What you need to know about the history of Ukraine – Vox.com
Russian President Vladimir Putin hasnt been coy about why he invaded Ukraine: He says it isnt a real country. He claims Ukraine is a fiction, created by communist Russia.
As Voxs Zack Beauchamp explained, Putins central claim that there is no historical Ukrainian nation worthy of present-day sovereignty is demonstrably false. But this does not mean Putin is lying: In fact, Russia experts generally saw his speech as an expression of his real beliefs.
So its worth digging into the political and historical ties between Russia and Ukraine to better understand just whats going on, as Russia closes in on Kyiv.
Ukraine has a long history of what a Poynter fact-check called an extended tug-of-war over religion, language and political control with Russia, but starting in 1917 when the Russian empire collapsed, some Ukrainians called for independence. They wanted a republic. And for the next 100-plus years, the relationship between Russia and Ukraine has been marked by animosity over at least some Ukrainians desire to be a nation, and Russias desire for it ... not to be.
Today, Explained co-host Noel King spoke with Yale historian Timothy Snyder to understand the background that led up to this point in history. A partial transcript of their conversation, edited for length and clarity, is below. (A full transcript of the show is available here.)
You wrote an essay recently in which you called Ukraine, over and over again, a normal country. Why did you frame it that way?
When we listen to other peoples propaganda, it enables us to make exceptions in our own minds. Now, if we listen to what Mr. Putin says about Ukraine, we start to think, Oh, theres some reason why we shouldnt be treating the country of Ukraine, the state of Ukraine, the people of Ukraine, like everybody else.
And my point was to say, No, its a state, its a country, its a people very much like other peoples. And if anything, its more interesting,
The propaganda youre referring to, in part, is Russian President Vladimir Putins claim that Ukraine is not a country, that it was entirely created by Russia. What is the argument that he is making?
Ill address it, but I would first just suggest that its much more a framing device than it is an argument. You know, its like if I say that Canada is not a country, its just a creation of the United Kingdom. Its going to sound ridiculous.
But [Putins] technical argument is that when the Soviet Union was created, a Ukrainian republic was established. In that sense, Ukraine was created by the Soviet Union.
There are three terribly wrong things about this argument. No. 1, the Soviet Union is not the same thing as Russia. It was established deliberately as non-Russian, as an internationalist project.
No. 2, hes got it completely backward because the Soviet Union was created as a federation of national units. That was precisely because everybody, including internationalists like Lenin, understood in 1917, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, that the Ukrainian question was real. A century ago, this was not actually a big debate, even on the far left. Several years of watching people being willing to fight and die for Ukraine convinced the Communists who founded the Soviet Union that there was a real question here, and they had to have a real answer for it. So in that sense, it would be truer to say, Ukraine created the Soviet Union, because without the general acknowledgment of a Ukrainian question, the Soviet Union wouldnt have been set up the way that it was.
But then the third point, I mean, the third way this is just absurd is that, of course, Ukrainian history goes way back before 1918. I mean, there are medieval events which flow into it, early modern events that flow into it. There was a national movement in the 19th century. All of that is, going back to your earlier question, all that falls into completely normal European parameters.
So Ukraine didnt get created in any sense when the Soviet Union was created. It was already there, and it already had an extremely interesting history.
And during the time of the Soviet Union, was Ukraine allowed to be its own country in terms of language and culture?
It goes back and forth.
When they set up the Soviet Union in 1922, the initial idea is: Were going to win over Ukraine. And the way were going to win over Ukraine is were going to have policies of affirmative action where we will recruit Ukrainian elites into the Soviet Union by promoting them, by opening up Ukrainian culture, by opening up jobs in the bureaucracy. That goes on through the end of the 1920s. But then when Stalin comes to power in 1928, he sees the situation differently. He is trying to transform the Soviet Union economically.
He carries out a policy called collectivization, which basically means the state taking control of agriculture. Ukraine is the most important agricultural center in the Soviet Union. Its the breadbasket of Eurasia, basically. When his collectivization policy fails and starts starving people to death, Stalin says, No, no, this problem is caused by Ukraine. Its caused by Ukrainian nationalists. Its caused by Ukrainian agents funded from abroad, which is all complete nonsense.
But what it does is that it turns the Ukrainian question around, and suddenly all of these people whod been promoted through the 1920s are put in show trials, are committing suicide, or executed in the great terror. Suddenly, Ukrainian traditional village life has been wiped out by a famine which was not only entirely preventable but which was basically not just allowed but determined to happen in 1932 and 1933. So Ukraine is allowed to rise in a certain way, and then its crushed.
Can you tell us about the famine in Ukraine? Give us a sense of what happened and what the outcomes were for people who lived in Ukraine.
The five-year plan from 1928 to 1933 was to turn the Soviet Union, which was basically a country of peasants and nomads, into a country of workers. And an essential part of that was to get agriculture away from private farmers, from smallholders, who were very common in Ukraine, and get it under control of the state because that would allow the state to control a source of capital, which you could then divert toward industrialization.
So the peasants would be put under control, the land would be put under control, the food would be put under control. And the idea was that this would allow the state to divert resources to what it really wanted to do, which was build up the cities, build up the mines, build up the factories.
So thats 1928, 29, 30. It doesnt really work very well. Collectivized agriculture doesnt work in general very well, and the transition to it can be particularly horrifying. In 1931 and especially in 1932, theres a transition to collectivization in Ukraine; there is a bad harvest. And what Stalin does is he interprets it politically.
He says this is the fault of the Ukrainian Communist Party. In other words, he gives a highly politicized interpretation of a failure which is basically about his own policy. And then he tries to make reality match his interpretation. So the famine is not treated as real or its treated as the fault of the Ukrainians.
Grain is confiscated from Ukrainians in 1932 and even into 1933, when its clear that hundreds of thousands of people or even millions of people are going to die. In November-December of 1932 especially, Moscow pushes through a series of extremely harsh policies for example, that peasants are not allowed to go to the cities and beg. No one is allowed to leave the Ukrainian Republic. You know, things like this, which basically make a kind of prison of the entire republic so that starving people have nothing to do and nowhere to go.
The result of all of this is the greatest political atrocity in Europe in the 20th century up to that point and a nationally and politically directed famine in which I think, by the best estimates currently, about 3.9 million people die who did not need to die.
Oh my God, 3.9 million people die who did not need to die. And at that point is Ukraine essentially beaten into submission? I mean, how do people respond?
It happens over weeks and months. And as it happens, people lose their ability to behave politically or in a way that they could protect themselves. They very often, you know, lose the elemental aspects of what we would think of as human morality and decency. So its a very, very heavy weight on Ukrainian society. Its an unforgettable episode, and it is one of the things that marks Ukrainians now off from Russians. And so if a foreign government, you know, tries to deny [that historical episode] or minimize it or spin it in some way, as the Russian government has been doing, that causes a good deal of resentment and alienation.
What happens to Ukraine?
Ukraine is a constitutive part of the Soviet Union from its establishment in 1922 to its disintegration in 1991. The back-and-forth of how the Ukrainian question is treated continues after the Second World War, if in a less violent way.
So during the Second World War, for a while, Ukraine is praised by Stalin, and thats because the war is being fought largely in Ukraine. And by the way, Ukrainians suffer more than Russians in that war, not just relatively, but also in absolute terms. The civilians suffer more in Ukraine than in Russia. But during the war, because the Germans are trying to control Ukraine, Stalin praises Ukraine. But when its over, that all turns around again, and the fact that Ukraine was occupied by the Germans is turned against Ukraine. Now, Ukrainians are suspected of being collaborators. Theyre more suspicious than Russians are.
When Stalin dies, theres a certain loosening, which comes to its apex in the 1960s, where theres a certain relaxation and Ukrainian culture is allowed to flourish a bit. But when Brezhnev takes control from the late 60s and especially from the early 70s forward, you have a policy of a very deliberate Russification in Ukraine.
And its that moment the 1970s that are so important for understanding the present because thats when people like Putin grew up. So Putins perspective that everything is basically Russian and like, you know, everyone really speaks Russian, and even if they seem not to, they really want to thats a very 1970s perspective on all of this. From the Ukrainian point of view, the 1970s were very much a down point.
Its really only after Chernobyl, when Gorbachev and the Soviet leadership dont say anything about the spread of radioactive material, that things start to move in Ukraine. And a new kind of politics emerges in Ukraine, which starts to talk about Ukrainian autonomy or even Ukrainian independence.
The Soviet Union comes to an end in 1991. Contemporaneous with that, theres a referendum in Ukraine about independence, in which theres not only a very large majority across the country for independence, theres also a majority in every region of Ukraine, including the ones that Russia claims, or occupies, or says its fighting for right now. So after that, Ukraine has to build everything anew. It has to build a state, it has to build an economy, it has to build a political system. And thats the phase of history that were in right now.
Listen to the full episode wherever you get podcasts. And find more coverage from Today, Explained, The Weeds, and more Vox podcasts on Russias invasion of Ukraine in this Spotify playlist:
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What you need to know about the history of Ukraine - Vox.com
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- Ukraine war briefing: British ex-soldier arrested in Kyiv and accused of spying for Russia - The Guardian - October 31st, 2025 [October 31st, 2025]
- Ukraine: Russian attacks on energy could trigger major crisis within crisis - Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs - October 31st, 2025 [October 31st, 2025]