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The Tatars were deported en masse by Soviet leader Josef Stalin at the end of World War Two for alleged collaboration with the Nazis. Crimea became part of Russia within the Soviet Union until ...
The collapse of the Soviet Union greatly reduced the West’s fear of another world war—a fear that had led Western leaders to ...
Despite the Russian leader's 2022 declaration, Moscow does not fully control these Ukrainian regions but hopes that the U.S.
Soar above the breathtaking landscapes of the disputed territory of Crimea, scene of geopolitical tensions between Russia and Ukraine, steeped in historical grievances and ethnic diversity.
Europe could experience major geopolitical shifts as protests ensue in seven countries, many of which have pro-Russia ...
FILE - People watch as Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech after signing treaties for four regions of Ukraine to join Russia in the Moscow's Kremlin, during a meeting in Sevastopol ...
Norway's proximity to the USSR in the Cold War led to it building many military bunkers – some of them vast secret bases.
To end the war with Ukraine, Russia could offer the U.S. access to rare earth deposits in Ukraine that it does not legally ...
Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill met there in 1945 to discuss the fate of Germany and Europe after World War II. For Kyiv, Crimea had been a strategic asset, too. By the time ...
Russia's illegal annexation of Crimea was recognized internationally only by countries such as North Korea and Sudan. In Russia, it touched off a wave of patriotism, and “Krym nash!” — or “Crimea is ...