From ICA News:
“100 days of war in Ukraine: A
timeline”
Russia invaded Ukraine in the
early hours of February 24, setting off the worst conflict in Europe in
decades. As Russia extends its grip over the east, we look back on 100 days of
fighting that has killed tens of thousands of civilians and reduced entire
cities to rubble.
– February 24: Russia invades
–
Russian President Vladimir Putin
announces a “special military operation” to “demilitarise” and “de-Nazify” the
former Soviet state and protect Russian speakers there.
A full-scale invasion starts with
air and missile strikes on several cities. Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelensky pledges to stay in Kyiv to lead the resistance.
– February 26: Massive
sanctions –
The West adopts unprecedented
sanctions against Russia and offers Ukraine military aid.
Air spaces are closed to Russian
aircraft and Russia is kicked out of sporting and cultural events.
– February 27: Nuclear threat
–
Putin puts Russia’s nuclear
forces on high alert, in what is seen as a warning to the West not to intervene
in Ukraine.
– February 28: First talks –
During the first peace talks
between Kyiv and Moscow, Russia demands recognition of its sovereignty over
Crimea, the “demilitarisation” and “de-Nazification” of Ukraine and a guarantee
Ukraine will never join NATO. Ukraine demands a complete Russian withdrawal.
– March 3: Kherson falls –
Russian troops attack Ukraine’s
south coast to try to link up territory held by pro-Moscow rebels in eastern
Ukraine with the Russian-annexed Crimea peninsula.
On March 3, Kherson in the south
becomes the first city to fall. Russian forces relentlessly shell the port of
Mariupol.
– March 4: Media crackdown –
Russia passes a law punishing
what it calls “fake news” about its offensive — such as referring to its
“special military operation” as an invasion — with up to 15 years in prison.
– March 16: Mariupol theatre
razed –
Russian air strikes raze a
Mariupol theatre killing an estimated 300 people sheltering inside. Moscow
blames the attack on Ukraine’s nationalist Azov battalion.
– March 16: Zelensky lobbies
Congress –
Zelensky tells the US Congress to
“remember Pearl Harbor” and lobbies Western parliaments for more help.
– April 2-3: Horror in Bucha –
After a month of fighting, Russia
withdraws from northern Ukraine, announcing it will focus its efforts on
conquering the eastern Donbas region.
On April 2 and 3, Ukrainians find
dozens of corpses of civilians scattered on the street or buried in shallow
graves in the Kyiv suburb of Bucha, which Russian forces had occupied.
Moscow dismisses accusations of
Russian war crimes, saying the images of the bodies are fakes.
– April 8: Train station
carnage –
A rocket attack on a train
station in the eastern city of Kramatorsk kills at least 57 civilians being
evacuated from Donbas.
– April 12: Biden speaks of
‘genocide’ –
Biden accuses Russia of
“genocide”, saying Putin appears intent on “trying to wipe out the idea of even
being able to be a Ukrainian”.
– April 14: Flagship sinks –
Ukrainian missiles hit and sink
Russia’s missile cruiser Moskva in the Black Sea, a major setback for Moscow.
– May 11: $40 billion in US
aid –
US lawmakers back a huge
$40-billion package of military, economic and humanitarian aid for Ukraine.
– May 16: Kharkiv retreat –
Ukraine says its troops have
driven Russian forces back from the outskirts of the country’s second-largest
city, Kharkiv, to the Russian border.
– May 18: Sweden, Finland
apply to NATO –
Finland and Sweden apply to join
NATO, reversing decades of military non-alignment because of Russia’s invasion
of Ukraine.
– May 23: First war crimes
conviction –
A Ukrainian court finds a
21-year-old Russian soldier guilty of war crimes and hands down a life sentence
for shooting dead a 62-year-old civilian in northeastern Ukraine in the opening
days of the war. He has appealed.
– May 21: Battle for Mariupol
ends –
Russia declares it is in full
control of Mariupol after Ukraine ordered troops holding out for weeks in the
Azovstal steelworks to lay down their arms to save their lives.
Nearly 2,500 soldiers surrender
and are taken prisoner by Russia.
– May 30: EU bans most Russian
oil –
EU leaders overcome resistance
from Hungary to agree a partial ban on most Russian oil imports as part of a
sixth wave of sanctions.
The deal bans oil imports
delivered by tanker but allows landlocked countries such as Hungary to continue
receiving Russian oil by pipeline.
– May 31: Russia seizes part
of eastern city –
Russian troops seize part of the
key eastern Ukrainian city of Severodonetsk, its governor says.
Taking the city would give Russia
de-facto control over Lugansk, one of two regions that make up the Donbas,
Ukraine’s industrial heartland.
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