Latvia United States Canada Russia Germany Czech Republic United Kingdom Lithuania Italy France Sweden China Finland Norway Brazil Ireland Netherlands India Estonia Vietnam Singapore Japan Spain Denmark Turkey Taiwan Ukraine Australia Poland Romania Armenia Hong Kong Belgium Thailand Indonesia Austria Morocco Egypt Albania Portugal Bulgaria Belarus Mexico Algeria Switzerland Colombia Argentina Pakistan Kazakhstan South Korea Venezuela Israel Saudi Arabia Greece United Arab Emirates Philippines South Africa Moldova Bangladesh Georgia Dominican Republic Hungary Tunisia Peru Slovakia Serbia Iceland Chile Croatia Afghanistan Iran Malaysia Slovenia Azerbaijan Sri Lanka North Macedonia Bosnia and Herzegovina Jordan Nigeria Uruguay Mauritius Kyrgyzstan Kenya Ecuador Mali Faroe Islands Honduras Malta Kuwait Cambodia Uzbekistan Nepal Cyprus Guatemala Montenegro Ghana Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Senegal French Polynesia Palestinian Territory Mozambique Reunion Aland Islands Barbados Mongolia Bahamas Maldives Puerto Rico Luxembourg Turks and Caicos Islands Oman El Salvador Bahrain Jamaica Bolivia New Zealand Guernsey Qatar Costa Rica American Samoa Zambia Laos Paraguay U.S. Virgin Islands Uganda Kosovo Seychelles Cote D'Ivoire Guadeloupe Panama Gibraltar Cayman Islands Saint Kitts and Nevis Libya Tanzania Aruba Lebanon Cabo Verde Benin Namibia Madagascar Northern Mariana Islands Rwanda Ethiopia Angola Bermuda Isle of Man Belize Liechtenstein Sudan Monaco Nicaragua Saint Pierre and Miquelon Saint Lucia Zimbabwe Fiji Tajikistan French Guiana Jersey Andorra Guam Iraq Greenland Timor-Leste Sint Maarten Cameroon Myanmar Dominica Martinique Trinidad and Tobago Yemen Mauritania Somalia New Caledonia Syria Russia Flag Meaning & Details 1,250 VISITORS FROM HERE! Russia Flag Flag Information three equal horizontal bands of white (top), blue, and red note: the colors may have been based on those of the Dutch flag despite many popular interpretations, there is no official meaning assigned to the colors of the Russian flag this flag inspired several other Slav countries to adopt horizontal tricolors of the same colors but in different arrangements, and so red, blue, and white became the Pan-Slav colors
Learn more about Russia »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook