Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 12 – Over the past
six month, polls show that Ukrainian attitudes toward Russians have improved
slightly but this does not mean that more of them want to be integrated in any
entity dominated by Russia. Instead, it represents a sobering up from the
earlier euphoria about Europe and a desire to become a normal independent
country.
Oleksiy Haran of Kyiv’s Mohylev Academy
says that these shifts represent “the concluding stage of saying goodbye to the
Soviet past. In the future, [Ukraine and Russia] will each go along their
separate paths. An enormous number of [Ukrainians] are for better relations with
Russia” (ng.ru/cis/2015-10-12/7_ukraina.html).
“No one wants to fight with a
neighbor, but no one wants to put up with his outbursts either,” the Ukrainian
scholar says. Instead, it has become finally clear that we will not be able to
live in one apartment. We are neighbors, but from the point of view of Ukrainians
we no longer can be called fraternal peoples or strategic partners.”
Haran’s conclusions are quoted by
Tatyana Ivzhenko of Moscow’s “Nezavisimaya gazeta” today in a report about new
research that has been carried out by the Kyiv International Institute of
Sociology and the Kucheriv Democratic Initiative Foundation concerning
Ukrainian attitudes about Russians and Russia.
The two institutes found that despite
a somewhat more positive view of Russians than six months ago, Ukrainians do
not want to be part of any Russian-dominated entity let alone part of the
Russian Federation. The share of
Ukrainians favoring membership in the Russian-dominated Customs Union remains
unchanged at 18.6 percent.
Half of all Ukrainians back developing
closer relations with the European Union, but slightly more than a quarter of
all Ukrainians – 27 percent – now oppose having their country join either the
Customs Union or the EU, the former because of Russian dominance and the latter
because of recent disappointments at the level of help Ukraine has received.
Until 2014, the researchers say, “Ukrainians
always were more positively disposed to the Russian Federation than Russians,
according to Levada Center polls, were to Ukraine. But now the attitudes of
Ukrainians to Russia and Russians to Ukraine are almost equal in terms of
positive and negative attitudes.
About a third of each nation has a
positive attitude toward the other’s country, and just under 60 percent in both
has a negative one. Those global attitudes track as well on the views
Ukrainians and Russians have about the implementation of a visa regime between
the two countries and other such measures.
But the most striking and important
change in Ukrainian attitudes toward the Russian Federation is this: In 2009,
23 percent of Ukrainians supported the idea of some combination of Ukraine and
Russia into a single state. Now, fewer than ten percent do – a figure identical
to the percentage of Russians who would like to see a common state.
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