Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 24 – The majority of
residents of Crimea almost certainly did not vote to join the Russian
Federation, according to a detailed analysis of that vote by Andrey Illarionov,
and Putin’s claimed victory was, as many have suspected, the result of the kind of massive
falsification Putin has perpetrated in Russian elections in the past.
Illarionov’s detailed discussion of
this issue is convincing, but it is especially important because it calls
attention to a trend Putin and his supporters have done everything they can to
suppress: support in Crimea for joining the Russian Federation had in fact been
declining rather than increasing, a development that may have contributed to
the timing of Moscow’s action.
In a blog post over the weekend,
Illarionov begins by citing the statement of former Ukrainian Prime Minister
Yuliya Timoshenko who said that only 34 percent of Crimean residents voted for
joining the Russian Federation, not the 97 percent Vladimir Putin has claimed (echo.msk.ru/blog/aillar/1284798-echo/).
Speaking on “Shuster Live,”
Timoshenko said that “according to the data of the leaders of the Crimean Tatar
people, only a little more than 34 percent of Crimeans voted for unity with
Russia.” That figure, she suggested, is “very close to the truth” (zn.ua/POLITICS/timoshenko-zayavila-chto-za-prisoedinenie-k-rossii-progolosovala-lish-tret-krymchan-141729_.html).
Such figures
correspond with the results of polls taken in Crimea in early to mid-February,
Illarionov point out. One by the Democratic Initiative found that 35.9 percent
of Crimeans favored joining Russia, and a second by the Kyiv International
Institute of Sociology found a figure of 41.0 percent (dif.org.ua/en/events/ukrainieyu-ne-hochut.htm).
And these in turn replicate the findings of still earlier samplings by the Research and Branding Goup and the Gallup Institute and International Republican Institute, he says (argumentua.com/novosti/vpervye-bolshinstvo-krymchan-khotyat-videt-krym-v-sostave-ukrainy and 112.ua/video/prisoedinenie-kryma-k-rossii-rezultaty-golosovaniya-na-krymskom-kanale-atr.html?type=90106).
And these in turn replicate the findings of still earlier samplings by the Research and Branding Goup and the Gallup Institute and International Republican Institute, he says (argumentua.com/novosti/vpervye-bolshinstvo-krymchan-khotyat-videt-krym-v-sostave-ukrainy and 112.ua/video/prisoedinenie-kryma-k-rossii-rezultaty-golosovaniya-na-krymskom-kanale-atr.html?type=90106).
Such
expressions of public opinion in Crimea not only call into question the results
Moscow claimed but suggest that those who currently accept them as somehow
valid or at least indicative of a majority in the peninsula need to look more
closely at those who have examined Russian falsifications of the vote (kireev.livejournal.com/1005294.html).
“At a minimum,” Illarionov says, “two-thirds of the residents
of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea did not vote for joining [it] to
present-day Putin’s Russia.”
Consequently, the chief ideological prop of the Kremlin on this issue
falls apart and means that Putin is relying on naked force alone, something that
those concerned about Ukraine and the future should focus on.
More such analyses are likely to
appear in the coming days, and one can only hope they will have an impact on
thinking in the West as well as in Russia.
But already they have called attention to something that Putin has
preferred not to talk about and that may explain why he acted when he did even
more than references to the Maidan.
Nine months ago, Tatyana Ivzhenko of
Moscow’s “Nezavsimaya gazeta” reported that “Russia is losing influence on
Crimean residents,” a conclusion she said arose from the findings of new polls
there. To the extent that is true, Putin may have felt he had to move when he
did lest support for him and for Russia were to fall further (ng.ru/cis/2012-09-14/1_crym.html?print=Y).
Some
commentators are likely to insist that the Maidan changed everything, that the
Kyiv demonstrations intensified the national feelings of ethnic Russians in
Crimea and Eastern Ukraine. There is likely some truth in that, but more recent
soundings show that most ethnic Russians even in those regions put Ukrainian
citizenship above Russian ethnicity.
Had Putin not played up Russian nationalist
sentiment and used it as the basis for an invasion and seizure of Ukrainian
territory, Ukraine would likely have been able to integrate its ethnic Russians
as full-fledged Ukrainian citizens and would have been a state interested in at
least cooperative relations with Moscow.
But Putin’s actions have unified
Ukrainians in ways few had thought possible even several weeks ago, and they
are likely to remain unified against Moscow in much the same way the victims of
Russian aggression on other occasions are. One can only hope that Russians in
Ukraine will nonetheless reject Putin’s inversion of ethnicity and citizenship.
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