Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 23 – Public support
for Vladimir Putin’s policies in Ukraine is broad but not deep and is likely to
dissipate quickly rather than become the basis by itself for any new imperial
adventures, accordin to Lev Gudkov, the head of the independent Levada Analytic
Center.
In the course of a long and
wide-ranging interview on Ekho Moskvy, the sociologist and pollster said that
the majority of Russians are interested in a quiet life and dealing with their
own problems rather than getting involved in the problems of others, even if
state propaganda can for a time mobilize them in a different direction (echo.msk.ru/programs/year2014/1343750-echo/).
Until Putin began his propaganda effort,
from a third to two-thirds of Russians considered the Maidan in Ukraine as “an
internal affair of Ukraine” and said that they fully understood and why
Ukrainians should be angry at the corrupt Yanukovich regime and in many cases
added that they supported the popular moves against him.
At that time, Levada added, only 29
percent of Russians said that the integration of Ukraine into Europe was “impermissible”
or held that such an action was “a betrayal of Slavic brotherhood” or anything
similar. All this has changed at least superficially as a result of the
Kremlin-orchestrated media campaign.
The Russian pollster said that “this
has been an unprecedented campaign in terms of its intensity, tonality and
aggressiveness” and that it was possible only because “all alternative sourcs
of information were blocked” including the Internet. As a result, “an enormous part of the
[Russian] population remained without alternatives” and followed the official
line.
But such dramatic changes in what
people tell pollsters they think are seldom long-lasting, Gudkov said, pointing
to the rise and fall of support for the Kremlin during and then after the
August 2008 war in Georgia. Initially,
support for Putin’s policies went through the roof but then fell off as people
focused on other issues and problems.
The reason that Putin has been so
successful now in ginning up support is that he has used Ukraine as the
occasion to “channel” a lot of other kinds of anger by allowing people to
compensate for shortcomings in Russian existence by turning to open
manifestations of xenophobia and nationalism, two things that may be more
difficult to put back in the bottle.
One indication of the relative
thinness of support for Putin and his imperial projects is that most Russians
view the Eurasian Union as something that has nothing to do with them but is
only a plaything for the very top leader.
They want to deal with their own affairs. Getting involved abroad is
something Russians mostly don’t understand the need for.
Gudkov did point out that Russians
who live outside of Russia as in Ukraine typically are “much more strongly
oriented toward Russia and the Soviet Union than are those who live in Russia
itself.” Moreover, he said, nostalgia for the Soviet past reflects the problems
people have now rather than a real commitment.
As far as the annexation of Crimea
is concerned, there was much less support for this in Crimea itself than Moscow
has claimed. Local pollsters found that 43 percent favoted joining Russia and
41 percent were opposed, not the 95 to 5 split that Putin and Russian
propagandists regularly claim.
And even that support, Gudkov said,
refected “the powerful pressure” exerted by the Russian military and its base there.
Elsewhere in Ukraine, there is even less support for linking to Russia.
Moscow’s efforts to play up a
supposed NATO threat have not been very effective, Gudkov says, because this is
“a phantom” not a reality. But given
that nearly half of those who say they are following events acknowledge that “they
don’t understand what is happening in Ukraine,” some are inclined to accept
whatever Moscow television says.
Asked directly “what the Russian
majority wants today,” Gudkov said that “speaking in general, it wants a quiet,
well-off, stable, and predictable life” and isn’t interested in pursuing “the
destruction of enemies,” despite what official propaganda suggests. Expressed attitudes to the contrary are the
product of inertia and propaganda.
They are also the result, the
pollster said of growing fears among Russians that if they disagree with the
regime, they will suffer. Such worries have “strongly increased over the last
two years.” More than a third now fear a return to mass repressions, and many
more think they could lose their jobs.
Given that more than two-thirds live
“paycheck to paycheck,” that is a real concern, Gudkov said. Moreover, very few Russians have been abroad. Consequently, what they
know about it in realitiy is limited, he added, and they are more prepared than
they would otherwise be to accept the regime’s version of reality.
At
present, 85 percent of Russians say that they can’t influence the political
decisions of their government, the sociologist added. Paternalism remains “very
strong,” but Russian society is not what it was, and consequently, more people
are thinking independently even if they are not always willing to express it.
Many
people are increasingly anger and even in despair, Gudkov suggested. There is evidence of this in social
pathologies like suicide. In Moscow, only about eight people per 100,000 kill
themselves each eyar, but in Bashkortostan, that figure is “about 50” and in
the Russian Far East it is approaching 80.
Putin’s
propaganda effort seeks to channel such anger and despair into xenophobia and
hatred, he said. “It exploits such feelings” and allows people to feel that
they have some basis for self-respect. But such campaigns do not transform
people; they simply distract them from what they see everyday.
And
what is in evidence in Russia today is not society itself but a society that
has been “artificially” arosed, one in which “deep phobias and mythological
ideas” have risen to the surface. “The
entire picture is simplified to a serious degree, and this will last until the
negative consequences of all this policy begin to tell. That will soon happen,” Gudkov concluded.
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