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Russia–Ukraine relations 

Russia–Ukraine relations
Flag of Russia   Flag of Ukraine
     Russia      Ukraine

The diplomatic relations between the Russian Federation and Ukraine were established in 1991 immediately upon the dissolution of the USSR of which both were founding constituent republics.

Russia has an embassy in Kiev and consulates in Kharkiv, Lviv, Odessa and Simferopol. Ukraine has an embassy in Moscow and consulates in Rostov-on-Don, Saint Petersburg, Tyumen and Vladivostok.

Contents

History of Relations

Ukraine and Russia share much of their history. Kiev, a modern capital of Ukraine, is often referred to as a mother of Russian Cities or a cradle of the Russian civilisation owing to the once powerful Kievan Rus state, a predecessor of both Russian and Ukrainian nations.[1]

After the Mongol invasion of Rus the histories of the Russian and Ukrainian people's started to diverge.[2] The former, successful in re-uniting all the remnants of the Rus' northern provinces swelled into a powerful Russian state. The latter came under the domination of Poland but the increasing pressure of Poland caused the Zaporozhian Cossacks to seek union with Russia via the Treaty of Pereyaslav.[3]

Afterward, most of Ukraine was gradually absorbed into the Russian Empire, which was completed in the late 18th century with the Partitions of Poland and the disbandment of the last Cossack units. Many people born in Ukraine, then called Little Russia, had powerful positions in the Russian Empire. [4]

After the February Revolution early relations with Russian Provisional Government and the Ukrainian Central Rada were the borders of the Ukrainian People's Republic, as over the three centuries of Ukraine being part of Russia several mixed Russian and Ukrainian territories were formed. The Sloboda region to the northeast, the Donets Basin to the east and the New Russia to the south. After the October Revolution, Ukraine became a battleground in the Russian Civil War and both Russians and Ukrainians fought in nearly all armies based on their political belief.[5]

In 1922, Ukraine and Russia were two of the founding members of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, and were the signatories of the treaty that terminated the union in December 1991.[6]

The 1990s

Embassy of Russia in Kiev
Embassy of Russia in Kiev

After both Ukraine and Russia terminated the union several acute disputes formed. The former one was the question of the Crimea which the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic has administered since 1954, but the transfer itself was done in violation of acting Soviet law. This however was largely resolved with Russia allowing Crimea to remain part of Ukraine, provided its Autonomous Republic status is preserved.

The second major dispute of the 1990s was the city of Sevastopol, with its base of the Black Sea Fleet. Unlike Crimea, Sevastopol was directly subordinate to Moscow, and after several years of intense negotiations, it was decided on the Fleet's partioning and Russia retaining its base in Sevastopol until 2017.

Another major dispute became the energy supply problems as several Soviet-Western Europe oil & gas pipelines ran through Ukraine. According to Gazeta.ru, in the 1990s Ukraine openly syphoned off Russian gas,[7] and after new treaties came into affect, the enormous debts were paid off by transfer of several Soviet weaponry and nuclear arsenals that Ukraine inherited, to Russia such as the Tu-160 bombers.[8] During the 1990s both countries along with other ex-Soviet states founded the Commonwealth of Independent States and large business partnerships came into affect.

2000s

Although disputes prior to the events of late 2004 were present including the accidental shooting down of a Siberia Airlines Tupolev Tu-154 in 2002 by the Ukrainian air defence and the controversy with the Tuzla Island, relations with Russia under the latter years of Leonid Kuchma improved. After the Orange Revolution, however, several problems resurfaced including a gas dispute, and Ukraine's potential NATO membership.

Today Russia remains Ukraine's biggest economic parter, Ukraine's tourist industry is heavily dependent on Russian tourists, and Russia's economy boom also depends on Ukrainian migrant workers. The overall perception of relations with Russia in Ukraine differs largely on regional factors. Many Russophone eastern and southern regions, which are also home to the majority of the Russian diaspora in Ukraine welcome closer relations with Russia[9]. However further central and particularly western regions of Ukraine show a less friendly attitude to the idea of a historic link to Russia[10][11][12][13] and the Soviet Union in particular[14]. In Russia, there is no regional breakdown in the opinion of Ukraine[15], but on the whole, Ukraine's recent attempts to joint the EU and NATO was seen as change of course to only a pro-Western, anti-Russian orientiation of Ukraine and thus a sign of hostility and this resulted in a drop of Ukraine's perception in Russia[16] (although Ukrainian President Yushchenko reassured Russia that joining NATO it is not meant as an anti-Russian act[17]). This was further fueled by the public discussion in Ukraine if the Russian language should be given official status[18] and be made the second state language[19][20] . Further worsening relations where provoking statements by both Russian (a.o. the Russian Foreign Ministry[21], the Mayor of Moscow Yury Luzhkov[22] and then President Vladimir Putin[17][23]) and Ukrainian politicians, for example, the former Foreign Minister] Borys Tarasiuk[24], deputy Justice Minister of Ukraine Evhen Kornichuk[25] and then leader of parliamentary opposition Yulia Tymoshenko[26]).

References

  1. ^ Kievan Rus, in The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition (2007)
  2. ^ Gumilev, Lev (2005). Ot Rusi k Rossii. AST. ISBN 5-17-012201-2. 
  3. ^ Shambarov, Valery (2007). Kazachestvo Istoriya Volnoy Rusi. Algorithm Expo, Moscow. ISBN 987-5-699-20121-1. 
  4. ^ Examples include Church leaders Feofan Prokopovich and Stephen Yavorsky, scientists Kiril Razumovsky, military commander Anton Golovaty, writers Nikolay Gogol and Taras Shevchenko, composers Dmitry Bortniansky and many other Famous people of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries.
  5. ^ see Ukrainian Civil War combatants include Anarchists, White Russians, Bolsheviks, Central Powers, Ententes and those of short-lived Ukrainian governments.
  6. ^ See Belavezha Accords
  7. ^ Ivan Chelnok "Украина ворует российский газ по заданию правительства" Gazeta.ru, 15 August 2000 Copy saved on compromat.ru
  8. ^ Кабінет Міністрів України, Російська Федерація; Угода, Міжнародний документ вiд 08.10.1999
  9. ^ BBC 25 Dec 2004, Angry mood in eastern Ukraine - Voters in Russian-speaking eastern Ukraine will go to the polls on Sunday in an angry mood.
  10. ^ BBC 15 Feb 2008, Country profile: Ukraine
  11. ^ BBC 5 Jun 2008, BBC dragged into Ukraine TV furore
  12. ^ BBC 28 Jan 2008 Ukrainians dream of EU future
  13. ^ BBC 18 Jun 2004, Ukraine drive to keep Russian off buses
  14. ^ (Russian) newsru.com 11 May 2007, Lvov unavailable 30 Jun 2008
  15. ^ Unian news agency 23 May 2008, Russians want Sevastopol to belong to Russia, poll shows
  16. ^ Unian news agency 9 May 2008, Almost fourth of Russians believe Ukraine is an enemy – poll
  17. ^ a b BBC 12 Feb 2008, Russia in Ukraine missile threat
  18. ^ BBC 1 Oct 2007, Q&A: Ukrainian parliamentary poll
  19. ^ BBC 22 Apr 2005, Ukraine divided over language row
  20. ^ BBC 22 Nov 2004, Ukraine's east-west showdown - The Ukrainian presidential election, plagued by bitter controversy and scandals, is seen as an east-west showdown.
  21. ^ Unian news agency 17 Jun 2008, Russian Foreign Ministry says Russian language in Ukraine suffers from pressure
  22. ^ Unian news agency 5 Jun 2008, Moscow Mayor calls on to take Crimea and Sevastopol from Ukraine
  23. ^ Unian news agency 10 Jun 2008, Ukrainian-Russian relations
  24. ^ Unian news agency 23 May 2008, Ukrainian politicians never went to Russia to violate its constitution - Tarasiuk
  25. ^ Unian news agency 22 may 2008, Russia bars entry to Ukrainian politicians
  26. ^ Foreign Affairs May/June 2007, Yuliya Tymoshenko, Containing Russia


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