Paul Goble
Staunton,
March 23 – As Russians become aware of the costs that Vladimir Putin’s
aggression in Ukraine entail, ever fewer of them in the Russian Federation
itself say they support what he has been doing. But backing for Putin’s
policies remains high in the Russian diaspora where its members have easier
access to information sources not controlled by the Kremlin.
The
softening of support at home for Putin’s policies is the subject of an article
by Aleksey Gorbachev in today’s issue of “Nezavisimaya gazeta” (ng.ru/politics/2015-03-23/3_crimea.html).
Their continued high levels among Russians abroad is explored by Novy
Region-2’s Kseniya Kirillova (nr2.com.ua/blogs/Ksenija_Kirillova/Pyataya-kolonna-rossiyan-v-Amerike-92842.html).
Gorbachev,
political observer for “Nezavisimaya,” reports that a new Levada Center poll
shows that “the share of those who have doubts” about the correctness of the
annexation of Crimea “is slowly but constantly growing,” with fewer than a year
ago feeling this was the triumph of justice (28 percent against 31 percent) or
approving it (44 percent instead of 47).
The
share of Russians who believe that Moscow acted as it did in Crimea to protect
the Russian population there has also fallen, from 62 percent to 55 percent, as
has the share of those who believe that Moscow’s actions were intended to
promote stability in Ukraine, from 39 percent to 33 percent.
At the
same time, however, Gorbachev says, the share of those who believe that the
annexation of Crimea was about “restoring historical justice,” a major theme in
Kremlin propaganda in recent months, rose from 32 percent to 40 percent. But the
percentage believing that Russia is returning to its traditional role as a
great power has fallen from 79 to 72 percent.
The “Nezavisimaya” writer says that
“those who consider the Crimean history to be “an error beyond correction” has
remained unchanged at six percent, but the share calling it “a great
achievement of the Russian leadership” has fallen from 85 to 81 percent.
Moreover, the numbers considering it an entirely good thing has fallen to 19
percent, and the number who consider it exclusively or primarily negative has
grown to 17 percent.
Just under a third of Russians (32
percent) say they are “completely unprepared” to pay for the development of
Crimea. On another subject, “over the past year, the share of those who
consider Russians and Ukrainians to be different peoples has doubled (from 18
to 40 percent),” although 52 percent now hold the opposite view, down from 79
percent in March 2014.
All
these figures reflect both the impact of Russian government propaganda and the
limits of that propaganda as people reflect on their own about what has
happened. But the situation among Russians outside of Russia and especially in
the West is different because they have easy access to various media outlets
with multiple points of view.
Despite
that, as numerous observes have noted, in many cases, including among Russians
in the United States, “support of Putin is extremely high” as are “negative
attitudes toward the country of residence,” Kirillova, who lives near Seattle
in the United States, acknowledges. Her latest article is devoted to why this
is so.
She
suggests that this pattern raises the question as to why the Russian community
abroad is different from others and how and why this pattern of opinions, so
rarely encountered among other diasporas, including the Ukrainian, is found
among such a high percentage of Russians who have chosen to live beyond the
borders of their own country.
Kirillova
begins her analysis by commenting on that of Aleksei Tsvetkov, whose recent “Lessons
of the Diaspora” article draws a sharp contrast between the way in which
Ukrainians and Russians living in the US have behaved with the former
integrating into American life and organizing ethnic groups more than the
latter. (inliberty.ru/blog/1885-uroki-diaspory).
The Novy region-2 analyst says that
while it is true that the Russian diaspora in the US has not formed as many
cultural institutions as has the Ukrainian, this has “not led to the loss of
Russian self-identification of emigrants from Russia. On the contrary, the
level of cohesion is also quite high,” but very different.
“The inability to self-organize and
create unions of a ‘horizontal’ type without directives ‘from above’ has not
led Russians to assimilate into the milieu of Americans or to lose their
identity.” Instead, it has meant that Russian immigrants in the US at least in
recent times have been far more ready to take part in organizations organized
by the Kremlin and its diplomatic representatives.
In part, Kirillova argues, this
reflects the inability of Russians to organize on their own, but there is a
deeper and more profound cause, one rooted in the way in which many Russians,
even those who leave to live elsewhere, view those who do so, as somehow having
“betrayed” their country, an attitude Ukrainians do not face or share.
Except for those who leave after
having consciously chosen to be dissidents, many Russians feel at a subconscious
level that they have engaged in an act of betrayal, Kirillova says, and
consequently, they see participation in organizations Moscow has created and
support for Moscow’s positions as a way to show to others and to themselves
that they are not traitors.
And that means, she concludes, that “Russian
self-identification in the new term promises to remain a problem” both for
Russians in the US and for the Americans they live among.
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