Russian President Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in the early hours of February 24. In the month since the invasion began, more than 10 million people have been displaced and major Ukrainian cities have been besieged and attacked. Russia has been hammered with severe punitive sanctions, including asset freezes and export bans. The sanctions and social punishments affected not only the Russian State, but also Russians staying overseas, especially the rich oligarchs. These have darkened the growth prospects of the global economy, which had just begun to recover from the COVID induced recession.
Key moments from the first month of the war are as follows:
February 24: Russia launches a full-scale assault on Ukraine. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy orders a general mobilisation. Moscow’s stock exchange plummets by 45% after the United States announces sanctions on Russian banks.
February 26: The European Union bars selected Russian banks from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT), cutting them off from the global financial system.
February 27: The EU bans Russian civilian aircraft from EU airspace. State-owned media Sputnik and Russia Today (RT), along with their subsidiaries, are banned from EU airwaves and the internet. Russian troops press towards Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, and towards Kharkiv and Kherson. Domestic and overseas Ukrainians enlist to fight against Russia.
February 28: Ukraine applies to join the EU. Russia and Ukraine start ceasefire talks. The Russian rouble tumbles 30%, forcing Putin to impose capital controls. The EU bans transactions with Russia’s central bank, and approves a 500-million-euro ($554m) support package for the Ukrainian military, the first time the EU has agreed to provide lethal equipment to a third country.
March 1: A 65km-long Russian convoy heads for Kyiv. Pressure increases on Kharkiv and Mariupol in the east, and Kherson in the south. US closes its skies to Russian aircraft.
March 2: Russian tanks enter Kherson, the first and only regional capital city to fall during the first month of the war. Russian forces surround the port city of Mariupol in southeastern Ukraine. March 3: The International Criminal Court’s top prosecutor sends an advance team to investigate possible war crimes.
March 4: Putin blocks Twitter, Facebook, Voice of America, the BBC and Deutsche Welle – among other media platforms – in Russia. He signs a law criminalising “fake news”, which could give offenders up to 15 years in prison.
March 5: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets his Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba on the Polish-Ukrainian border. The US urges its citizens to leave Russia immediately. Aeroflot, Russia’s biggest state-owned airline, says it will cease all international flights.
March 7: Brent crude briefly reaches a high of $139.13 a barrel.
March 8: Civilians flee the town of Sumy via an evacuation corridor as agreed in talks between Moscow and Kyiv. US rejects a Polish offer to transfer Soviet-era MiG-29 fighter aircraft to Ukraine’s air force, as US seeks to keep NATO out of the war. The European Commission unveils REPowerEU, a plan to reduce dependence on Russian natural gas by two-thirds by the end of the year. The US imposes a ban on Russian crude oil imports, bringing the rise in oil prices since the Russian invasion to 30%.
March 9: Streams of refugees flee bloody battles in Kyiv’s northwestern suburbs Irpin and Vorzel. The International Monetary Fund’s executive board approves $1.4bn in emergency financing for Ukraine.
March 10: US Congress approves $13.6bn in spending for refugee and military aid.
March 11: Russians kidnap the mayor of Melitopol, a city in southeastern Ukraine. Putin approves the deployment of up to 16,000 fighters from Syria.
March 13: Russia broadens its attacks to western Ukraine, firing 30 cruise missiles at a military training base in Yavoriv, 25km from the Polish border.
March 14: Chechen leader and Putin loyalist Ramzan Kadyrov says Chechens have joined Moscow’s fight against Ukraine. US warns China it will not tolerate any form of alleviating sanctions against Russia, as US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan meets China’s Foreign Affairs Director Yang Jiechi for talks.
March 15: The Czech, Polish and Slovenian prime ministers ride a train to Kyiv. Zelenskyy tells European officials he doesn’t believe NATO membership is a prospect for Ukraine, signalling possible grounds for a compromise in negotiations with Moscow. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that in addition to over 30 biolabs (capable of producing bio weapons) in Ukraine, the United States has created “hundreds of such laboratories” in other countries.
March 16: Russian and Ukrainian negotiators say they are discussing neutrality for Ukraine in return for security guarantees and the departure of Russian troops. Putin likens domestic opponents of the war to “gnats” who weaken the country.
March 18: Russian forces enter the Mariupol and fighting is reported in the centre, as Ukrainian officials say the city has lost access to the sea. The Mariupol city council estimates 2,500 people have been killed during the Russian bombardment. US President Joe Biden warns Chinese President Xi Jinping of “consequences” should China offer Russia “material support” in the conflict.
March 20: The UN says more than 10 million people have been displaced in Ukraine, including those who have fled the country.
March 21: Ukraine rejects a Russian ultimatum to surrender in Mariupol.
March 22: Biden says Putin’s constant claims that Ukraine has chemical and biological weapons are a “clear sign he is considering using both of those”. Russian has been a very close friend of Myanmar for many years, especially militarily. More than a thousand officer level military personnel from Myanmar are present in Russia, receiving training and military education. Most of the advanced military equipments used in Myanmar also come from Russia, a shift from being depended upon China as short as a decade ago.