Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 20 – Some Russian
analysts believe that the impeachment process against US President Donald Trump
is helping Moscow, US-based Russian journalist Kseniya Kirillova says, with
ever more Americans, including in the armed forces, coming to view Moscow as an
ally rather than an enemy.
Moscow writers are arguing that “the
impeachment hearings are only increasing the sympathy of ordinary Americans to
Russia” as a form of protest against those who are pursuing Trump for his “supposed
deal with Moscow;” and they point to a new poll in support of that view (rosbalt.ru/world/2019/12/19/1819343.html).
According to the latest Reagan
national defense poll, “almost half of American military personnel and members
of their families – 46 percent – said that they consider Russia an ally,”
Kirillova continues, pointing out that this finding has generated “concern”
among Pentagon leaders.
The same poll found, she says, that “only
28 percent” of Americans overall held that view, but at the same time, that
figure is “nine percentage points higher than last year” when only 19 percent
of Americans considered Russia to be an ally.
But Kirillova says, it is not true
that “investigations into the interference of Russia into American elections
has increased the sympathy of Americans for Moscow, “to put it mildly.” And
those Americans both in the establishment and in the population at large in
fact view Russia for its actions in this regard with hostility.
Instead the exposure of what Moscow
has been doing in the US and of “the mutual sympathies of Donald Trump and
Vladimir Putin have given rise to negative attitudes,” despite what the new
poll seems to suggest. And she argues that the shift in public attitudes is
connected with another trend in American public opinion.
“Americans,” Kirillova argues, “are tired
in principle from the extraordinary influence of foreign policy on domestic processes
in the country.” Most don’t focus on foreign policy, and talk about Russian and
Ukrainian links to the US has only intensified their feelings that foreign
involvement in the US and US involvement with others is somehow “unclean.”
It is the case, she says, that some
Trump supporters “really have accepted his positive attitude toward Moscow, but
their number is lower than those who on the contrary relate to Russia worse
than they did after the 2016 elections.” Thus, the Kremlin’s hopes for serious
changes in US attitudes toward Russia are misplaced.
Moscow may gain from the controversy
and confusion in the US over the impeachment process, Kirillova suggests; but
it isn’t going to become more popular as a result, except perhaps among those
who, like Donald Trump, already view Russia in general and Putin in particular
in a positive light.
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