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Russians See Best Friends, Arch Foes Among Former Soviet Republics

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  • Russians See Best Friends, Arch Foes Among Former Soviet Republics

    RUSSIANS SEE BEST FRIENDS, ARCH FOES AMONG FORMER SOVIET REPUBLICS
    Lyudmila Alexandrova

    ITAR-TASS News Agency, Russia
    June 1, 2007 Friday 10:52 AM EST

    As before, most Russians see their arch foes - and bosom friends
    likewise - among the former Soviet republics.

    In their eyes Russia's worst enemy these days is Estonia, and the
    best friend, Kazakhstan.

    In the group of non-CIS countries Germany firmly holds first place as
    to the percentage of Russians who say it is the friendliest country
    of all.

    In an opinion poll of 1,600 by the Yuri Levada Center of Analysis
    held on May 11-14, 60 percent pointed to Estonia as Russia's worst
    enemy. In this sense Estonia this year has outdone Latvia (36 percent).

    NEWSru.com recalls that in 2006 a tiny 28 percent of the polled
    Russians said Estonia was an unfriendly country.

    Relations between Russia and Estonia turned from bad to worse after
    the Estonian authorities late last April, acting in defiance of
    protests from Moscow and from many Estonian citizens, too, dismantled
    the monument honoring the Soviet soldiers who had liberated Estonia
    from Nazism.

    Before, Russians' negative attitude to the Baltic countries was most
    often attributed to the abuse of the rights of ethnic Russians, who
    account for less than seven percent of the population of Lithuania,
    13 percent of the population of Estonia and nearly 29 percent of the
    population of Latvia.

    In the same club of countries unfriendly to Russia, alongside the
    "bosom foes" sharing a common Soviet past, there are also the United
    States and Poland.

    According to the Levada Center, one in two citizens of Russia applies
    the term 'enemy' to Georgia, and one in three to Latvia (36 percent),
    Lithuania (32 percent), and the United States (35 percent).

    Also on the list of hostile countries are Ukraine (23 percent), Poland
    (20 percent, in contrast to seven percent last year), Afghanistan
    (11 percent), Iraq (8 percent) and Iran (7 percent).

    On top of the list of friendly countries are Kazakhstan, Belarus,
    Germany, China, Armenia and India.

    The findings indicate that today, just as a year ago, Russia's closest
    friends are Kazakhstan (33 percent said so in 2006, and 39 percent
    in 2007), and Belarus, (47-38 percent).

    "The best friends are the same, but changes in their rating are
    quite telling," says NEWSru.com. "Firstly, Belarus has lost part of
    its supporters and now it has to share the status of Russia's friend
    number one with Kazakhkstan."

    Ukraine is rated as an unfriendly country a little bit more rarely
    than a year ago, and Poland, a little bit more often.

    On the whole, a variety of opinion polls over the past few years
    repeatedly confirmed that of all countries Russians like the European
    ones most of all - Germany, in the first place. As before, they are
    not at all enthusiastic about things American.

    The national public opinion studies center VCIOM last October found
    that of all parts of the world Russians see Western Europe as the most
    attractive place where to resettle, if need be. In case of emergency
    36 percent of Russians would prefer to move to that region.

    >From that standpoint the most popular countries are Germany (12
    percent), and also France and Britain (4 percent each).

    All opinion polls held lately confirmed many Russians' negative
    attitude to the United States.

    The Public Opinion Fund last September showed that according to one in
    two Russians (49 percent) the United States plays a negative role in
    the modern world, and only a tiny 16-percent fraction sees its role as
    positive. Twenty seven percent of Russians say the United States is a
    state friendly to Russia, and 55 percent argue it is unfriendly. This
    ratio has remained rather stable over the past two years.

    The chief of the analysis department at the Political Technologies
    Center, Tatyana Stanovaya, argues that the answer to the question
    about the reason for the Russians' pro-European, pro-German sentiment
    and anti-American attitudes lies on the surface.

    "The level of relations with Germany makes itself felt. These
    relations are more institutionalized than those with the other European
    countries," Stanovaya told Itar-Tass.

    The political scientist recalled that Germany was one of Russia's
    main foreign economic partners. The factor of President Vladimir
    Putin's personal likes and dislikes is also present. Putin spent in
    Germany many years of his career and his attitude to that country
    is sympathetic."

    "The Russians see that the relationship with Germany is particularly
    warm, and this cannot but influence their preferences, too,"
    Stanovaya said. As far as the Russians' pro-European sentiment in
    general is concerned, "Europe for Russia is a benchmark in terms of
    living standards, social insurance and culture."

    The trend towards anti-Americanism, according to the political
    scientist, developed back in the 1990s during President Boris Yeltsin's
    rule, when the public at large grew disillusioned about liberalism.

    "At first everybody tried to live 'the way they do in America',
    but then, after the disappointment over the liberal reforms that
    myth collapsed," Stanovaya said. "With time this cooling towards the
    'American dream' was blended with the new Putin-era ideology. The
    gist of the latter is this 'Russia is rising from its knees, while
    the United States is creating hindrances, because it wishes to Russia
    to stay weak further on'."
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