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NATO: The View from the East
Authors:Stephen White  Julia Korosteleva  Roy Allison
Institution:1. Department of Politics , University of Glasgow , UK s.white@socsci.gla.ac.uk;3. Department of Politics , University of Glasgow , UK;4. Department of International Relations , London School of Economics , UK
Abstract:Abstract

Relations between Russia, Ukraine and Belarus and NATO have placed more emphasis on cooperation than confrontation since the Cold War, and Ukraine has begun to move towards membership. At the popular level, on the evidence of national surveys in 2004 and 2005, NATO continues to be perceived as a significant threat, but in Russia and Ukraine it comes behind the United States (in Belarus the numbers are similar). There are few socioeconomic predictors of support for NATO membership that are significant across all three countries, but there are wide differences by region, and by attitudinal variables such as support for a market economy and for EU membership. The relationship between popular attitudes and foreign policy is normally a distant one; but in Ukraine NATO membership will require public support in a referendum, and in all three cases public attitudes on foreign policy issues can influence foreign policy in other ways, including the composition of parliamentary committees. In newly independent states whose international allegiances are still evolving, the associations between public opinion and foreign and security policy may often be closer than in the established democracies.
Keywords:anti-terrorism  public goods  counterterrorism  international organizations  EU security  weakest links
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