Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 29 – The Russian
government is totally opposed to the creation of an international tribunal to
investigate the downing of the Malaysian airliner a year ago and will likely
veto a proposal for such a venue at a meeting of the UN Security Council today.
But a recent poll shows about half of all Russians are quite ready to see such
a tribunal set up.
The reason for that, Lev Gudkov, the
head of the Levada Center Analytic Center which conducted the poll (On that
survey, see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2015/07/kremlin-gets-only-half-loaf-from.html.), says that
those taking that position generally believe that such a tribunal would condemn
the Ukrainian side (nv.ua/opinion/Gudkov/pochemu-rossijane-podderzhivajut-tribunal-po-mn17-61388.html).
“Only a small part of the citizens
of the Russian Federation are inclined to believe that it would condemn” either
pro-Moscow separatists or “Russia which gave them arms. Those who think that
guilt falls on the Russian Federation are mostly against a corresponding
tribunal or at least more cautiously evaluate the prospects of its being set
up.”
“For the domestic consumer,” he
says, the Russian government explains “its protest against the creation of an
international tribunal at the UN by saying that such a decision is premature,
not objective, politicized, and isn’t necessary until the completion of
investigations by other courts.”
“The presumption of Ukraine’s guilt
exists,” Gudkov continues. The Russian
media is still full of stories saying that the Ukrainians are “exclusively”
guilty, and “the majority of Russians” as a result are inclined to believe that
either the Ukrainian military or Kyiv itself is guilty of the shoot down.
Thus, Gudkov argues, “the absolute
majority of the Russian population on this issue supports the position of the
official authorities,” even though they are more willing to have a tribunal
formed than the Kremlin is. Their view has been formed by “a most powerful and
extraordinarily aggressive one-sided demagogic” position.”
Russians “cannot check the facts and
believe everything they are told, especially in the provinces. After more than
a year and a half of unceasing anti-Ukrainian campaign, people are ready to
view Ukraine a priori as guilty of
all sins.”
A small but declining percentage
blame the US. A year ago, 22 percent of Russians said the United States was
responsible for the shooting down of the Malaysian plane. Now, 17 percent do,
and this opinion is found most often among the least educated strata of the
Russian population.
The small share of Russians who are
ready to blame the Russian side for the shooting down of the plane, in
contrast, Gudkov says, are “more educated, politically better informed, and
critically inclined toward the authorities. In general,” he adds, “this is the
urban population of the major cities.”
No comments:
Post a Comment