MOSCOW — In May 1993, Estonia's first post-Soviet leader Lennart Meri — a wise man with bitter experience of life in the Soviet Union — told the visiting U.S. deputy secretary of state that Estonia urgently needed to join NATO. It was, he said, the only guarantee that Russia wouldn't invade the Baltic state once a less Western-friendly and authoritarian Russian leader replaced then-President Boris Yeltsin.
Meanwhile, Yeltsin openly warned the U.S. that NATO's expansion to the east would inevitably lead to an explosion in nationalist and imperialist sentiment in Russia. Some of Meri's and Yeltsin's predictions have come true. It took Vladimir Putin, prone to imperial obsession, to awaken Russians' ultraconservative feelings, complete with phantom pain for the lost Soviet Union. The more the Russian president advances his Make Russia Great Again strategy, the more Russians are convinced that their country was humiliated following the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Yet Putin's recent buildup of military forces along Ukraine's border has equally brought out Russians' fears as tensions heighten. The Pentagon announced last week that about 2,000 U.S.-based troops will be deployed to Poland and Germany, and another 1,000 soldiers from Germany are shifting to Romania, in a show of American commitment to NATO allies. The U.S. says it will not enter Ukraine. The view from Russia isn't clear-cut.
Russians think highly of their government. In a recent poll, half of the respondents blamed the U.S. and other NATO countries for the escalation in eastern Ukraine. Sixteen percent said Ukraine initiated the escalation, and only 4% faulted Russia.
Such patriotic vision has led to an increase in recent years in the number of Russians who believe that the nation has enemies. Most cite the U.S. as the primary foe.
Things can change, however. As soon as international rifts diminish even a little, the attitudes of Russians to everything Western, above all toward the U.S. and the European Union, instantly become less hostile, and vice versa. As for NATO, perceptions of the alliance as an instrument of American power took root back in Soviet times.
Putin's belligerent rhetoric and behavior have inspired ordinary Russians, but they have also frightened them. They worry about significant military threats from abroad. In recent years, Russians have begun to fear another world war. It's their second-biggest fear (after that of their loved ones becoming ill), according to a recent survey.
When Russia annexed Crimea in 2014, there was an unprecedented torrent of patriotic sentiment, embodied by Putin, whose ratings soared. The vast majority of Russians believed that reincorporating Crimea — for many years part of the Russian republic formerly under the Soviet Union — simply righted a historical injustice. Although that consensus on Crimea still exists, it no longer inspires Russians to unconditionally support Putin. He can't invoke that campaign to mobilize ordinary Russians to rally around the flag or boost his ratings again.