United States Singapore Ecuador Canada United Kingdom Mexico Spain Brazil Australia Germany India France Russia Philippines Qatar Netherlands Japan Panama Colombia South Africa Poland Italy Peru Belgium Thailand Turkey Pakistan Argentina Portugal New Zealand Puerto Rico Costa Rica Switzerland Malaysia South Korea Ireland Chile Indonesia Czech Republic Greece United Arab Emirates Ukraine Hong Kong Sweden Vietnam Taiwan Norway China Romania Finland Israel Hungary Saudi Arabia Trinidad and Tobago Egypt Guatemala Austria Venezuela Denmark Bulgaria Bangladesh Dominican Republic Jamaica Croatia Bahamas Nigeria Cambodia Lebanon Belize Botswana Estonia Morocco Iraq Kenya Bolivia Slovakia Serbia Nicaragua Latvia El Salvador Algeria Zimbabwe Slovenia Uruguay Jordan Sri Lanka Kazakhstan Honduras Barbados Bahrain Aruba Cayman Islands Malta Armenia Mauritius Ghana Bermuda Belarus Bosnia and Herzegovina Namibia Lithuania British Virgin Islands Albania Uganda Kuwait Tanzania U.S. Virgin Islands Oman Cyprus Curacao Paraguay Tunisia Eswatini Moldova Antigua and Barbuda Nepal Dominica Suriname Iceland Montenegro Syria Tonga Liberia Gibraltar Yemen Georgia Ethiopia Guam Jersey Malawi Libya Guyana Afghanistan Macao Angola Rwanda Kyrgyzstan Palestinian Territory Burkina Faso Laos Fiji North Macedonia Grenada Mongolia Senegal Netherlands Antilles Uzbekistan Madagascar Haiti Reunion Togo Sierra Leone Somalia Iran American Samoa Tajikistan Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Cameroon Guernsey Democratic Republic of the Congo Luxembourg Zambia Saint Kitts and Nevis French Polynesia Benin Turks and Caicos Islands Saint Lucia Azerbaijan Sudan Micronesia San Marino Northern Mariana Islands Russia Flag Meaning & Details 179 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 » CIA - The World Factbook