

Over the centuries, the Russian and Austro-Hungarian empires, Poland, and Lithuania have all wielded jurisdiction over Ukraine, which first asserted its modern independence in 1917, with the formation of the Ukrainian People’s Republic. Residents of Kyiv leave the city following pre-offensive missile strikes by Russian armed forces on February 24, 2022. “any conquests by warring factions and Ukraine’s diverse geography … created a complex fabric of multiethnic states.”

The “historical reality” of modern-day Ukraine is more complex than Putin’s version of events, encompassing “a thousand-year history of changing religions, borders and peoples,” according to the New York Times. After Ukraine declared its independence in 1991, the president argued, Ukrainian leaders “began to mythologize and rewrite history, edit out everything that united, and refer to the period when Ukraine was part of the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union as an occupation.” In an essay published on the Kremlin’s website in Russian, Ukrainian and English last July, Putin credited Soviet leaders with inventing a Ukrainian republic within the Soviet Union in 1922, forging a fictitious state unworthy of sovereignty out of historically Russian territory. Before Russian forces fired rockets at the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv seized Chernobyl, site of the world’s worst nuclear accident and attacked Ukraine’s second-largest city, Kharkiv, Russian President Vladimir Putin shared some choice words.
