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Russian spokesman’s statement ignores centuries of Russian attacks
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• Historians cite upwards of a dozen examples dating back to the 1500s in which Russia or the Soviet Union attacked another country without being militarily attacked first.
• Russia may offer various justifications for why it attacked another country in these instances, but each of these examples involved militarily unprovoked actions by Russia or the Soviet Union.
As Russia’s military was surrounding Ukraine and threatening to invade, Russian president Vladimir Putin’s spokesman gave an interview in which he denied that Russia had ever invaded any other country.
"We remind you that Russia has never attacked anyone throughout its history," Dmitry Peskov said in an interview on the Russia-1 television channel, according to the Russian news service TASS. "And Russia, which has survived so many wars, is the last country in Europe that even wants to utter the word ‘war.’"
When asked about this assertion, historians agreed that Peskov’s statement was untrue. "It’s blatantly false," said David Silbey, a military historian at Cornell University.
"How do you think the Russian Empire acquired most of its territory?" said Dan Nexon, a professor of government and foreign service at Georgetown University.
Faith Hillis, a historian at the University of Chicago, agreed that the statement is "baseless," and yet "also very familiar, because it was repeated frequently in Soviet-era textbooks. Throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, Russia attacked and subjugated numerous populations, almost always with the rationale that the aggression was mandated by Russians' needs to protect themselves or others."
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Here is a list of examples, stretching over more than 450 years, of Russia or the Soviet Union going on the offensive militarily, excluding cases of direct self-defense. We’ve left off the list murkier examples of Russia attacking as part of formal alliances, such as the events that precipitated World War I.
Siege of Narva during the Livonian War, 1558, shown in a depiction made in 1836. (Public domain)
• The Livonian War. In 1558, Tsar Ivan IV of Russia (sometimes called Ivan the Terrible) invaded Livonia, an area that included much of modern-day Estonia. This precipitated three decades of war that involved Russia, Poland, Lithuania, and Sweden.
• The Great Northern War. In 1700, Russia, under Tsar Peter I (known as Peter the Great) joined with its allies in challenging the regional hegemony of Sweden. At the outset of the 20-year war, Russian troops laid siege to the Estonian city of Narva.
• The annexation of Crimea. During the 1770s, the Black Sea region of Crimea had nominal independence but with Russian control of key ports. Empress Catherine II (known as Catherine the Great) refused mediation offered by other European powers and eventually took control of the entire peninsula. Russia formally annexed Crimea in 1783.
• The partition of Poland. In 1791, Poland enacted a new, liberal constitution. Conservative elements known as the Confederation of Targowica asked Russia to intervene and reimpose the previous constitution. Russia agreed and eventually ended up absorbing Lithuanian Belorussia and western Ukraine.
A Russian hospital in Sebastopol during the Crimean War, 1855. (Public domain)
• The Crimean War. The war, which stretched from 1853 to 1856, stemmed from a great powers conflict in the Middle East involving Russia, Great Britain, France, and the Ottoman Empire. Russia demanded protections for Orthodox populations subject to Ottoman rule. In 1853, at the outset of the war, Russia occupied portions of modern Romania along its border with Turkey.
Russian troops were involved in multiple campaigns in the early days of the Soviet Union in the 1920s, but historians say the chronology and circumstances are too muddled to be included on this list. Later examples are clearer, however, they said.
Soviet cavalry on parade in Lviv, after the city's surrender to the Red Army during the 1939 Soviet invasion of Poland. (Public domain)
• The invasion of Poland. On the eve of World War II, Russia and Germany signed the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, a nonaggression agreement between Hitler and Stalin that enabled the two powers to carve up and occupy Poland. The two dictators carried out their dual invasions of Poland in September 1939.
• The Russo-Finnish War. In November 1939, shortly after the invasion of Poland, the Soviet Union sought to expand its reach to portions of Finland. The Finnish government rejected a Soviet proposal to control several islands and secure a lease for a naval facility in exchange for a portion of Soviet territory. The Soviets proceeded to attack, and after more than three months of combat, the two sides signed a treaty favorable to the USSR in March 1940.
• The Soviet takeover of the Baltics. In 1940, the Soviet Union presented ultimatums to Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia, requiring them to admit an unlimited number of Soviet troops and install pro-Soviet governments. All three countries refused, and the Soviet Union proceeded to take control of the countries. Puppet governments agreed to be absorbed into the Soviet Union.
• War against Japan. In the closing days of World War II, the Soviet Union jettisoned its neutrality pact with Japan and invaded Japanese-held Manchuria from the east, west and north, as well as landing on Japanese-held Sakhalin Island.
• The Invasion of Hungary. A revolutionary moment occurred in 1956 in Soviet-aligned Hungary, amid some easing following the death of Josef Stalin. In November 1956, the Soviets invaded and crushed the efforts to liberalize, including executing former premier Imre Nagy.
Czechoslovaks carry their national flag past a burning tank in Prague during the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. (Public domain)
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• Ending the Prague Spring. In 1968, Czechoslovakia enacted liberalizing reforms. In August, Soviet forces invaded and occupied the country and took back key government positions.
• The Invasion of Afghanistan. In December 1979, the Soviet military invaded Afghanistan to support a Soviet-aligned government facing opposition from Muslim guerillas. Soviet troops remained in the country until 1989.
Rebel Muslim fighters inspect a Soviet tank captured in fighting near Asmar, Afghanistan, on Dec. 27, 1979. (AP)
Some of Russia’s military campaigns in the post-Soviet era don’t make this list for technical reasons. (Russian military activity in Chechnya, for instance, was arguably an internal matter.)
However, in 2014, Russia took control of Crimea from Ukraine, and later formally annexed the region. The annexation was never accepted by most other nations.
Experts said that Peskov’s framing leans heavily on the idea that a military attack is not an attack as long as there is some justification, however tenuous or archaic.
"Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union both have expansionary histories, but in Russian history-writing, these expansions are ‘liberations,’ not hostile annexations or attacks," said Susanne Wengle, a University of Notre Dame political scientist.
Typically, Russia, as well as other states, claim to have "intervened" on behalf of the "good guys," or were invited in by a government, or reacted to an attack by another state, Herrera said. "This is how Russia would explain its previous wars."
While the uncertainties of history sometimes allow justifications for attacks on other countries to be somewhat plausible, the more important point for the current situation, Herrera said, is that "the statement by Peskov is part of Russian propaganda to make it seem like Russia is not the aggressor today."
"What is different about 2022," Herrera said, "is that Russia is engaging in astonishingly belligerent and dangerous action on the border with Ukraine, and an invasion would be a clear choice by Russia to ‘attack’ unprovoked, with little question of who is the attacker, in comparison to other, more complicated historical examples."
Peskov said, "Russia has never attacked anyone throughout its history."
Historians cite upwards of a dozen examples dating back to the 1500s in which Russia or the Soviet Union attacked another country without being militarily attacked first.
Russia may offer various justifications for why it attacked another country in these instances, but contrary to Peskov’s statement, each of these examples did involve militarily unprovoked actions by Russia or the Soviet Union.
We rate the statement Pants on Fire.
Our Sources
TASS, "Peskov said that Russia does not even want to pronounce the word 'war,'" Feb. 20, 2022 (via Google Translate)
Lucian Kim, tweet, Feb. 20, 2022
Britannica.com, "Livonian War," accessed Feb. 21, 2022
Britannica.com, "Second Northern War," accessed Feb. 21, 2022
Britannica.com, "Partitions of Poland," accessed Feb. 21, 2022
Britannica.com, "Crimean War," accessed Feb. 21, 2022
Britannica.com, "Russo-Finnish War," accessed Feb. 21, 2022
Britannica.com, "Baltic states: Soviet occupation," accessed Feb. 21, 2022
Britannica.com, "Hungarian Revolution," accessed Feb. 21, 2022
Britannica.com, "Prague Spring," accessed Feb. 21, 2022
Britannica.com, "Soviet invasion of Afghanistan," accessed Feb. 21, 2022
Smithsonian magazine, "When Catherine the Great Invaded the Crimea and Put the Rest of the World on Edge," March 4, 2014
The Atlantic, "Putin’s Big Lie," Jan. 5, 2020
U.K. National Archives, "Soviet-Japan and the termination of the Second World War," Sept. 2, 2020
Email interview with Lance Janda, military historian at Cameron University, Feb. 21, 2022
Email interview with John Pike, director of globalsecurity.org, Feb. 21, 2022
Email interview with Steven Pifer, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, Feb. 21, 2022
Email interview with Harley Balzer, emeritus professor at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service, Feb. 21, 2022
Email interview with Ted Wilson, emeritus professor of history at the University of Kansas, Feb. 21, 2022
Email interview with Simon Miles, assistant professor at Duke University's Sanford School of Public Policy, Feb. 21, 2022
Email interview with Susanne Wengle, University of Notre Dame political scientist, Feb. 21, 2022
Email interview with Dan Nexon, professor of government and foreign service at Georgetown University, Feb. 21, 2022
Email interview with David Silbey, military historian at Cornell University, Feb. 21, 2022
Email interview with Yoshiko M. Herrera, political scientist at the University Wisconsin-Madison, Feb. 21, 2022
Email interview with Faith Hillis, historian at the University of Chicago, Feb. 21, 2022
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Russian spokesman’s statement ignores centuries of Russian attacks
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