10 January 1994
— NATO PfP programme launched14 May 1994
— Moscow brokers end to war between Georgians and Abkhaz5 December 1994
— Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances for Ukraine signed by Russia, US and UK1 January 1995
— CSCE renamed OSCE27 May 1997
— NATO–Russia Founding Act on Mutual Relations, Cooperation and Security signed31 May 1997
— Friendship treaty signed by Russian president Boris Yeltsin and Ukrainian president Leonid Kuchma10 October 1997
— Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Moldova form GUAM consultative forum12 March 1999
— Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland join NATO19 November 1999
— A/CFE signed at Istanbul summit of OSCE31 December 1999
— Yeltsin resigns, Vladimir Putin becomes acting president of Russia26 March 2000
— Putin elected president7 October 2002
— Establishment of CSTO23 November 2003
— Eduard Shevardnadze resigns as Georgian president, in the culminating moment of Rose Revolution24 November 2003
— President Vladimir Voronin of Moldova scuttles ‘Kozak Memorandum’ plan for resolving the Transnistria dispute.29 March 2004
— Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia join NATO1 May 2004
— Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia join EU12 May 2004
— European Neighbourhood Policy announced28 December 2004
— Viktor Yushchenko elected president of Ukraine in run-off prompted by Orange Revolution protests3 April 2005
— Tulip Revolution in Kyrgyzstan forces resignation of president Askar Akaev10 May 2005
— Russia and EU sign framework documents for four ‘Common Spaces’31 December 2005
— First Russia–Ukraine gas war begins12 December 2007
— Putin suspends implementation of CFE agreement2 March 2008
— Dmitry Medvedev elected president of Russia2–4 April 2008
— NATO Bucharest summit communiqué declares Georgia and Ukraine ‘will become’ members of Alliance5 June 2008
— Medvedev calls for new European security treaty8–12 August 2008
— Russia–Georgia war26 August 2008
— Russia recognises independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia31 December 2008
— Second Russia–Ukraine gas war begins7 May 2009
— Launch of EU Eastern Partnership initiative9 June 2009
— Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus announce formation of Customs Union29 November 2009
— Russia publishes draft European Security Treaty25 February 2010
— Viktor Yanukovych elected president of Ukraine15 April 2010
— President Kurmanbek Bakiev ousted in Kyrgyzstan21 April 2010
— Yanukovych signs 25-year extension of lease on Russian Black Sea Fleet base in Crimea in return for discounted gas price31 May 2010
— Russia and EU launch Partnership for Modernization20 November 2010
— NATO–Russia Council agrees to ‘work towards achieving a true strategic and modernised partnership’ at Lisbon summit4 March 2012
— Putin elected to third term as president of Russia30 March 2012
— Ukraine and EU initial AA3 September 2013
— President Serzh Sargsyan announces Armenia will scrap AA and join EEU21 November 2013
— Ukrainian government suspends preparations for AA with EU28–29 November 2013
— At EU Eastern Partnership summit in Vilnius, Yanukovych refuses to sign AA despite intense pressure from EU leaders30 November 2013
— Police crack down on students demonstrating in Kyiv against decision not to sign AA17 December 2013
— Putin promises US$15bn in credits to Ukraine and cut in the gas price by one-third18–20 February 2014
— Dozens of protesters and police killed in bloodiest days of the Maidan Revolution21 February 2014
— Yanukovych and three opposition leaders sign agreement calling for government of national unity, constitutional reform and new presidential election22 February 2014
— Yanukovych flees Kyiv; Verkhovna Rada votes to remove him from office25–28 February 2014
— Russian reinforcements arrive in Crimea and fan out across the peninsula1 March 2014
— Putin obtains formal approval from upper house of parliament to deploy military forces on Ukrainian territory15 March 2014
— Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov presents US Secretary of State John Kerry with draft ‘Friends of Ukraine’ action plan16 March 2014
— Contested plebiscite held in Crimea; overwhelming majority of voters said to support unification with Russia17 March 2014
— US and EU enact sanctions against Russia