmjk_12 Neither declared independence. That's a Russian propaganda line, not reality. Both these declarations of independence and the votes were orchestrated by Russian secret services.

    • @theantagonist2147
      @theantagonist2147 Рік тому

      Typical communist tactics

  • @natmaren989
    @natmaren989 Рік тому +31

    Important note. In Ukraine, Maidan 2014 is most often called not "Euromaidan", but "Revolution of Dignity".
    Yes, Euromaidan was the beginning of the protests. However, the number of protesters was decreasing and, most likely, they would have stopped taking to the streets. But the government made a mistake. They decided to intimidate the people by brutally beating the protesters. It was this incident that gave Maidan a new, more powerful turn.
    On the day after the students were beaten, the largest number of people took to the streets of Kyiv. They demanded to punish the officials responsible for the beating. This gave rise to a tough confrontation between the street and Yanukovych, who did not want to punish his entourage.
    Further, the brutality of the police only increased, reaching the kidnappings and murders. Along with this, the demands of the protesters became more stringent,
    turned into a demand for the impeachment of Yanukovych. Rejection of police brutality and its impunity gave the name to the protests - "Revolution of Dignity".

    • @doniehurley9396
      @doniehurley9396 Рік тому

      there was a hell of a lot of brutality on the barricades led by ultra-right hoods who were not going to let this best chance of power slip and most likely killed a lot of kids and ordinary citizens to escalate and blame the regime. the investigation into the killings was dropped like a hot potato by the interim government when it took over

    • @Silver_Prussian
      @Silver_Prussian Рік тому

      This so called revolution was used as a smoke cover to instigate a coup and put friendly politicians in charge

    • @darkopavlic6592
      @darkopavlic6592 7 місяців тому

      ask CIA

    • @catalincarceanu7991
      @catalincarceanu7991 3 місяці тому

      @@natmaren989 how is to organise a Maidan in your country?

    • @zlo333
      @zlo333 6 днів тому

      a year later people are taken forcefully to front lines, i knew back then that maidan was a fluke, u literealy get people freedoms taken away, and no maidan anymore, u try to to protest now , u'll see the democratic country, i won't even talk about males can't leave the country, looks like the concentration camp then democratic country

  • @Joaocruz30
    @Joaocruz30 Рік тому +37

    For anyone who wants the answer to the question posed in the title and for those who suffer from "attention span"
    I can give here the answer in summary form and the synopsis:
    Because Crimea has 90% of Russians and have military air and sea bases, fundamental to giving hegemony to the Russians in the Black Sea and consequently in the Mediterranean. basically this is it!
    EDIT: Don't forget that the special military operation started in 2022 (February) But the war started in 2013/2014 for several reasons, the Ukrainian government's coup d'etat, the Maidan, the ban on newspapers, radios and televisions that spoke in Russian , the destruction of the Orthodox Church, and the apartheid on the part of Ukrainians who began a campaign of hatred and violence against the population that expressed itself in the Russian language Mainly in; the Oblast of Lugansk, Odessa, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhia and Crimea.
    In addition to starting to attack the Donbass area in 2014 and with the culmination of terror with the fire at the Chamber of Commerce in Odessa where, after setting fire to the building, they closed the doors from the outside, ending up burning 50 people to death... Fantastic huh? !?

    • @marcopetrovski9762
      @marcopetrovski9762 Рік тому

      They haven’t mentioned that those 14000 dead people were Russians, many kids… they left that out conveniently…

    • @mohammedqamar7942
      @mohammedqamar7942 10 місяців тому

      This is something the the western media fails to understand, that or deliberately hiding the truth to the wider audience i believe it to be the latter.

    • @sidp5381
      @sidp5381 6 місяців тому

      Yeah, special military operation is a full out invasion you for if you think Russia has respect for any country sovereignty it’s obvious you know nothing about the history of the Russian empire you’re talking about a country that has committed genocide against not just millions of people but eradicated complete cultures from particular areas

    • @ВикторАнтип
      @ВикторАнтип 17 днів тому

      @72badry в 2014 году на майдане произошло разрушение конституции Украины, поэтому Донбасс и встал на защиту конституции. Но народ Донбасса почему то назвали сепаратистами, хотя сепаратисты это были на майдане.

  • @connormclernon26
    @connormclernon26 Рік тому +15

    I'll bet Yanukovich isn't too thrilled that his mansion got turned into a museum

    • @johnd2058
      @johnd2058 Рік тому

      I would be kinda proud, myself. Easy for me to say, though, I don't have a mansion.

  • @Neoptolemus
    @Neoptolemus Рік тому +22

    The video starts with the Russian involvement in Crimea without mentioning the 2014 coup with US involvement.

    • @jonathandavx
      @jonathandavx Рік тому +7

      Nice try Iván, haven't you been drafted yet?

    • @Neoptolemus
      @Neoptolemus Рік тому +5

      @@jonathandavx Ivan? I am Boris from England.

    • @amandapeluso4217
      @amandapeluso4217 11 місяців тому

      Ukraine on Fire gives the truth on what happened in Ukraine. The CIA coup from 2014 has been reported on also BBC Newsnight had a video on the rise of Neo Nazism in Ukraine. The people in Crimea voted to stay with Russia as they didn't support the coup. Can't blame them

    • @therenschchild1
      @therenschchild1 2 місяці тому +2

      @@Neoptolemus the people voted on closer alignment with europe, which was ignored. dont blame the us, it was the will of the people that was ignored

    • @PUARockstar
      @PUARockstar 2 місяці тому

      No such thing happened

  • @sepxviii731
    @sepxviii731 Рік тому +16

    What an unbelievable pile of half truths, skipped history, wrong maps and general shallowness

  • @tanderson596
    @tanderson596 Рік тому +20

    Thank you IWM for this analysis; the truth is a gift to the world.

    • @alphaclot302
      @alphaclot302 Рік тому +1

      "truth"

    • @denisdemin81
      @denisdemin81 Рік тому +2

      Why are you sure this is the truth?

    • @amandeis
      @amandeis Рік тому

      @@denisdemin81 Because we don't believe any poisoner who even forbids using the word war. The people who are so manipulable that they have remained loyal for over 20 years despite every outrage. They believe all the stupid lies that this man spreads in the Kremlin. Anyone who eats everything they vomit can confidently also be called such. Dumb.

  • @FreshPrincce
    @FreshPrincce Рік тому +6

    Why are you showing war footage of the August war in Georgia from 2008?

  • @neolexiousneolexian6079
    @neolexiousneolexian6079 Рік тому +69

    1. *Every* part of Ukraine, including Crimea, voted in the majority for independence from the USSR.
    2. The use of Russian as a language and the demographics of ethnic Russians in Ukraine are a direct result of deliberate and genocidal Russian/Soviet policies of artificial famine, language suppression, forced displacement.

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron Рік тому

      Straight up dishonesty, 2014 elections were overwhelming for Russia! I you tell lies you'll lose any credibility...

    • @imtiazakand3174
      @imtiazakand3174 Рік тому +6

      Criemia was populated by criemian tatars. When russian empire captured it in 1783,it was populated by ethnic russian.

    • @ThePeterispas
      @ThePeterispas Рік тому +1

      Just check the maps for the results of those votes. A minority in Crimea voted for anything separating it from Russia. The video fails to explain the long Hystoric connection of Crimea with Russia and no connection with today's Ukraine that it si only a product of USSR. Nothing else. There is no common Ukrainian History as each region had its own history and connection to Russia.

    • @TheBottlenose33
      @TheBottlenose33 Рік тому +3

      How have the people of Crimea voted in similar referendums?

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron Рік тому +3

      @@ThePeterispas Lughansk and Donetsk tho? Don't forget that the EU Verified that election...

  • @Antibackgroundnoise
    @Antibackgroundnoise Рік тому +53

    Vladimir Putin visits a primary school one day
    And he gives a lecture about how great the government is, and how Russia is the best country in the world.
    At the end of the lecture he invites people to ask questions and one kid stands up and says
    “Hello my name is Sasha and I have two questions”
    Putin: “go ahead”
    Sasha: “Why did Russia sent troops to Ukraine and why did Russia annex Crimea? ”
    At that moment the bell rang and everyone went to lunch.
    At the end of lunch the Q&A continued and another kid stood up
    “My name is boris and I have four questions”
    Putin: “Yes?”
    Boris: “Why did Russia sent troops to Ukraine, why did Russia annex Crimea, why was the bell 20 minutes early and where is Sasha?”

    • @angrydoggy9170
      @angrydoggy9170 Рік тому +11

      @@filce1232 You don’t know what an analogy is. Let’s start by learning about that. Once you get that down, let’s work on understanding humour.

    • @angrydoggy9170
      @angrydoggy9170 Рік тому +9

      @@filce1232 There’s no obligation to consider it funny, just the ability to recognise it as an attempt at humour will do.

    • @jackieclan815
      @jackieclan815 Місяць тому

      @@Antibackgroundnoise lol funny

    • @spike5911
      @spike5911 19 днів тому

      Do you really think russia invaded ukraine for no reason?

  • @TotalWarVisegrad
    @TotalWarVisegrad Рік тому +4

    Crimea should be an independent state of Tatars

  • @12mickeyd12
    @12mickeyd12 Рік тому +18

    Why was Crimea taken so easily? Was the title question answered? This video is informative, don't get me wrong, but you didn't answer the title question, or was it simply, "Russia sent little green men into Crimea, held a referendum and then annexed the region"? Nothing on the Ukrainian Navy defecting or genuine popular support for Russia at that time?

    • @andyontheinternet5777
      @andyontheinternet5777 Рік тому +16

      They can't tell you that the vast majority of the people in Crimea see themselves as Russians and want nothing to do with the kleptocracy of Ukraine. That would ruin the narrative.

    • @louisecorchevolle9241
      @louisecorchevolle9241 Рік тому +4

      taking Crimea :2 died by accident 20.000 ukrainian on 22.000 went over to Russia

    • @louisecorchevolle9241
      @louisecorchevolle9241 Рік тому +2

      @@andyontheinternet5777 exactly was there under Ukrainian occupation

    • @torehaaland6921
      @torehaaland6921 Рік тому

      ​@@andyontheinternet5777 reported as false information.

    • @andyontheinternet5777
      @andyontheinternet5777 Рік тому +4

      @@torehaaland6921 Im not making this up. I know people from Ukraine. Crimea voted to leave Ukraine in a huge landslide. Crimea was part of Russia for a LONG time before it was assigned to the soviet state of Ukraine. The people there are not Ukrainians, they are mostly Russians.

  • @cuthomas4664
    @cuthomas4664 Рік тому +28

    A prosperity Ukraine with strong democracy is a threat to any dictatorship regime in Russia. The same problem is happening to countries neighbouring China, be weak or be dependent to China or a Chinese invasion is imminent.

    • @arnoldshmitt4969
      @arnoldshmitt4969 Рік тому +9

      BOLD of you to assume usa is not a dictatorship with sham elections , where industry lobby to make laws they want and the common man voice is often silenced no matter the intensity of protest , usa seems more of an oligarchy with democracy as a shield to keep public from doing violent protest

    • @alphaclot302
      @alphaclot302 Рік тому +6

      Democracy, haha.
      I wonder why are there american soldiers near the countries you named? Maybe it's about american interventions, but not democracy?

    • @allseeingirene
      @allseeingirene Рік тому +2

      @@alphaclot302 The irony is that America is slightly more moral, technically, however the result is the same. The aggression of these superpowers prompts common yet not guaranteed pleas to the west for aid which leads to a dependency on the US. Better than being put under the CCP but it's still a thing. Russian doctrine nowadays is meant to mirror actual fascism in all but name btw, so I'd rather be an Imperialist than a Imperialist and a fascist dictatorship.

    • @alphaclot302
      @alphaclot302 Рік тому +3

      @@allseeingirene nice excuses for your personal invasions

    • @Dennis-nc3vw
      @Dennis-nc3vw Рік тому

      @@arnoldshmitt4969 If the US was a dictatorship, how did Trump come to power? Everyone in the elite, both politically and economically, hated him, yet he still became President.

  • @RichardBejtlich
    @RichardBejtlich Рік тому +76

    Great video, but the invasion started 24 Feb, not 22 Feb as stated at 11:24.

    • @juancho1663
      @juancho1663 Рік тому +52

      You're incorrect. The invasion started in 22 Feb when Putin declared the independence of Donetsk and Lugansk. Just hours after that there were a lot of russian troops, tanks and everything crossing ukranian borders. Before 24 Feb 50% of Kherson region was already taken. 24 Feb was just Putin's speech confirming that he was ordered what we all already were seeing was happening

    • @gediminaskucinskas6952
      @gediminaskucinskas6952 Рік тому +16

      Not entirely correct. You see in 24 Feb was Putins speech confirming special military operations but actions started in Feb 22.

    • @carlos1232
      @carlos1232 Рік тому +10

      @@juancho1663 the special military operation was announced at roughly 3:30am on 24th February 2022 and shortly after that troops began to cross the border. I watched this unfold live.

    • @Vsack9yolo09
      @Vsack9yolo09 Рік тому

      Shows how unprofessional they are , this source can't be trusted

    • @alphaclot302
      @alphaclot302 Рік тому +2

      @@juancho1663 lie

  • @konackt
    @konackt Рік тому +16

    You didn't mention who the snipers were!

    • @YOURDADSDILDO
      @YOURDADSDILDO Рік тому +10

      Ukranian

    • @BlutoandCo
      @BlutoandCo Рік тому +2

      ​@@YOURDADSDILDO ruSSian

    • @RaveYoda
      @RaveYoda Рік тому

      Maybe at the time the snipers were pro Ukrainian but thought the protestors were illegally attacking Ukrainian federal buildings. Or, a pro Russian leader has his close guard be pro Russian snipers. What is your point?

    • @YOURDADSDILDO
      @YOURDADSDILDO Рік тому +1

      @@BlutoandCo check your facts

    • @havareriksen1004
      @havareriksen1004 Рік тому

      There is ample evidence that almost all shots were made from positions held by Berkuk. Photographic evidence, cartridge casings, tracing of the bullet paths etc. There is some evidence for a few shots coming from areas protesters held at the time, but it is inconclusive.

  • @georgesaggers208
    @georgesaggers208 Рік тому +6

    I went to the photo exhibition couple of weeks back.. well done IWM

  • @alphaclot302
    @alphaclot302 Рік тому +5

    Ukraine never was a country, don't lie about "ukre russian relations for centuries". There were no such.

    • @ButtThuck
      @ButtThuck Рік тому

      In 1991, Russia acknowledged that Ukraine, Crimea included, was a sovereign nation. This is codified in Russian federal law.

    • @ВикторАнтип
      @ВикторАнтип 17 днів тому

      ​​@@ButtThuckвы не договариваете. Договор включает себя вне блоковый статус Украины, договор военной базы в Крыму. Там многое еще что есть. Украина рацифицировала этот договор.

  • @mishaknopkin2199
    @mishaknopkin2199 8 місяців тому +1

    Russia took Crimea first, then, second, took Donbas, Zaporoje and Herson. The next step, third, Odessa will be Russian too.

  • @kjp76
    @kjp76 Рік тому +19

    Wikipedia: 2007 Munich speech of Vladimir Putin
    That was the moment when he revealed his plans to the whole world, and nobody said enough!

    • @Infernal460
      @Infernal460 Рік тому

      It wasn't "current thing".

    • @amandapeluso4217
      @amandapeluso4217 11 місяців тому

      Perhaps you didn't pay attention to his Munich speech from 2007. Putin discussed NATO expansion and American imperialism which is happening today. You can spin it to suit your narrative. The truth is in Putin's speech in 2007 on how America wants to control Europe through NATO expansion. Too bad America didn't listen as they think they can do whatever they want and have military infrastructure and missiles in every country. The European countries which are in NATO lost their sovereignty which was also in Putin's speech yet you want to twist around to suit your pathetic narrative.😂😂😂 Wikipedia is not a reliable source. You probably never even listened to Putin's speech 😂

  • @54mgtf22
    @54mgtf22 Рік тому +42

    Love your work 👍

  • @DSAK55
    @DSAK55 Рік тому +46

    Mid-Life crisis. He should have bought a Lamborghini

    • @havareriksen1004
      @havareriksen1004 Рік тому +9

      He probably have several already. The worlds richest man.

    • @Chinunit22
      @Chinunit22 Рік тому +1

      Losing Crimea to NATO would be end to Putin's Navy and security of Russia

    • @B1G_Brother
      @B1G_Brother Рік тому

      He actually looks out for his country’s interests I wish we had a leader that did that

    • @therenschchild1
      @therenschchild1 2 місяці тому

      @@Chinunit22 security against what exactly?

  • @LusoPatriot77
    @LusoPatriot77 Рік тому +23

    I appreciate the very balanced view presented in the video.

    • @Neoptolemus
      @Neoptolemus Рік тому

      Do you know anything about the 2014 coup backed by US?

    • @LusoPatriot77
      @LusoPatriot77 Рік тому +5

      @@Neoptolemus I understand that the government of Yanukovitch broke a promised deal with the EU, but I also understand that US backed Svoboda in creating riots to overthrow the government. Am i correct?

    • @vamsikrishna3855
      @vamsikrishna3855 Рік тому +7

      @@LusoPatriot77 yes.. and that’s why this report is biased.

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 Рік тому +2

      @@LusoPatriot77 I understand you're posting from a bunker underneath the Kremlin.

    • @douglasmcginity3327
      @douglasmcginity3327 Рік тому

      @@Poliss95just reality why is it oblivious to you that NATO is the side CONSTANTLY for decades purposefully creeping onto Russia’s border? Russia at peace just being Russia. NATO wanted a war for the money laundering it makes the ruling class.

  • @mitchellanderson3960
    @mitchellanderson3960 Рік тому +77

    Pretty good video, fairly unbiased. A little more on the Minsk Agreements and Ukraine and Germany purposefully not allowing elections to move forward would be a nice add.

    • @obsidianjane4413
      @obsidianjane4413 Рік тому

      It would also be nice to note that it was because Russia had totally corrupted the election process. Oh wait, they did mention that.

    • @tomkent4656
      @tomkent4656 Рік тому +13

      The Minsk Agreements were never ratified by either party.

    • @maryanchabursky9148
      @maryanchabursky9148 Рік тому

      Elections didn’t work out because russia refused to give refugees a vote.

    • @TheAlien729
      @TheAlien729 Рік тому +16

      ​@@tomkent4656 Ukraine and Donbass were parties to the agreement. The rest were the guarantors of fulfillment. Considering that more than one politician from Ukraine and the West has already spoken out that all these negotiations were needed only to stall for time to create an army...

    • @TheAlien729
      @TheAlien729 Рік тому +1

      Ukraine and Donbass were parties to the agreement. The rest were the guarantors of fulfillment. Considering that more than one politician from Ukraine and the West has already spoken out that all these negotiations were needed only to stall for time to create an army...

  • @ishkel
    @ishkel Рік тому +8

    The most propoganda-like and distorted history representation I ever heard.

    • @Grendel650
      @Grendel650 5 місяців тому

      Sometimes, evidence based description can upset the useful idiots supporting russian narratives. 😂
      Stop whining.
      Read more.

  • @ILoveBees
    @ILoveBees Рік тому +21

    Good summary of the events of the last decade, but does not answer the question in the title.

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 Рік тому

      I'll answer it. it's because Putin is a completely and totally insane megalomaniac who thinks he's Peter the Great.

    • @tidbit1877
      @tidbit1877 Рік тому +1

      Russia annexed Crimea, that's the answer.

    • @tomnewham1269
      @tomnewham1269 Рік тому +1

      To have access to the oil and gas fields off the coast of Crimea which if Ukraine used would be able to supply the EU therefore Ukraine would not be dependent on Russia for their energy needs plus Ukraine could export the oil and gas to the EU.

  • @jmccallion2394
    @jmccallion2394 Рік тому +8

    What a great series from the IWM this is! It is very similar to the style of Prof Mike Clarke, the resident Sky News military analyst: an ability to make politico/military terms easy to understand and an informative style that reinforces that understanding! Thank you and keep up the good work!

    • @oliverlister1029
      @oliverlister1029 Рік тому

      I very much agree with you!

    • @TheRealBillBob
      @TheRealBillBob Рік тому

      Interesting that you mentioned this with Clarke. Clarke is a known clown who spouts similar false and disinformation realities about Russia and Ukraine.

  • @nopasaran453
    @nopasaran453 10 місяців тому +3

    Such nonsense can only be heard from Western "journalists"

  • @Harbringe
    @Harbringe Рік тому +7

    Losing Crimea puts at risk the whole of southern Russia to the caucasus mountains . It's similar to Hawaii for the Americans.

    • @colinobrien3806
      @colinobrien3806 Рік тому

      that makes no sense considering it was never russias in the first place , what risk ? ukraine getting its rightful border back ? what are you talking about a risk of what ? ukraine take back crimea blow the kerch bridge then set up a really good and solid air and land defense on the coast and stick their middle finger up at russia across the water .. what risk to who ? losing crimea ? you do know that happened 8 years ago lol ........ crimea will be won back not lost , do you know whats going on in the ukraine you do ?

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 Рік тому +1

      No. It's not similar to the Hawaiian islands in any way.

    • @mutluolmaknedir
      @mutluolmaknedir Рік тому

      Why is crimea so important for russia

  • @stuckp1stuckp122
    @stuckp1stuckp122 Рік тому +12

    A succinct summary that ended with how important Crimea is

    • @ekesandras1481
      @ekesandras1481 Рік тому

      it is an unsinkable aircraft carrier, that controls the Black Sea.

  • @thesceptic1018
    @thesceptic1018 Рік тому

    I vote for Emily Ferris; a scholar and commentator who has successfully expunged all traces of “er, you know, like, sort of” and other rubbish from her discourse. Chapeau.

  • @stc3145
    @stc3145 Рік тому +37

    Russia tried to colonize Ukraine that is why there are so many Russian speaking people there. Also in the Baltic states

    • @TheEvertw
      @TheEvertw Рік тому +15

      That, and it did genocide on the original population.

    • @RaveYoda
      @RaveYoda Рік тому

      Exactly. Additionally, why should it matter? In the US we have a lot of Spanish speaking people but does that make that part of Mexico or Spain? No- of course not. This line of thought that Putin peddles distracts fuzzy thinking people from his atrocities and it's depressing.

    • @brianmarshall1762
      @brianmarshall1762 Рік тому +4

      No that is not correct. The original Ukraine state that went into the Russian empire in about 1654 or so, was much much smaller. (This was afternoon asking Russia to join it for protection after wars with Poland). The expansion of what is modern day Ukraine came about when the territory was added to the Russian empire. Odessa on the south coast was all Russian. The northern part of modern day Ukraine was conquered from the Polish Lithuanian commonwealth. The western most part was taken from Poland after WWII. The Donbas region, Odessa and coast all along to the Crimea went into Ukraine during Soviet times. It is wrong to describe the Russians living there in those areas as colonising Ukraine. During Soviet times, the leadership moved people around for political reasons. Many of the Crimean Tartars we sent to Siberia for example. Later on many had moved back. In fact it would be more accurate to state that Ukrainians were colonising areas that the Russian empire and later Soviet Union conquered. The western bit had the Poles moved to what is modern day Poland after the great border changes at the end of WWII.

    • @brianmarshall1762
      @brianmarshall1762 Рік тому +2

      @@TheEvertw if you are referring to the Holodomor, that was a Soviet Union thing not a Russian thing. The leader of the Soviet Union at the time was a Georgian who we know today as Stalin. In regards to the famine, it was not directed against the Ukrainian Kulaks, it was against the kulaks in general. Somewhere between 7-8 million farmers in the Soviet Union died. Ukraine lost around 3 and a half million people, but to describe it as an attack on Ukrainians belies it’s communist origins and the deaths of others at its hands.

    • @patternrecon5271
      @patternrecon5271 Рік тому

      Keith Woods: "russian" oligarchs.
      Igor Kolomoisky.
      Great russian famine, Holodomor, Famine in Khazakhstan, Lazar Kaganovich, Genrikh Yagoda, Aron Solts, Filipp Goloshchyokin, Yakov Yurovsky, Lazar Kogan, Matvei Berman, Naftaly Frenkel, Salomon Morel, Helena Brus.
      You must understand. The leading Bolsheviks who took over Russia were not Russians. They hated Russians. They hated Christians. Driven by ethnic hatred they tortured and slaughtered millions of Russians without a shred of human remorse. The October Revolution was not what you call in America the "Russian Revolution." It was an invasion and conquest over the Russian people. More of my countrymen suffered horrific crimes at their bloodstained hands than any people or nation ever suffered in the entirety of human history. It cannot be understated. Bolshevism was the greatest human slaughter of all time. The fact that most of the world is ignorant of this reality is proof that the global media itself is in the hands of the perpetrators."
      Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

  • @Rus88292
    @Rus88292 Рік тому +2

    Потому что Крым всегда принадлежал России, пока Хрущев не отписал Украине.
    Вот Путин и вернул что принадлежало российскому народу😅

  • @interpl6089
    @interpl6089 Рік тому +13

    Crimea was Always Russian.

  • @dpt6849
    @dpt6849 Рік тому +1

    Crimea is founded by acient Greeks. So it belongs Greece. And then. Persia, Rome, Byzantium/Ottoman.
    Not to a Jewish president who dances around in a skirt and wears high heels.
    You see. They didn't have high heels in ancient times...

  • @VajrahahaShunyata
    @VajrahahaShunyata Рік тому +8

    Not much mention of the Budapest memorandum treaty?
    Why?

    • @0rcd0c
      @0rcd0c 9 місяців тому +2

      She also failed to mention at 4:15 why Yanukovych didn't sign the agreement in his historic "pen breaking apology". These Western "development aid funds" had inhumane conditions attached to them which would result in the Ukrainian working population essentially becoming slaves to big cooperations for the forthcoming decades. Yanukovych 100% did the right decision for his country at the sacrifice at his own safety and future career.

  • @GabGotti3
    @GabGotti3 Рік тому +2

    This is my favorite military news channel. I’m American.

    • @caynair1002
      @caynair1002 Рік тому

      ami go home ! out of rammsein ! NOW !

  • @thornil2231
    @thornil2231 Рік тому +4

    Crimea is part of Russia, always has been.

    • @mutluolmaknedir
      @mutluolmaknedir Рік тому

      Only from 1783

    • @thornil2231
      @thornil2231 Рік тому +1

      @@mutluolmaknedir before the french republic, Italy, Germany, all the central and eastern european countries existed...

    • @mutluolmaknedir
      @mutluolmaknedir Рік тому

      @@thornil2231 why is crimea so important for russia

    • @thornil2231
      @thornil2231 Рік тому

      Why is California so important for the US?@@mutluolmaknedir

  • @jjoei1345
    @jjoei1345 Рік тому +11

    The Russo Ukraine War began with the Maidan Protests

    • @Cottam89
      @Cottam89 Рік тому +8

      Which were directed and pushed by the west

    • @ogposter8086
      @ogposter8086 Рік тому +5

      @@Cottam89 delusional

    • @MacTac141
      @MacTac141 Рік тому

      @@Cottam89 Only when the government gave orders to start using live ammunition on protesters. Turns out killing dozens of people in your capital city is a great way to drive your population from protest to revolution. Particularly picking off civilians in the streets with snipers was a stupid thing to do

    • @martijnstam6186
      @martijnstam6186 6 місяців тому

      @@Cottam89 Ukraine is a democratic country and in 2014 they ousted a corrupt Putin cronie.

  • @TheByrd
    @TheByrd 5 місяців тому

    If it was illegitimate like you said then why does your Ukrainian map reflect the Russian annexation of Crimea? Contradictory.

  • @Stand663
    @Stand663 Рік тому +9

    We take democracy here for granted ie the vote actually means something and cannot be overturned etc etc. Unfortunately places in the east have never experienced real democracy only dictatorship in one form or another.

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron Рік тому +1

      Define Democracy?

    • @Stand663
      @Stand663 Рік тому +6

      @@DaveSCameron You can change your government

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron Рік тому +1

      @@Stand663 Didn't we witness Ukraine *change its Government back in 2013/4...

    • @cattraknoff
      @cattraknoff Рік тому

      Democracy has its own perils. Chief among them is this: There is no one in power who has not sought power. Most who seek power do so for selfish reasons. Power is the most addictive thing in the world: more addictive than every drug combined. We entrust people with power who are addicts to power. Democracies have a tendency to decay over time and become more and more corrupt for this reason. Soon enough these addicts to power start conspiring together, making deals with hand shakes privately. Some are little conspiracies, while others are more grand in scale. These things have always happened. Conspiracy has always been an integral part of politics. In no democracy has everything been decided publicly. Most things are decided privately before they ever even become a subject for public debate. Politicians make deals. They have always made deals. The older a democracy, the more corrupt these dealings become.

    • @jamesng7320
      @jamesng7320 Рік тому +4

      Are you implying that democracy is somehow better? Many countries and have been undemocratic for their entire existence and still turned out to be very great nations.

  • @mishasmirnov9988
    @mishasmirnov9988 Рік тому +4

    a lot of misinformation, especially in the beginning. To make impression that Ukraine was always occupied by Russia during imperial or soviet periods.
    Crimea belonged to Russia more than 300 years, and it was a part of Ukraine for 20 years. Now it is 10th year coming when Crimea is in Russia. Where is annexation?
    It was not mentioned that Crimea was an autonomous republic in Ukraine with its own parliament and constitution. So they decided to quit from Ukraine during the absence of legal power in Ukraine in 2014, it is a fact.
    And funny thing that the EU didn't recognize a referendum with voting. But it recognized the armed overthrow of power. Very democratic way.

    • @eugenes9620
      @eugenes9620 Рік тому +1

      ruzzky, follow your warship Maaskva 🤣🤣

  • @nigellawson8610
    @nigellawson8610 Рік тому +8

    Of course that does not excuse Putin's aggression against a country that posed no danger to his own. One has to remember that Putin, like the Americans, has his own imperial agenda which includes incorporating Ukraine into the Russian Federation, as well as annexing the Baltic states and other parts of the old Soviet Block. He has also stated in numerous writings that Ukraine doesn't exist outside of Russia. And I have no doubt that if he had been able to capture Kiev in the first days of his invasion, he would have instituted a wholesale radical purge of Ukrainian society, which could have led to the murder and disappearance of tens of thousands of people. So I don't blame the Ukrainians for wanting to fight the Russians tooth and nail to maintain their nation and national identity.

    • @timmccarthy982
      @timmccarthy982 Рік тому +1

      "Putin's aggression against a country that posed no danger to his own" If Ukraine joined NATO then US hypersonic nuclear missiles are on Russia's border 300 miles from Moscow and could strike in less then 3 minutes.
      After US put nuclear missiles in Turkey Russia put nuclear missiles in Cuba causing Cuban Missile crises. For Cuba's part in doing that the US gov't 70 years later is still punishing that country and people with crushing economic sanctions most of the people not even alive back then.

    • @giselameunier4788
      @giselameunier4788 Рік тому

      That 's the reason Ukraine should stay Nutral, than no war

    • @MacTac141
      @MacTac141 Рік тому

      @@timmccarthy982 What stupid reasoning😂
      1) There are only 5 NATO countries who have American nukes on their territory, and all of them have had American nukes there for decades. None of them have American ICBMs or “hypersonic nuclear missiles”, only small yield tactical gravity bombs
      2) If the US wanted nukes close to Russia, Latvia is closer to Moscow than Ukraine and Estonia is only 300km from St. Petersburg. It would be easier, smarter and closer to put nukes in the Baltics rather than Ukraine. Logistically it makes a LOT more sense as well. Since the U.S. made no effort to move nukes into the Baltics or Poland prior to the invasion, why is Ukraine any different?
      3) The US government isn’t stupid and knows Russia has second strike capability. Taking out the Russian capital and second largest city faster doesn’t help the US avoid a nuclear response from Russia. Russia couldn’t stop the barrage on Moscow anyway so why would it matter to the US if it’s a base in Ukraine/the Baltics or a nuclear sub in the Atlantic that launches the reentry vehicle? Answer is they don’t, this isn’t the 1960’s anymore. It’s why they didn’t worry about building missile silos in NATO nations
      Ukraine joining NATO never represented a nuclear threat to Russia unless Russia was planning on nuking Ukraine to begin with, forcing an American or European response

  • @Cubs3344
    @Cubs3344 Рік тому

    How poor this report could be? stated that an unknown armed force occupied Crimea "Despite their Russian equipment". Did the reporters know that Ukraine also possesses a lot of Russian equipment as well?

    • @ameerhamid89
      @ameerhamid89 Рік тому +1

      Nice try. They mean very modern russian equipment such as body armour and rifles specific to Russian federation. Not soviet equipment

  • @4i4ofester72
    @4i4ofester72 Рік тому +3

    Because they are Russians living there. It's more than obvious.

  • @sadako8559
    @sadako8559 3 місяці тому

    I lived in Crimea for my whole life. We wanted to become part od Russia. If only you all saw what a dumpster fire was our infrastructure before Russia actually funneled money here.
    Was it a good choice in the end? I don't know, but the fact that the whole peninsula (well, like 85% give or take) voted for Russia, remains.

  • @merc340sr
    @merc340sr Рік тому +3

    Interesting video. Russia has access to the Black Sea in areas other than Crimea. Why don't the Russians develop these areas(Sochi, Novorossiysk)?

    • @ДаданДаданский
      @ДаданДаданский 11 місяців тому

      What do you mean "don`t develop"? Most of those areas are sand beaches and resorts. Very well developed and growing.

    • @merc340sr
      @merc340sr 11 місяців тому

      @@ДаданДаданский I meant develop those areas in order to locate a naval base, as an alternative to using Crimea as naval base. That's what I meant.

    • @Bjonnet55
      @Bjonnet55 10 місяців тому

      @@merc340sr Russia took Crimea and would still take Odessa because historically they are part of Russia ; the Russia empire developed those places not Ukraine and majority of the populations are Russian majority; Ukraine Is a red alert for Russia that’s why it won’t allow it to join nato that will automatically put USA and nato infrastructure in Crimea close to Russia ; so Russia had a lot of reason to take back those strategic port its was always been Russian cities and port not Ukraine

    • @merc340sr
      @merc340sr 10 місяців тому +2

      @@Bjonnet55 fair enough, but can you recapture a country after it acquired its independence (i.e.Ukraine)?Using military power and war to conquer territory is becoming less acceptable in this day and age.Would Russia not be better off if it became part of the West?

    • @yorrickloooper9398
      @yorrickloooper9398 5 місяців тому

      ​@@merc340srYes ofcourse, but.... Russia is the enemy...

  • @IusedtohaveausernameIliked
    @IusedtohaveausernameIliked Рік тому +1

    Speaking Russian doesn't make you Russian any more than speaking English makes you English. Borders are decided by laws not by languages. Slava Ukraini!

    • @eugenes9620
      @eugenes9620 Рік тому

      100%, half country speaks ruzzians

  • @lc5945
    @lc5945 Рік тому +3

    Napoleonic wars. Switzerland. The "language affinity" card, and it's outcome...

  • @republicofhandball8815
    @republicofhandball8815 7 місяців тому

    First of all, Crimea was the only autonomous oblast of Ukraine. From 2014(since its annexation to Russia) until 2022(when the full invasion started) Ukraine didn't shoot a single a bullet in Crimea. Probably, if it was just Crimea, we wouldn't had any war at all between Russia and Ukraine.

  • @johnnyenglish583
    @johnnyenglish583 Рік тому +19

    Crimea was Russian for only a relatively short time. If one nation were to lay claim to it, it would be the Crimean Tartars, who had their own state there until Russia conquered Crimea (late 1700s) and then carried out ethnic cleansing. So basically Russia's claim rests on genocide. After the Russian invasion, Crimea was annexed for about 130 years. It was then a separate republic after the revolution, then it was made Russian in 1944 again, and ten years later it was transferred to the Ukrainian republic. So all in all, Crimea belonged to Russia for about 140 years. The Tartars had their state there for something like 400 years.

    • @Imprudentman
      @Imprudentman Рік тому +6

      The Russian Tmutarakan principality existed in the Crimea in the 10th-11th centuries. So the Crimea has long belonged to the Russians. Did you know about it? 😉

    • @johnnyenglish583
      @johnnyenglish583 Рік тому +1

      @@Imprudentman the Russian nation didn't exist in 11th century... Moscow didn't exist. Kyiv existed and the Ruthenian state was already there. Volodymyr/Suzdal only became a thing about 300 years later.
      There were people from central asia in Crimea among other things. But if you're saying they were "Russian" (which is a complete anachronism) you're basically admitting that Russians aren't European, they're Asian+Mongol. It's that what you're saying?

    • @raulmelo5881
      @raulmelo5881 Рік тому

      So Americas claim to the west coast of America is based of genocide of the natives .. are u in favor of us giving it back or do u only care when it’s Russia ?

    • @patternrecon5271
      @patternrecon5271 Рік тому

      Blood tax
      Ottoman slave owners
      Tartar slave owners

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 Рік тому +6

      @@Imprudentman Nobody knows that because it's rubbish.

  • @mer3abec
    @mer3abec 9 місяців тому +2

    80% of Ukraine army joined Russian army. 20% went back home to Ukraine. It is fact.

  • @Alhambrasheff
    @Alhambrasheff Рік тому +28

    The gas fields of off shore Crimea, the Donbas rift and eastern Carpathians would have made Ukraine potentially the second largest world supplier. Combined with extensive storage facilities this was of interest to the EU and a major threat to Putins plan to create an energy dependent Europe. But a resources war would have not gained much support from friends so this has been carefully wrapped up in historical justification. Oil supplies will be next.

    • @DevilbyMoonlight
      @DevilbyMoonlight Рік тому +3

      Very true.. war usually follows black gold..

    • @TheAlien729
      @TheAlien729 Рік тому +4

      Let me remind you that Russia stood for a peaceful solution to the Donbass. And in the course of the agreements, Russia offered Donbass to remain part of Ukraine (on the rights of republics, with their own laws). So apparently it wasn't so critical.

    • @rizz1042
      @rizz1042 Рік тому +4

      And where there is oil, there is usa

    • @Alhambrasheff
      @Alhambrasheff Рік тому +6

      The Donbas is part of Ukraine, how generous of Russia to offer it could remain

    • @TheAlien729
      @TheAlien729 Рік тому +6

      @@Alhambrasheff Meanwhile, the residents of Donbass, who held a referendum on joining Russia in 2014 and were refused, apparently did not think so and will not think so anymore.
      They wanted to break away, and Russia persuaded them to stay and pushed through the Minsk Agreements to recognize them as republics with their own laws. So that they remain within the borders of Ukraine, but can live without those laws that they did not like.

  • @antonioalvir8402
    @antonioalvir8402 6 місяців тому +1

    😂What is the cause for the invasion/war in Ukraine?
    Okay, It's a bit complicated. First, to simplify, let's see what are the causes.
    Denazification? This was one reason provided by Putin which most know to be false. Zelensky is Jewish and was elected in 2019 vs Poroshenko, next runner up. Nationalism and Nazism are not the same thing! The Nationalist party, one political party of many in Ukraine, and seen as right wing, only won about 2% of the vote. So this means there is no Nazi party ruling Ukraine either.
    Demilitarization. Putin stated this as a goal in the invasion. There are now more weapons in possession of the Ukrainian Armed Forces than any other time in history.
    Remove Ukraine as a threat to Russian security? Ukraine gained it's independence in 1991 and with it inherited 1/3 of the entire Soviet Nuclear Arsenal (missiles, bombers, etc). By 1994 an agreement had been reached between Russia and Ukraine, through UK and USA for Ukraine to destroy it's Nuclear missiles, and weapons in exchange for a guarantee of security. Ukraine was a threat to Russia before 1994, not after. This agreement was also broken by Putin.
    Putin claims he invaded to save the Russian speaking people of South Eastern Ukraine. He did the same thing about Crimea, but instead of giving it it's independence, he annexed it. Hitler used the same tactic in 1936 vs Czechoslovakia and the region of Sudetenland. As in Crimea, the Czechs appeased Hitler. They did not put up a fight but later, Hitler still invaded the rest of the country. Putin invaded the heart of Ukraine, Crimea and the Donbas regions. To this day, any who can evacuate the region, run to the Ukrainians side, not the Russians if possible.
    He liberates nothing.
    He claims he supports independence for the separatists in Donbas. Most those "separatists" are actually infiltrated Russian soldiers incognito. This also happened in Crimea, where soldiers were seen without identification.

  • @michaelthompson9548
    @michaelthompson9548 Рік тому +4

    Great effort!

  • @jeffreybabor2585
    @jeffreybabor2585 Рік тому

    Does anyone else wonder if there is a Crimea river?

  • @robertdlucas7418
    @robertdlucas7418 Рік тому +10

    Russia was right to annex Crimea. Crimea was always Russian. America and NATO wanted to use Crimea as a naval base.

    • @mxmis1225
      @mxmis1225 Рік тому +2

      No. At that time Ukraine was not even an ally with "nato and usa". Plus crimea was Russian in Russian empire. But always when Ukraine was independent, it was Ukrainian. So no. Plus 45% of people in crimea are crimean tatars which say that it was better when there were Ukrainians. So your comment is not valid.

    • @thegaslightneverends
      @thegaslightneverends Рік тому +1

      whoever has the most money and guns can do anything, no one has the true 'right' to anything

    • @doniehurley9396
      @doniehurley9396 Рік тому

      @@thegaslightneverends and who has the most money and guns

    • @mutluolmaknedir
      @mutluolmaknedir Рік тому

      Crimea can not be more important than the Bosphorus Strait

    • @robertdlucas7418
      @robertdlucas7418 Рік тому

      @@mutluolmaknedir In this day of drones and missiles,the Bosphorus Strait is not that important.

  • @gordion1
    @gordion1 Рік тому +1

    Who were the snipers?

    • @StephenSeabird
      @StephenSeabird 5 місяців тому

      That's been a much disputed issue, as far as I can tell, because some accuse extreme right-wing Ukrainian nationalists with links to the Azov Brigade, which has a very dark history. Others dispute that.

  • @tomkent4656
    @tomkent4656 Рік тому +15

    A rather simplistic analysis.

    • @straighttalking2090
      @straighttalking2090 Рік тому +9

      What do you expect in 12 minutes. I came here because it was short.

    • @ameerhamid89
      @ameerhamid89 Рік тому +2

      Looking forward to the 1200 page book on the topic by "tom kent"

    • @timmccarthy982
      @timmccarthy982 Рік тому +1

      @@ameerhamid89 I got Tom's back.

    • @ameerhamid89
      @ameerhamid89 Рік тому

      @@timmccarthy982 that's nice, you gonna write the foreword to that book?

    • @giselameunier4788
      @giselameunier4788 Рік тому

      the facts were iold

  • @maryanchabursky9148
    @maryanchabursky9148 Рік тому +1

    1:45 including in Crimea and Sevastopol.

  • @max45623
    @max45623 Рік тому +5

    Crimea is Ukraine!!!

  • @liamwarren7590
    @liamwarren7590 Рік тому

    Walk past the IWM in Manchester everyday and im absolutely gutted i didnt go in to these portraits.

  • @MrMountain707
    @MrMountain707 Рік тому +7

    No mention of the US-funded coupe in 2014?

    • @jonathandavx
      @jonathandavx Рік тому +2

      Source of that absurd clam?

    • @MrMountain707
      @MrMountain707 Рік тому +3

      @Jonathan alava it's widely publicized. The US funds a foreign coupe roughly every 10 years. Read a history book

    • @jonathandavx
      @jonathandavx Рік тому +2

      @@MrMountain707 could you suggest me a source where I could read about that or are you another crazy Ivan spreading misinformation?

    • @martijnstam6186
      @martijnstam6186 6 місяців тому

      Ukraine ousted a Putin cronie.

  • @jshepard152
    @jshepard152 3 місяці тому +1

    Russia denied involvement, but promptly annexed Crimea once the war was over. Yeah, they definitely were not involved.

  • @NothernNate
    @NothernNate Рік тому +6

    + Biden goes to Ukraine while Putin is afraid to fly! 😎
    Glory to the Heroes!
    #PutinWarCriminal

    • @rohitdabral7249
      @rohitdabral7249 Рік тому

      Biden went to ukraine by taking permission from Russia.
      Russia guaranteed that there will be no threat to his safety.

  • @danarzechula3769
    @danarzechula3769 10 місяців тому

    Americans are not taught geography. Honestly they had no idea how important Crimes and its assets were

  • @SeptikAvenger
    @SeptikAvenger Рік тому +8

    Crimea is about as Ukrainian as Kosovo is Serbian. Having been born in Ukraine I can't fault them for not wanting to be a part of that country.

    • @mxmis1225
      @mxmis1225 Рік тому

      One thing is wrong here. This referendum in crimea was fake.

    • @SeptikAvenger
      @SeptikAvenger Рік тому +5

      @@mxmis1225 Just because you disagree with it it's fake? The vast majority of the people there want nothing to do with Ukraine. Before you say Crimean Tatars they were like 15% of the population max even before 2014. Crimea wanted greater autonomy back in the early 90's before Ukraine abolished the Crimean constitution in 1995.

    • @andruhakrutchenko2523
      @andruhakrutchenko2523 Рік тому +6

      @@SeptikAvenger that is absolutely false. How do you know Crimeans wanted to be in Russia, considering that Russian didn't even let international observers to overlook the voting to be fair?
      Russian so-called "referendums" cannot be trusted. Last fall russia also said that more than 90% of people in Donbass and Kherson voted to be in Russia, without even fully controlling those territories! How can you say Ukrainians in Donbass region want to be russian, of you don't even ask people their choice (because you are not there). This is a bullshit farse.

    • @SeptikAvenger
      @SeptikAvenger Рік тому

      @@andruhakrutchenko2523 Чувак иди на хуй. Мы ненавидим вас и не хотим иметь с вами ничего общего. Россия это ваша проблема, а не наша.

    • @andruhakrutchenko2523
      @andruhakrutchenko2523 Рік тому +2

      @@SeptikAvenger speak normal language please, I won't read the language of the rashists

  • @AbduljabbarAli-oe5fo
    @AbduljabbarAli-oe5fo 10 місяців тому +1

    Lol 30 years ago there's no country by the name Ukraine.. It was ussr

  • @michaeldelisieux5252
    @michaeldelisieux5252 Рік тому +15

    International Law MUST BE held! Anything short of that will be a reward to recklessness and the opening of a Pandora’s Box ( if not, already).
    Slava Ukraini!

    • @shesathome
      @shesathome Рік тому +8

      Give Lwów and Wołyń back to Poland, Donbass, Crimea and Odessa to RF, Western Ukraine to Romania Hungary and live happily ever after!

    • @maryanchabursky9148
      @maryanchabursky9148 Рік тому +3

      @@shesathome lol no it is our land and we will not give it to anyone

    • @neilnelson7603
      @neilnelson7603 Рік тому

      Unfortunately, westerners openned the Pandora's box long time ago when they ignored international law and started invading countries, organising coups and protest in third world countries.

    • @michaeldelisieux5252
      @michaeldelisieux5252 Рік тому

      @@neilnelson7603 Absolutely! We aren’t talking about “good” versus “bad” here. It worked well at the playground but the reality is completely different. What we are talking about is that “if” we start re drawing borders at this stage and age, things can get really ugly. I am not saying this in my own name ( I was born in the late sixties and I have had a good ride, so far). I am talking about our sons and grandsons and granddaughters’ future ( if any).

    • @omachiimmanuel3123
      @omachiimmanuel3123 Рік тому

      @@michaeldelisieux5252 But NATO could redraw to create Serbia. Russia warned of the consequences of that action and used same pretext used by NATO in there own with Crimea and Donbass.

  • @Grunty1289
    @Grunty1289 Рік тому

    Anyone looked into who those snipers were?

    • @doniehurley9396
      @doniehurley9396 Рік тому

      That got the same sort of investigation that Nord Stream got

  • @thomasjefferson1111
    @thomasjefferson1111 Рік тому +17

    No one mentions US involvement in the uprisings and civil war, yet it’s a crucial piece.

    • @asinine9ben
      @asinine9ben Рік тому +3

      What exactly?

    • @obsidianjane4413
      @obsidianjane4413 Рік тому +3

      @@asinine9ben He's invoking the myth that the US CIA staged everything in 2014 etc.

    • @havareriksen1004
      @havareriksen1004 Рік тому +2

      No one mentions it because it didn't happen. Easy as that. Proof of such involvement hasn't surfaced anywhere.

    • @thomasjefferson1111
      @thomasjefferson1111 Рік тому +6

      @@havareriksen1004 You can find the phone calls between Victoria Nuland and other US officials working in Ukraine talking about the elections in Ukraine and the results thereafter and what outcome they will and won’t allow in terms of US interests. Public knowledge easily discovered with a modicum of interest. The war is wrong, but not surprising in the slightest.

    • @Summoningz
      @Summoningz Рік тому +4

      Where is the evidence of this US involvement?

  • @evgendoktor-TA
    @evgendoktor-TA Рік тому

    It is interesting!:) But there is not rational cosation of stealing Crimea semi-peninsula by Russia. It was only due to putin's desire to be an eternal ruler.

  • @madzihove
    @madzihove Рік тому +2

    There was no political entity known as Ukraine before its formation under the Soviets. Ukraine in Russian means the borderlands which is where it gets it's name from.

    • @ogposter8086
      @ogposter8086 Рік тому

      Learn history from reliable sources, not russia today

  • @ivan7453
    @ivan7453 4 місяці тому

    How does anyone trust Putin and Russia to honour an agreement? No-one can.

  • @larsrons7937
    @larsrons7937 Рік тому +6

    Ukrainian soldiers: _"Mr. president, we took _*_Cremlin_*_ just like you asked us to."_
    President Zelenskyy: _"Crimea, Mykola, I said _*_Crimea."_*

    • @charliebarton
      @charliebarton Рік тому

      How's that working out?

    • @ВикторАнтип
      @ВикторАнтип 17 днів тому

      Украинские солдаты даже за Крым не стали бороться, а просто сказали забирай он нам не нужен. За Крым не было ни одного боя. Так что это называется не аннексия.

  • @mrbeltr5833
    @mrbeltr5833 Рік тому +1

    Sucks that Russia is stuck in a cycle. Hope they break it soon

  • @betterdonotanswer
    @betterdonotanswer Рік тому +8

    0:45 Muscovy is not Russia, historically. Ukraine, more known as Rus since 839 AD, had no complex and antagonistic relation with Muscovy until 1502 because such country simply did not exist. Crimea belonged to Rus since 968 AD, until it was invaded by Mongols on 1239. Whereas the Muscovite army has reached Crimea only on 1736 just to die in there. And managed to occupy it on 1776, or 808 years after Ukraine.

    • @betterdonotanswer
      @betterdonotanswer Рік тому +2

      Q: Kievan Rus / Kyivan Rus'...
      A: Is a false name fabricated by Muscovite propaganda in order to introduce derivative frauds such as «North-Eastern Rus», «Vladimir-Suzdalian Rus» or «Muscovite Rus» that never existed in reality and were intended to support groundless Muscovite claims for the legacy of Rus (849-1434).

    • @betterdonotanswer
      @betterdonotanswer Рік тому +2

      Q: the Soviet era...
      A: Was a period of Muscovite occupation (1921-1991) during which about twelve million of Muscovite migrants have been shipped to Ukraine and settled into the homes of Ukrainians and Crimean Tatars murdered in the genocides of 1921, 1932, 1944 and 1946.

    • @betterdonotanswer
      @betterdonotanswer Рік тому +2

      Q: The steppes of Ukraine were home to many different people...
      A: Starting from the Sarmatians, Alanians, Huns or Goths who became Ukrainians and ending up with the Cumans who became the Crimean Tatars. None of them were related to the Muscovites in any way.

    • @betterdonotanswer
      @betterdonotanswer Рік тому +1

      Q: Russian, rather than an Ukrainian...
      A: Ukrainians are the only historical Rus, Russians or Ruthenians on this planet. Whatever identity the Muscovite migrants have received as a result of brainwashing, it was forcibly imposed on them. They are sentient beings capable to decide themselves by using the historical knowledge.

    • @betterdonotanswer
      @betterdonotanswer Рік тому +2

      Q: You forgot the Poles...
      A: In 1918 Ukraine was invaded from all direction by the RSFSR, VSUR, Poland and Romania, resulting in the Polish occupation of western Ukraine. Where the Poles perpetrated multiple war crimes, including ethnic persecutions, pogroms, deportations and the genocide of Ukrainians in 1942-1947.

  • @LifeDL
    @LifeDL Рік тому

    What I’d like to know is, I’ve heard the military force was firing into Donbass region. Some say it’s the Ukrainian military forces wiring into the Donbass region because they’re pro Russian. Others as this video describes the little green men were the ones to do the plague take over the Donbass region with what I just saw a Toronto they have little green men that swept to Toronto, without a shot of bullets in anyway and pushed all the truckers that were protesting the vaccination by mandate . It was believed the little green men were actually United Nations why the United Nations would help. Canada is clear what would be unclear is why would the UN, potentially little green men, will be firing into the Donbass region from the west. I know this is long but I appreciate any response. Thank you.

  • @jeshurunfarm
    @jeshurunfarm Рік тому +11

    But where is the part where the US🇺🇸 fuels the conflicts in 2014? That changes so much. Also the aria borders is very liquid.

    • @havareriksen1004
      @havareriksen1004 Рік тому +1

      I guess it's not there because there is no believable proof of involvement by the USA.

    • @feral_berryy
      @feral_berryy Рік тому +1

      The US is not relevant to 2014. Ukrainian activists, the people and the opposition spoke out against Yanukovych for refusing to sign a trade document with the European Union. We wanted to be with the EU all along lol
      What Russia does not like. But to hell with that Russia. Millions of Ukrainians died because of the USSR. Cursed repression, camps and confiscation of property

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 Рік тому +1

      I think you missed out the part where Putin fuelled the conflict by his illegal invasion.

  • @bikenavbm1229
    @bikenavbm1229 Рік тому +1

    thank you good overview that.

  • @jonr6680
    @jonr6680 Рік тому +9

    So succinct and clearly presented. The problem in a way (nodding to the raison d'etre of the channel of course) is by being factual and objective we are in a way tacitly acknowledging and legitimising Russian ambition. And the use of force and death as a valid means to that end.
    Would really like 'war' to be a true museum artefact, a historical anecdote, rather than a perpetual disease or addiction that humanity seems incapable of breaking free of.

  • @epluribusu9430
    @epluribusu9430 Рік тому +1

    Ukraine did not "join the Soviet Republic".
    Ukraine became ONE of the republics in the USSR - Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Plural, republic's.

  • @lucapieralisi
    @lucapieralisi Рік тому +15

    The famine which went down in history as the Holodomor in Ukraine was a famine which didn't affect Ukraine only but other soviet republics too and actually the republic which more affected by it was not Ukraine - which tops the list for the number of dead - but Kazakhstan where the famine whip out 1/3 of the whole population. The famine affected the Caucasus republics too.
    But nowadays the narrative is so centered on Ukraine only that soon we are going to wonder if the solar system revolves around that country too.

    • @johnnyenglish583
      @johnnyenglish583 Рік тому +8

      Do you think this has something to do with the fact that Kazakhstan is not being invaded and Ukraine is? Do you think that if Russia had attacked Kazakhstan, the world would be talking about Kazakhstan, not Ukraine?

    • @havareriksen1004
      @havareriksen1004 Рік тому +8

      There is ample proof that this famine was deliberate. There were ample harvests, but the government seized all the produce and exported it. This export was crucial for the Soviet economy at the time. In China the same happened during their 5 year plan, but unlike in the Soviet Union, the leaders did not want to starve people. They were just fed reports that all was going well by subordinates that didn't dare bring bad news. Stalin does seem to have been delibarate about the Holodomor, though. And it further added to the russification of Ukraina, since ethnic russian farmers were brought in from different parts or the russian USSR to repopulate the land and grow more crops.

    • @patternrecon5271
      @patternrecon5271 Рік тому

      Keith Woods: "russian" oligarchs.
      Igor Kolomoisky.
      Great russian famine, Holodomor, Famine in Khazakhstan, Lazar Kaganovich, Genrikh Yagoda, Aron Solts, Filipp Goloshchyokin, Yakov Yurovsky, Lazar Kogan, Matvei Berman, Naftaly Frenkel, Salomon Morel, Helena Brus.

  • @Marcel-ct9wq
    @Marcel-ct9wq 3 місяці тому

    Russia just wanted Ukraine to stay a neutral buffer between Russia and Nato .. but the US had to keep creeping up to their borders ...

  • @petergardner760
    @petergardner760 Рік тому +10

    I'm not a Putin acolyte or supporter but this is an uncharacteristically biassed account by the IWM. Of course militias were armed with Russian weapons. Ukraine's enitre military inventory was Russian. In the build up to the annexation of Crimea nothing was said of the role of Angela Merkel who told Yanukovich that the neutral independence he wanted for Ukraine was not an option and, with complete disregard for Ukraine's treaties with Russia, told him he must choose either the EU or Russia exclusively. Nor is there any mention of EU finance for the Maidan rioters and the support and presence of meddling US Democrat politicians.
    Public understanding depends on hearing a balanced account from bodies such as the IWM. The IWM has fallen short and the public have every right to expect better.
    NATO expansion is highly relevant but is not mentioned. Russia was badly and deceitfully treated in the negotiations in the 1990s as recounted fairly and comprehensively by ME Sarotte in "Not One Inch" and NATO's recent overtures to Ukraine were, let's be honest, an attempt to do a reverse Cuba, to park nuclear weapons right up close to Russia's borders. Russia has much right to resist as the US did in 1962.
    Going back further you might like to talk about the brutal occupations of Ukraine by Germany in both WW1 and WW2. The latter involved the enslavement of Ukrainians to work in German factories and the fact is that Ukraine had its own National Socialist movement - still active in 2014 - that gladly helped the German National Socialists by murdering Ukrainian jews. Kasputin Yar is a dark stain on a Europe that now pretends to be entirely virtuous. Putin's propaganda contains some uncomfortable truths that the West refuses to acknowledge. that does not justify Russia's invasion but the West blunders on because it refuses to acknowledge the causes and fails to understand them.
    And what are Germany's and the EU's aims today? Not in the slightest altruistic as those of the UK are. They want control of Ukraine's vast deposits of rare earths and lithium valued at up to US$12 trillion plus a bonus in the form of gas, agriculture and, whisper it, oil. That is why Germany reversed its previous policy not to supply weapons, as a condition of Zelensky signing over the future governance of Ukraine to the EU in a Faustian deal on 27 February 2022, just three days after the Russian invasion. Germany has learned very well from its dependence on Russian gas. Control of Ukraine's resources by the German dominated EU will greatly enhance its Green Energy supply independently of China. It also makes respectable Scholz's drive to massively re-arm Germany to make it the most powerful miltary power in Europe, to lead European 'defence', and to make Germany the undisputed top power in Europe militarily, economically and politically. Third time lucky.
    Russia may be today's problem. A militarised EU totally dominated by Germany is tomorrow's.

    • @johnnyenglish583
      @johnnyenglish583 Рік тому +4

      Germany's political position became significantly weaker now. Poland's got bigger (and better) army than Germany at the moment. Even France is paying more attention to the Eastern Flank. And Germany won't become militarised because the Germans got used to easy living and won't give it up to spend money on the army.
      Also, you mention the extreme right movement in Ukraine in 2014 but you conveniently choose not to say what happened to it later. In the previous term, the extreme right had four seats (of a total of 450 seats) in the Ukrainian parliament. In the current term, they have ONE seat. That's a quarter of a percent. I wish all countries only had such small support for the extreme right.

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 Рік тому +2

      Yes you are a Putin acolyte and supporter. NATO expansion is irrelevant. If independent countries want to join a defensive alliance they are perfectly entitled to do it. There was never any agreement not to expand NATO. That's something else you've got wrong.
      Putin's propaganda contains NO truth.
      I notice you haven't said one word about the genocide Stalin perpetrated on all the subject states of the USSR. Why is that I wonder?
      Green energy doesn't rely on imports either. You're wrong on all counts.

    • @petergardner760
      @petergardner760 Рік тому +2

      @@Poliss95 that is the kind of blinkered wilfully ignorant attitude that causes misunderstandings, confrontation and war. Don't they say war is a failure of diplomacy. Certainly in your case it is.

    • @thorkushari4027
      @thorkushari4027 Рік тому +1

      This would explain Germany's sheepish complicity in the Nordstream pipelines destruction, even though it helped to make life even harder for German workers by removing cheap energy and replacing it with expensive LNG. And coal. !!

    • @petergardner760
      @petergardner760 Рік тому

      @@thorkushari4027 I don't know the truth about Nordstream 2's sabotage. But since this thread started what I said earlier has become even clearer in the case of Germany. Von der Leyen has already boasted about Europe, meaning the EU, having its own lithium and rare earths, ie. Ukraine's, and Sholz has already claimed the mantle of leading Eiuropean defence. Diplomacy in the Indo-Pacific is heating up with Britosh, Fr and Ge naval deployments and the EU designating it an area of interest - along with the Gulf of Guinea. It is all so obvious I sometimes think the UK's political elite, despite being hyperactive in wolery and other inward looking issues is utterly blind to what is going on in the wider world. By 2030 Germany will dominate the EU economically, militarily and politically and it will have Ukraine under its control again. Third time lucky for Germany's place in the sun.

  • @admir3486
    @admir3486 Рік тому

    "But the vote was condemned by the EU"
    Victoria Nuland:"F... the EU"

  • @MgpCars
    @MgpCars Рік тому +10

    Full scale invasion was 24th Feb, not 22nd.

    • @sst701
      @sst701 Рік тому +5

      She said: "In the early hours of the 22nd of February Russian tanks rolled across the Ukrainian border."
      Not: "The full scale invasion began on 22nd of Feb".
      You need to pay more attention to what you hear.

  • @didutasev4427
    @didutasev4427 Рік тому +1

    Became a soviet republic or became a part of the Soviet Union, but not "became the soviet republic".

  • @robinindam6983
    @robinindam6983 Рік тому +5

    Crimea is belongs tu Ukraine not russian

  • @jamesvioleen
    @jamesvioleen Рік тому +1

    0:00 you mean early 2014

  • @joyjit_roy
    @joyjit_roy Рік тому +3

    *western narration.*

  • @sergk5701
    @sergk5701 Рік тому

    as in most cases, this is a one-sided narrative. i was born in Sevastopol and lived in Crimea for more than 20 years - from end of 80s to the end of 00s. Since 1992 Crimea was under illegal occupation by Ukraine. The wish of Crimean people for independence of Crimean Republic, clearly expressed in referendum of 1991, was ignored by Ukrainian SSR government, which forced Crimean parliament to agree to keep Crimea under Ukraine, after the USSR collapsed. Most of ppl in this video, as well as in comments never even visited Crimea and know nothing about the reality of that region. We even had our own president for about a year, before Russia and Ukraine forced him to be removed from politics. Crimea belongs to Crimeans - people who either lived there for generations, or were born there and lived most of their lives. Only they have the right to decide. Everything else - including Ukrainian occupation, which lasted from 1992 till 2014 - was a crime. This western-style reporting is such a depressing propaganda. As if Edward Seid or Michelle Foucault or Chomsky or Zizek, or in fact any critical thought never existed in your intellectual lives. How dare you in general discuss the land of people, without asking them? Imagine someone in China would be making arguments about Manhatten being under annexation by Irish and Dutch.. and etc.. shame

  • @lourdesbastida9203
    @lourdesbastida9203 Рік тому +4

    So dissapointing to see that once again only a partial thruth is mentioned and thought this was a great channel..

  • @jakklump
    @jakklump Рік тому +8

    An important element completely overlooked in this video; the North Crimea Canal is required to make agriculture and tourism possible in Crimea. 85% of water used on the Crimean Peninsula comes from the Dnipro River with no financially viable alternatives. Therefore in order to maintain any viability of Crimean putinazi occupation, the muskovite murderers will want to continue to illegally and immorally murder and steal Ukrainian land and water. Slava Ukraine!

    • @giselameunier4788
      @giselameunier4788 Рік тому

      Crimea is russian, bast if you like it or not , Crimea was not annexed they wanted to join russia, they suffert from Ukraine

  • @joshm3484
    @joshm3484 Рік тому +2

    It wasn't taken easily. Not really. Russia took months, failed at their objective to take larger portions of Ukraine, failed to topple the government, and took ridiculous casualties in what should have been a week long cake walk for any competent military. While bloggers and _analysts_ were all echoing "Russia Stronk" actual experts were watching the Russian military flail and fail with concern.

    • @timmccarthy982
      @timmccarthy982 Рік тому +2

      Ukraine is the size of Texas anybody think that takes weeks and not years is clueless and also doesn't look at the amount of territory taken in the Russian Donbas, surrounding important port Mariupol, captured Crimean canal that supplies all the fresh water to Russian Crimea in the south things Russia wants in the month Ukraine defended Ukrainian city Kiev with Ukrainian citizens Russia didn't and still doesn't want. Or that no hostile city over a million has every been captured in modern war (unless you count completely shatterred and almost flattened Berlin at the end of WW2) it's something that's not done and the Russians remember more than anybody trying to take Grozny in 1994 and taking huge losses against 10,000 Chechens.

    • @charliebarton
      @charliebarton Рік тому

      They went in with less than 200k troops. The idea that they were aiming to conquer the entire country is absurd. Which is probably why our leaders keep repeating that point.
      And speaking of blunders - how did those sanctions work out?
      From the brains that brought us the Iraq and Afghanistan wars: it's a forever war that will have the Hillary Clinton for president crowd cheering for blood and death till the end of time.