By Egor Lazarev
Vladimir Putin
looks like a winner in Syria these days. In just three short days, Russian air
support for Syrian military forces helped expand Damascus’s control toward
Aleppo, a feat that President Bashar al-Assad had not been able to accomplish for
the past three years. Russia also became the main broker of the Syrian
cease-fire.
But many observers have warned that Putin’s
military campaign in Syria may backfire at home. Russia’s 144 million people
include about 20 million Muslims; the overwhelming majority are Sunnis. Some
analysts believe that these
Russian Sunnis will recoil from Russia’s support for Assad’s Alawite-dominated
regime and its attacks on Sunni rebels, and from Russia’s effort to lead a
coalition of Shiite powers, Iran, Iraq and Syria.
What
do Russian Muslims think about Syria?
We tested these speculations
through a recent survey of Russian Muslims. The survey was conducted by the
department of sociology at the Anti-Corruption Foundation,
a non-governmental organization in Russia. We got answers from 1,200
people who were randomly sampled from Tatarstan and Dagestan, two
Muslim-majority Republics within the Russian Federation.
This gives us opinions from
two major historical centers of Islam in Russia: the Volga Urals region
(Tatarstan) and the North Caucasus (Dagestan). Tatarstan is especially useful
to survey; its 3.8 million people are almost equally divided between Muslim
Tatars (53 percent, according to a 2010 census) and Orthodox Russians
(40 percent). Our Tatarstan survey included members of both groups,
allowing us to benchmark Muslims’ views on the war in Syria.
We asked all respondents to
say which of these options they preferred:
Russia should not have any
military involvement in Syria
Russia needs to participate in
the Syrian war on Assad’s side
Russia should join
international military coalition in Syria with the U.S. and France.
If none of these appealed,
respondents could fill in their own preferred response.
If pundits’ predictions were
true, Muslims would be more likely to choose the anti-war response and less
likely to support Putin’s intervention. But that’s not exactly what we found.
Pretty
much the same thing that their non-Muslim neighbors think
As you can see, Muslims in both Tatarstan (24 percent)
and Dagestan (22 percent) were more likely to oppose war in Syria than were
Russian Orthodox people in Tatarstan (18 percent). But the difference isn’t
large. What’s more, Muslims do support helping Assad. In fact, more Dagestani
Muslims than Tatarstan Orthodox Christians supported intervening to prop up
Assad (29 percent to 23 percent).
Russian
Muslims and Orthodox Christians did split on the idea of joining a Western
alliance to stop the Syrian civil war. Many fewer Tatar Muslims (18 percent)
and Dagestani Muslims (11 percent) wanted to join a Western alliance, while 28
percent of the Orthodox Christians in Tatarstan did so.
So, there wasn’t a consensus among any religious
group. Russian Muslims are split regarding the intervention in Syria, but more
are pro- than against anti-war. In addition, about 20 percent of the sample
(both religions) said that they were unsure of their opinion.
These Russian
Sunnis don’t see Putin’s support of Assad’s Shia as a sectarian
intervention
Perhaps one reason why these result contract
specialists’ predictions of a Muslim backlash against Putin’s intervention in
Syria is that most of our respondents don’t see the Syrian conflict as
sectarian. In other words, they do not perceive Russian intervention as Putin
attempting to help an Alawite regime crush Sunni rebels.
As you can
see, most respondents of both religions – about 40 percent — weren’t sure what
the conflict was about. Most important, only 6 percent of Dagestani Muslims see
the Syrian war as a conflict between Sunnis and Shias. And only 3 percent of
Tatar Muslims see it that way.
About 25 percent of Tatar Muslim see the conflict as a
fight against Islamic terrorists. But no other group rises to that level; only
20 percent of Christians see it that way, and only 15 percent of Dagestani
Muslims. Those who do see it that way probably agree with the Russian media
that Putin is intervening in Syria to fight Islamic State forces.
The rest of respondents pick the second option, and
believe Assad’s regime is fighting the West. Many of those who provided their
own answers also saw a geopolitical confrontation — but one between the United
States and Russia. For instance, one respondent said, “It is America that
destroys peaceful countries. They did it in Yugoslavia, in Iraq, in Libya. Now
this is happening in Syria.”
More Orthodox
Christians see the Syrian war as an East-West confrontation than do Muslims.
But Russian Muslims also are more likely to see it as a geopolitical conflict
or as a fight against Islamist terrorism than as a sectarian divide.
But
did we find out what Russian Muslims really think?
We’re not sure, for three reasons.
First, respondents may be lying. In a recent
study, Levada Center
showed that 26 percent of Russians are afraid to express their opinions in
surveys. Asking whether someone supports war in Putin’s Russia is pretty
sensitive; some may feel lying is safer. So perhaps more Russian Muslims
disapprove of Putin’s intervention in Syria than we know.
Second, as the war drags on, Russia is being accused of killing
Syrian civilians — intentionally. As such allegations increase, Russian
Muslims’ attitudes may harden — especially those who say they’re not sure what
they think about intervention or who don’t really understand the conflict.
Third, even if more Russian Muslims support
intervening in Syria now, that still leaves a minority who strongly object to
the intervention and who hate the Assad regime. That might come back to haunt
Russian national security.
Putin himself has
estimated that there are “5,000 to 7,000 fighters from Russia and other CIS
[Commonwealth of Independent States] member states fighting for ISIS.” As
Russia intervenes in Syria, that minority may become even more interested in
joining the Islamic State. But Putin’s foreign policy often seems aimed mainly
at boosting his domestic popularity. At least for
now, his Syrian campaign is proving successful, even among Russian Muslims.
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