With Us or Against Us

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With Us or Against Us Page 22

by Tony Judt


  influence the formation of the American image in Russia—from

  America’s racial and ethnic characteristics to the deep divisions in the

  understanding of privacy and personal freedom. They have a funda-

  mental, historical character, and depend little on Russia’s political

  system or changes in American society. The events of 9/11 did not

  change these factors.34 But on that day, the war on international ter-

  rorism had a major influence on the subjective perception of America.

  In that respect, since the end of the 1980s, two tendencies, which are

  at first glance contradictory, may be observed.

  The first is that anti-American sentiments in Russia were either

  increasing or remaining stable at high levels. This period was marked

  by a feeling of national humiliation as a result of Russia’s rapid decline

  relative to the USSR of the 1980s. Ideas of a conspiracy against Russia

  (this time, executed successfully by Washington) began circulating

  widely in Russian society, as did notions of hostility of foreign interests

  to Russia and the humiliating Russian dependence on the United

  States. In 1998, approximately a third of Russians believed in the

  “international conspiracy against Russia.”35 Many American stereotypes,

  instilled into the public’s consciousness by communist propaganda,

  began to self-perpetuate. For example, 25 percent of Russians

  believed that Russia is doing badly precisely because its failure is bene-

  ficial to foreign countries.36

  The society experienced growing disenchantment with the new

  sociopolitical realities. The economic crisis was directly reflected in the

  quality of life and the Russians’ social security net. A noticeable por-

  tion of the population began forming a view that the major political

  triumphs of the period—a free press, democratic elections, and a

  reform of the government—were not worth so much suffering.37 The

  United States was seen as the catalyst of this suffering, pushing the

  Russian government in that direction. The economic aid it provided

  to Russia was seen not only as a national humiliation, but a desire of

  the American corporations to position themselves in the Russian market.

  For example, in 1999, 75 percent of Russians believed that Russia is

  too dependent on the West.38 From 1990 to 1993, the number of

  people who thought Russia was threatened with “the selling off of

  national riches to foreigners” increased from 48 to 73 percent.39

  The exponential growth of contacts between the two societies

  should be judged as extremely positive. Yet, this contact became a

  sort of a “reality check,” strengthening some mutual stereotypes and

  even creating new ones. When people who think they know each

  other start to live together, they often discover that they think

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  The Special Russian Way

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  differently, get in each other’s way, and degenerate into petty but

  endless squabbles.40 Their differences become more apparent. The

  initial period of embrace in the years of perestroika could be called a

  honeymoon. Continuing the metaphor, it could be said that both soci-

  eties brought into their “marriage” the old problems and stereotypes.41

  American passiveness toward Russian corruption and organized

  crime also contributed to the increase in anti-Americanism. The policies

  of privatization and the shock therapy undertaken by Yegor Gaidar with

  the recommendations of American economists, put most of the pop-

  ulation on the brink of poverty while enriching a select few—primarily

  government officials and local bureaucrats.42

  Yeltsin’s team became a symbol of corruption, which did not pre-

  vent Washington from extending its enormous assistance, seeing a

  greater threat in the opposition—the communist Gennady Zyuganov.

  The presidential elections of 1996 were the apotheosis of this support.

  Half of the Russians, at the time, considered American allies to be

  Russian enemies, and more than a third were convinced of the threat

  of an American military invasion of Russia.43 Many believed that Yeltsin

  was a tool of Washington, since he was working under their control to

  complete the extermination of their recent opponent.44

  The loss of Russia’s global influence was another factor of animosity

  toward the United States. For the people of Russia—the inheritor of

  the USSR, which achieved a status of a superpower by paying a hefty

  price of blood and sacrifice—the loss became a profound psycho-

  logical trauma. The Americanization of former republics and allies,

  who sought to distance themselves from Russia, take up anti-Russian

  stances, and reorient themselves to the West with Washington’s sup-

  port, were seen as an especially negative development. Russia lost

  access to international markets, including those for arms, which were

  immediately taken over by American corporations. The number of

  Russians who thought that their country always provokes the hostility

  of other states grew from 42 percent in 1994 to 56 percent in 2000.45

  A feeling that democratization was yet another method of under-

  mining Russian influence in the world and subjugating Russia’s for-

  mer estates was fomenting. In response to the question, “Who should

  Russia strengthen its ties with?” in 1999, 16 percent pointed to Asia,

  and only 13 percent pointed to the Untied States. A year before that,

  18 percent thought it necessary to strengthen ties with the United

  States, and only 9 percent with Asia.46 That is, if on the question of

  America’s role in Russia’s domestic issues they were ambiguous, in

  trade and international matters they did not see the United States as a

  friend and ally. In April 1999, 48 percent of Russians considered the

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  United States an enemy in the international arena, while two years

  prior, only a third thought so. The number of people who saw China

  as Russia’s enemy decreased six-fold, and, in 1999, fell to 3 percent.47

  The second tendency in Russian society during the 1990s was

  related to the fact that the United States ceased to be some abstract

  “force of evil.” America became more a nation of regular people in the

  form of tourists who visited Russia or seen by Russian tourists visiting

  it. American news agencies, government organizations, and NGOs

  began to display an active presence in Russia. Russians began traveling

  to the United States, buying products made there, and getting their

  share of American popular culture. Cultural and scientific exchange

  facilitated an evolution of perceptions. America was less and less “the

  government of America” of the Cold War and more of “the country

  of America,” which could be judged in simple human terms. In 2001,

  the number of those who considered the United States an enemy state

  decreased from 52 to 43 percent, while the number of those who saw

  her as a friend grew from 32 to 43 percent. Sixty-five percent judged

  friendly relations with America as a positive development, while only

  12 percent saw
this as negative.48

  Russians felt the responsibility for world order out of sheer inertia.

  The concept of “peaceful coexistence” between two major military

  powers continues to influence public sentiment.49 It is understood

  that the United States has the same responsibility and, therefore, can-

  not be interested in weakening Russia, because no one needs a weak

  partner. That is, the suspicion toward American politics or the convic-

  tion of her aggressiveness did not abate, but human contact and com-

  mon sense led many in Russia to see a chance for creating new

  relations that would be acceptable for both sides.

  The Russian reaction to NATO actions in Yugoslavia in the spring

  of 1999 is a good illustration of this. They shocked Russian society. At

  the beginning of the bombing, the percentage of people responding

  favorably to America fell from 57 to 14 percent, while the number

  responding unfavorably grew from 28 to 72 percent.50 The aggres-

  sion, as the Russian press called the action, was considered a direct

  threat to their nation by 70 percent of Russians.51 Sixty-one percent

  responded favorably to Evgeny Primakov’s response, who, when he

  learned of the attack en route to the States on an official visit, turned

  his airplane around and went home.52 Sixty-three percent placed the

  blame for the events on NATO, and only 6 percent on Yugoslavia.53

  Relations with the United States worsened (51 percent), the number

  of people opposing the relationship increased.54 Twenty-seven percent

  thought that the United States had benefited as a result of the war,

  while only 1 percent thought the Kosovar Serbs did.55

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  The Special Russian Way

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  But, on the other hand, the explosion of anti-Americanism ran head-

  first into the well-defined boundaries of realism—namely, the desire to

  avoid a military conflict with the United States at all costs. Eighty-six

  percent thought Russia should not engage itself in such a conflict; only

  13 percent supported shipping arms to Yugoslavia, 4 percent supported

  sending volunteers, and 3 percent supported severing diplomatic ties

  with the United States. Two months after the start of the bombings, a

  more balanced assessment could be observed. The number of people

  who blamed the West for the conflict decreased from 63 to 49 percent,

  while the number of those who supported strengthening ties with the

  United States increased from 26 to 59 percent.56

  Similar tendencies could be observed during the U.S. Iraqi cam-

  paign in the spring 2003. From the campaign’s very beginning, the

  Russian media mounted an unprecedented anti-American attack. In

  the March of 2003, according to VTsIOM data, 83 percent of Russian

  citizens responded with indignation to American actions in Iraq, and

  only 2 percent approved of these actions. Fourteen percent of the

  people characterized relations between Russia and the United States

  as tense, against 6 percent in August 2002. From November 2002

  to March 2003, the number of Russians who expressed negative

  or extremely negative sentiments toward America rose from 29 to

  55 percent.57 Seventy percent considered America as a conqueror, not

  a liberator of Iraq. In March 2003, 70 percent said that their feelings

  toward Saddam Hussein were either positive or neutral. The number

  of people who thought that the United States played a positive role

  in the world dropped sharply, from 23 percent in August 2002 to

  14 percent in March 2003.58

  The anti-American hysteria in the Russian media continued until

  April 2, 2003, when President Putin stated that Russia is not interested

  in an American defeat in Iraq. The tone of the Russian press changed

  immediately. Pragmatic considerations began to take over. The

  number of people who expressed positive sentiments about Saddam

  fell from 23 percent in March to 10 percent in April, while those

  who expressed negative sentiments more than doubled—from 14 to

  29 percent.59 At the end of April, according to FOM data, the number

  of respondents who felt positive about the United States was over 50

  percent, and 70 percent supported maintaining close relations between

  the two countries. Only 5 percent backed the contrary stance.60

  Approximately the same reaction can be discerned in other uneasy

  moments of the Russian–American relationship—NATO’s eastward

  expansion, U.S. withdrawal from the ABM treaty,61 differences over

  Chechnya, the Winter 2002 Olympics, and trade wars over steel and

  poultry.62 On the one hand, anti-American sentiment grew, but on

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  the other, an orientation toward a union with the United States

  remained strong.

  Anti-American phobia, skepticism, disillusionment, and suspicion

  were counterbalanced to an increasing extent not only by the “human-

  izing” of America, but also by practical considerations. If the United

  States wants to strengthen ties with Russia for its own selfish purposes,

  Russia should use the situation to its advantage. In the mass con-

  sciousness, the idea of integration with America and the West picked

  up speed during the 1990s. In 1999, 63 percent thought that strength-

  ening relations with the United States was important for Russia.63

  Rapprochement with America was becoming an independent Russian

  priority. More and more people saw in this a necessary pre-condition

  for Russia’s economic and political renaissance, and its full entry into

  global civilization. In the summer of 2001, 73 percent of respondents

  said that they viewed the United States in a positive light, while

  22 percent viewed it as negative; 77 percent noted that they felt

  positive toward the American people, while only 9 percent viewed

  them negatively.64

  In the period between the Yugoslavian crisis and the events of 9/11,

  one could observe a decrease in both negative and highly positive

  judgments of the United States, with the concurrent increase in

  neutral assessments. Since then, this tendency has stabilized. In

  September of 2001, 46 percent were neutral in their feelings toward

  the United States. Polls from March 2002 and February 2003

  showed the same results.65 That is, the emotional approach to the

  issue waned while a pragmatic approach became more prevalent.

  Emotional indifference is a necessary component for a rational–pragmatic

  perception.66 President Putin, while making a strong political

  statement by announcing his unconditional support for the United

  States in the wake of 9/11, was not contradicting the evolution of his

  country’s public opinion.

  The position of the Russian elite proved to be a greater obstacle for

  Putin. Throughout the 1990s, this elite had been the driving force for

  the Westernization of Russia. One of the main methods that the new

  generation of politicians used in fighting the old Soviet nomenklatura

  was the deliberate, accuratissime67 Americanization of life and culture,

  which corresponded to their sociopolitical and economic agenda.

&nb
sp; To be “pro-American” at the time, in the eyes of a casual participant,

  meant being a progressive liberal, a proponent of the free market, a free

  press, and human rights; that is, to have an image that was in direct

  opposition to that of the representatives of the old communist ideology.

  Orienting toward the United States brought political power.

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  The Special Russian Way

  131

  But the situation gradually changed. On the one hand, as compen-

  sation for the national humiliation, the disillusionment with the new

  social ideals and a demand for a return to the old social and political

  ways, which were thought to have been discarded, returned. Thus, in

  the winter of 2001, to the question “Did the democrats of early pere-

  stroika bring Russia more harm than good?,” 47 percent said “more

  harm,” and only 2 percent said “more good.” Sixty-six percent said that

  reforms of the Gaidar administration were unnecessary and destructive,

  and 50 percent were willing to return to the pre-perestroika USSR.68

  The idea of a Russian “special way” began gaining popularity. In the

  spring of 2000, 60 percent of respondents said that Russia should go

  its own way, and 18 percent that it should use the path taken by the

  USSR.69 Debates about the Russian “national idea”70 and the nature of

  Russian government began heating up, while the political role of the

  Russian Orthodox Church increased.71 The belief in the inability of

  Western analytical tools to comprehend Russian society, as well as the

  concept of Russian uniqueness and its incompatibility with Western

  sociopolitical norms received mass support.72 There was a movement

  to buy domestically made products, and nostalgia for the cultural val-

  ues of the Soviet times: films of the 1950–1970s gathered huge televi-

  sion audiences, and radio stations playing Soviet-era music gained

  record numbers of listeners. The change in mood was reflected in the

  elite, parts of which took on extremely anti-American positions.73

  On the other hand, further Americanization for certain Russian

  circles was a fraught with the possible loss of comfort, of transparency

  in the decision-making processes, the opening of financial flows, the

 

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