Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 10 – Most analysts
have treated reports that 80 percent or more Russians support Vladimir Putin
and his war in Ukraine either as fraudulent, an indication of the success of
government propaganda, or as an indication of where Russian society as a whole
now stands.
But Russian journalist Kseniya Kirillova
suggests that regardless of whether that figure is completely accurate, there
are in fact six more or less distinct groups subsumed under it and that each
has its own reasons for being there and its own vision of where Russia should
be heading (cogita.ru/a.n.-alekseev/publikacii-a.n.alekseeva/kseniya-kirillova-tipologiya-rossiyan-podderzhivayuschih-rezhim-putina).
And because the members of these groups –
and Kirillova does not attempt to suggest exactly what share any of them form
in “the Putin majority” – have different positions, they can be evaluated in
terms of how they are likely to behave in the future if the economic crisis in the
country grows into a political one.
The first group, she says, are “the
active ‘imperialists,’” ideologically committed to the annexationist policies
of the Kremlin. These include both the ideologues of the “Russian world” and
those who want to see Putin and the Russian state become more powerful at home
as well as abroad.
The number of people in this group is
not large, and their degree of ideological consolidation is sufficiently
limited that “a disappointment in a specific idea will automatically lead to a
sharp exodus of supporters” of this position. Those are positive factors for
anyone who wants to see a change in Russia.
But on the other hand, “despite
their small numbers,” the members of this group constitute “the majority in the
Russian media space and on the Internet,” they are concerned about ideology and
thus will defend their ideas, and they will defend Putin and his regime in the
event of a crisis as the best means of defending themselves.
The second group are “the active
conformists,” people who while not ideological are conditioned “from pragmatic
and utilitarian considerations” to go along with the powers that be. The number of such people “has turned out to
be much larger than one might have expected,” Kirillova says.
No fewer than 20,000 journalists are
in this group for that reason, but its members also include Russian military
and security types, government officials, and activists who are making a good
living by pushing the Kremlin line on Ukraine or on the need to crush dissent. And it includes many in the Russian Orthodox
Church hierarchy.
Despite its numbers, Kirillova
argues,”this group all the sameremains aminority as does any active group
compared ot the general passivity of Russians.” Moreover, because it does not
rest on a belief in a specific ideological position, its members can be
expected to change their views with any shift in power or policy.
But
it is nonetheless an important resource for the Kremlin because it forms “the
absolute majority of the active population of Russia” and perhaps even more
because its activities up to now have “cut off its opportunity to retreat” in
the future. Thus they “will defend the regime as the single guarantee of their
own security.”
The third category includes “the
passive conformists,” who are not benefitting specifically from Putin’s line
but who are used to going along with whatever the leadership says. Some of them
are smart enough to reject part of what the propagandists say but not smart
enough to recognize how false the total picture the latter paint in fact is.
They aren’t interested in much
beyond their own immediate lives and consequently won’t defend the existing regime
in the event of a crisis, although many of them may feel constrained about
coming out against it as long as they feel “the greatness of Russia” is at risk
and that revenge is possible.
The fourth includes “the typical
residents,” who simply want to keep out of the way and get on with their own
lives. They too are “in principle” not interested in preserving the existing
regime and they are more likely than the passive conformists to be willing to
protest against it if the situation its worse.
But at the same time, they too will
defer to the authorities and their “sacred” status far longer than is
warranted, something the regime can use, and they will be more open than other
groups to the argument that they should support whoever is in office because “otherwise
‘things will be even worse.’”
The fifth group
includes “the zombified inhabitants or passive victims of propaganda. They
really get their information only from state television and they believe what
they see. They are distinguished from the third and fourth groups in that they
do not doubt what they are told rather than deciding that they have little interest
in challenging the story line.
Like those
other two groups, this one is “personally not interested in the preservation of
the regime,” includes people who are quite capable of criticizing the
authorities when they act against their personal interests, and can evolve and
mature into full-fledged citizens capable of acting on their own if they
suddenly discover that what they have been told is a lie.
At the same
time, however, this group fears even more than the others that the future might
be even worse and thus its members are inclined to support the status quo
believing that Putin “despite all his shortcomings” is doing something positive
in Ukraine and “saving Russia” from a West that wants to destroy the country.
And the sixth
group, Kirillova says, are “the active victims of propaganda.” This is a subset
of the fifth and includes those who are impressed by government propaganda
because it helps give them a sense of efficacy. That is especially important
because Russians, as unhappy as they are with their surroundings, “constantly
feel their inability to change anything in it.”
Among this
group, she continues, there are many who are either marginal figures of those
who “in principle are accustomed to living by illusions. As a rule, they are
not capable of a real defense of their illusions in the event of growing
threats.” And thus the potential that under such threats, they will change
their views and join the opposition is higher than many might expect.
But the longer
they are subject to propaganda, the more members of this group may become
ideologically convinced of the rightness of Putin’s line and thus will become “subconsciously
interested in the preservation of the regime” because they like “the
psychological atmosphere of struggle and conspiracy theories which it is
creating.”
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