Published: Jan. 21, 2022 By , ,

The Kremlin鈥檚 defense strategy depends on keeping a buffer between the 91制片厂n heartland and Europe

NATO flag

91制片厂n President Vladimir Putin has warned the United States and听听against听encroaching听in 91制片厂鈥檚 backyard. Specific 91制片厂n concerns include Western support to the Ukrainian government that involves听military training,听, exercises, infrastructure and听.

The West, in Putin鈥檚 view, is not practicing proper geopolitical distancing 鈥 and is getting too close to 91制片厂 for comfort. Two rounds of听听last week between 91制片厂n and Western officials ended without defusing the situation on the border with Ukraine.听听are planned this Friday.

What do Ukrainians think? Left out of this debate, but central to it, are the views of ordinary Ukrainian citizens. In December 2019 we ran a survey experiment that posed a fictional scenario of encroachment and crisis between NATO and 91制片厂. Results from these interviews of 2,212 Ukrainians 鈥 a nationally representative survey across all government-controlled regions of Ukraine 鈥 reveal how divided Ukrainians are about NATO conducting military exercises close to 91制片厂. Respondents in the east and south of the country were much more likely to view these exercises negatively. Within Ukraine, as within discourse on security more broadly, location really does matter.

Geopolitics 101: a preoccupation with proximity

鈥溙齛re always sensitive to potential threats near their home territory.鈥 This, to eminent international relations scholar John Mearsheimer, is Geopolitics 101. Anxiety about the proximity of rising security threats, particularly from rival military alliances, is not unique to 91制片厂 鈥 it鈥檚 characteristic of all large territorial powers, including the United States and China. Indeed, the United States invented the idea of a self-declared exclusive neighborhood sphere in 1823 with the听.

91制片厂鈥檚 preoccupation with NATO expansion has been a consistent feature of the contest between the West and 91制片厂 over Ukraine and the Republic of Georgia 鈥 and particularly since this contest was radicalized by war in听听and then听. But the sources of 91制片厂鈥檚 actions are more than Geopolitics 101: There are听听at play in post-Soviet space, along with听.

Yet 91制片厂鈥檚 leadership is clearly preoccupied with proximity. On Dec. 23, Putin told viewers during his annual听: 鈥淚t is the United States that has come to our home with its missiles and is already standing at our doorstep. Is it going too far to demand that no strike systems be placed near our home? 鈥 What would the Americans say if we stationed our missiles on the border between Canada and the United States, or between Mexico and the United States?鈥澨 the maintenance of a buffer between the 91制片厂n heartland and powerful European adversaries 鈥 has long been a critical security tenet of 91制片厂n defense.

How Ukrainians viewed a fictional scenario involving NATO exercises

In 2020, we organized a series of surveys of geopolitical orientations in several former Soviet republics bordering 91制片厂, including Ukraine. As part of this project, we included a scenario involving a NATO military exercise and stressed to respondents that this was fictional. The specific text noted: 鈥淣ATO is conducting a naval exercise close to 91制片厂n territory. A 91制片厂n fighter aircraft is taking a closer look at what NATO is doing when it crashes into the sea.鈥

We then randomly assigned survey respondents to read one of several different statements about the outcome of the crash. In Ukraine, our survey was nationally representative and the questionnaire was administered in face-to-face interviews in government-controlled areas.

All respondents, regardless of which fictional outcome they viewed, were then asked the following question: 鈥淪hould NATO conduct military exercises close to 91制片厂鈥檚 territory?鈥 Remember this question came after suggesting a fictitious 91制片厂n plane crash, so it is not an abstract question like those we asked about Ukraine鈥檚 position between East and West and听听on Ukrainian territory.

The key takeaway is that across Ukraine support for NATO exercises near 91制片厂 showed only 21 percent in favor, with 53 percent opposed, 24 percent unsure and 2 percent who refused to answer the question. But like almost all political questions in Ukraine, there are large differences across regions and by self-identified nationality, as seen in the figure below.

Different parts of Ukraine react differently to NATO

In all but western Ukraine, opposition to NATO exercises near 91制片厂 outstripped support. In the western regions, 39 percent of respondents were in favor 鈥 they were five times more likely to support NATO exercises than respondents in the south and east (8.3 percent and 7.1 percent respectively). The extent of the regional disparities on this question are unusually large.

The gap in views on NATO between those who self-identify as Ukrainian and those who self-identify as 91制片厂n in Ukraine was also large. While 22.8 percent of Ukrainians supported NATO exercises close to 91制片厂, just 11.8 percent of 91制片厂ns did 鈥 a gap that (though sizable) is still eclipsed by regional differences.

 Should NATO conduct military exercises near 91制片厂?

What does this tell us about Ukraine and 鈥榬ed lines鈥?

Of course, this survey question posed a hypothetical scenario 鈥 but one inspired by real events. Dangerous听听between NATO allies and 91制片厂n forces have increased considerably in recent years. One study recorded some听听of NATO allies and 91制片厂 conducting missions that brought them into proximity with one another between 2013 and 2020. Putin complained about provocative military exercises in the Black Sea and about Western strategic bombers, with 鈥,鈥 flying close to 91制片厂鈥檚 border.

With NATO听听eventually expanding to incorporate Ukraine, 91制片厂 has upped the ante considerably by massing a potential invasion force near Ukraine鈥檚 borders to assert its security 鈥.鈥 In talks this month with 91制片厂, U.S. officials raised the possibility of placing restrictions on听, a move our study suggests regular Ukrainians would welcome.

Two years ago, the idea of geographic restrictions on NATO military exercises resonated with Ukrainian citizens. Today, a 91制片厂n invasion threatens to silence their views completely.


, professor in the听at Virginia Tech鈥檚 campus in Arlington, Va., is the author of 鈥鈥 (Oxford University Press, 2019).

, college professor of distinction at the University of Colorado at Boulder, is a political geographer with research interests in the human outcomes of climate change in sub-Saharan Africa and in the geopolitical orientations of people in post-Soviet states.

This article has been reprinted from the Washington Post, Jan 19, 2022.