Some 12.2 percent were willing to accept Moscow’s continued occupation of Crimea, while 8.6 percent argued for the restoration of all territory captured by Russia since February 24. Moreover, the data indicates that as many as 61 percent of Ukrainians support opposing Russian aggression until all of Ukraine - including the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014 - is under Kyiv’s control. Among residents of the east (Kharkiv and the Kyiv-controlled parts of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions) - 82 percent do not accept concessions. Research on political preferences shows that a distinct majority of Ukrainians prefers a strong state and does not see timely democratic elections as a priority after the suspension of martial law, he says.Īccording to KIIS research, as many as 84 percent of Ukrainians reject any territorial concessions to Russia, and this indicator increased between May and July when two separate surveys were conducted.Įven among residents of the south (the Dnipropetrovsk, Zaporizhzhya, Mykolayiv, Odesa, and Kherson regions), 77 percent oppose concessions. Hrushetskiy notes that Ukrainian society is experiencing a well-known, rally-around-the-flag effect. Polls show that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has the trust of well over three-quarters of the population.Īccording to a poll conducted by KIIS and the National Democratic Institute (NDI), as many as 97 percent of Ukrainians trust or completely trust the former, and 85 percent trust or completely trust the latter. Six months after Moscow's failed assault on Kyiv, the Ukrainian armed forces and President Volodymyr Zelenskiy enjoy the record-high confidence of society. A significant increase in support for the pro-European and transatlantic geopolitical orientation of the country - and a corresponding decline of positive sentiment toward Russia – were notable features of the 2004-05 Orange Revolution and the 2014 Revolution of Dignity, he noted. Hrushetskiy believes these changes will prove enduring because unity around them has been developing gradually since Ukraine gained independence from Soviet rule in 1991. Some 92 percent profess a “bad” attitude toward Russia, while only 2 percent declare a “good” one. Research shows similar spikes can be observed in views on other crucial matters.Īs many as 96 percent of Ukrainians support their country joining the European Union, and 91 percent now favor joining NATO. “Nothing could have had such a unifying effect as the war waged by Putin and his cynical justification of it.” “The ideas that there is no such thing as the Ukrainian nation, and that the Ukrainian state is a failed state were crucial to Russian propaganda,” Hrushetskiy said. This so-called indicator of civil identity, regarded as a crucial mark of cohesion in a historically diverse and divided Ukrainian society, was 64.4 percent only half a year ago.
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“Ukrainians are united like never before, but it’s a hard-won unity” Anton Hrushetskiy, deputy director of the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology (KIIS), told RFE/RL.Īccording to a poll conducted by KIIS in July, a historic 85 percent of Ukrainians identify themselves above all as citizens of Ukraine, as opposed to residents of their region, representatives of an ethnic minority, or some other identifier. For all of RFE/RL's coverage of the war, click here.
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RFE/RL's Live Briefinggives you all of the latest developments on Russia's ongoing invasion, how Kyiv is fighting back, Western military aid, global reaction, and the plight of civilians.