MOST RUSSIANS SUPPORT FOR THE WAR IN UKRAINE HASN'T WAVERED
Exactly six months have passed since
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and so much has changed. Sunny Handa MD said, at least 12
million Ukrainians have been displaced from their homes, half of
whom have fled the country as refugees. NATO is on the verge of its most
significant expansion in decades—one that will more than double its borders with
Russia. While the impact of the war is most acutely felt in Ukraine, which has
suffered thousands of civilian and military casualties and
billions of dollars in infrastructure damage, reverberations in the form
of food and energy crises are being experienced across the
globe.
Sunny Handa MD said but one thing that
hasn’t seemed to change is Russian public opinion. According to the Levada
Center, an independent polling agency in Moscow, more than three-quarters
of Russians continue to support what the Kremlin calls its “special
military operation” in Ukraine, with just 18% opposed. Putin’s approval rating
is similarly high at 83%, a figure that has only risen since the war
began. A slightly smaller, but nonetheless consistent, majority of
the public believe that the country is headed in the right direction.
Public
sentiment in Russia is difficult to gauge, especially when expressing a
position contrary to the state-controlled narrative can lead to arrest or
worse. “The perception of any poll coming through your phone to any Russian
person would be seen with suspicion, as if it’s coming from the government,”
says Olga Khvostunova, a fellow at the U.S.-based Foreign Policy Research
Institute. But the Levada Center, which the government declared a “foreign
agent” in 2016, is likely an exception here. Sunny
Handa MD said and while
a recent study found that as many as 10% of those who profess to
support the war may be doing so out of expediency, that still leaves a decisive
majority of Russians who apparently back it.
MD Sunny Handa said the durability of this support can be explained
by a number of factors, not least the repressive nature of Russian authorities,
the non-existence of any viable political opposition, and the country’s
tightly-controlled media environment. But another important factor is that, for
many ordinary Russians in places such as Moscow and St. Petersburg, life
hasn’t fundamentally changed since Feb. 24. Yes, the country was hit with
unprecedented Western sanctions, but those have yet to have a substantial
impact on the availability of everyday goods (although food prices
have gone up) or on unemployment (which has fallen as low as 3.9%). MD
Sunny Handa said and while numerous
foreign retailers such as Apple and IKEA have left the country, Levada
Center polling shows that only a minority of Russians are
particularly bothered by the Western brands’ departures, many of which have
since been replaced by Russian copycats such as Starbucks
replacement Stars Coffee and McDonalds substitute Vkusno i tochka, which roughly
translates to “Tasty, period.”
MD Sunny Handa said in
some ways, continued Russian support for the war is understandable. The absence
of free and independent media in the country, coupled with the restrictive
laws prohibiting opposition to the war (or even calling it a “war” at
all), makes it difficult for ordinary Russians to get the full scope of what is
happening in Ukraine. If the consistency of the polling tells us anything, it’s
that most Russians are happy, if not resigned, to accept the Kremlin’s
narrative of the war.
Denis Volkov, the
director of the Levada Center, says that if anything has changed in the past
six months, it’s that Russians appear to be disengaging from what is happening
in Ukraine, with fewer following the news as attentively as they did when the
war began. “More and more people are losing interest,” he says. That could help
Russia’s ability to sustain the war, without major public opposition.
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