Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 21 – New polls
showing that a majority of Russians do not want to absorb Abkhazia, South
Osetia, Transdniestria or other breakaway parts of other post-Soviet states is
less a rational choice than yet another expression of support for Vladimir
Putin’s policies as promote in the Russian media, according to Levada Center
sociologist Lev Gudkov.
That of course suggests that such
attitudes, which are likely to be cited by some as evidence of an absence of
imperial interests in Russia, could easily shift in another direction if Putin
changes his position as in fact he and Russians as a whole have changed positions
on this issue over the past decade.
In today’s “Nezavisimaya gazeta,”
journalists Aleksey Gorbachev and Darya Garmonenko, report that the latest
polls show that “most Russians say they favor Abkhazia and South Osetia
remaining independent” rather than becoming part of an expanded Russian
Federation (ng.ru/politics/2015-09-21/3_ambitions.html).
Forty-seven percent of Russians say
they consider South Osetia an independent state. A third call it “part of
Russia,” and a tenth identify it as part of Georgia. As to the future, 48
percent say it should remain independent, seven percent that it should be part
of Georgia, and 23 percent indicate that it should become part of Russia.
The figures concerning Abkhazia are
roughly similar, as are those for Transdniestria, the breakaway portion of
Moldova, the two journalists point out.
The majority of those samples are “certain
that Russia’s recognition of the independence of South Osetia and Abkhazia did
not bring either harm or benefits” to Russia, with 47 percent taking that
position, 23 percent saying it was useful, and 10 percent indicating that such
recognition was harmful.
Gudkov points out that “the poll
completely reflects the position of the leadership of Russia which is carried
on all Kremlin channels,” a position which “does not stress that these regions
are under the total control of and being paid for by Russia.” To the contrary,
Moscow’s propaganda stresses that they are truly independent states.
At first, he continues, “an imperial
view dominated” the attitudes of the Russian public who thought this was all a
step to the inclusion of “ever more former territories of the USSR” into the
Russian Federation. But now, “the
majority is inclined to the notion that these are independent states” and no
one wants to bear the costs of annexing them.
The share of Russians who think that
Russia’s recognition of the independence of Abkhazia and South Osetia was
useful to Russia has fallen because attention to this issue has fallen given
the events in Ukraine and because there is greater appreciation of the costs
involved of annexing any territory.
Gudkov notes that the least educated
and oldest Russians are more inclined to support annexation while the educated
and wealthier ones are less supportive. “Between the provinces and the
residents of major cities, the difference is insignificant, although urban
residents and Muscovites in the first instance are less inclined to support unification.”
That pattern reflects, the
sociologist says, the fact that in the Russian capital, there are more varied
sources of information and analysis, while in the provinces, people are “more
strongly dependent on television and propaganda.”
Crimea is the exception that proves
this rule, Gudkov argues. Russians have overwhelmingly supported its inclusion
in Russia since 1991 and thus “it is difficult to expect that a skeptical
attitude will arise concerning the peninsula” and its annexation by the Russian
Federation.
No comments:
Post a Comment