The war is not a distant debate for many of those called in the poll. Nearly half of those of Ukrainian descent (48%) report having relatives fighting in Ukraine. So do one in five (19%) of those of Russian descent.
Olga Rudenko, 49, an artist who emigrated from Ukraine in 2002 and lives in Harlem, has loaded on her phone the Ukrainian air alerts that warn of approaching attacks there.
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“So I know when my mom needs to go to the shelter and what’s going on,” she says, “because I need to check in the morning if she’s alive, if she was not bombed.” Her mother doesn’t have a smartphone, so Rudenko checks on her through an aunt who lives in another Ukrainian town.
She begins to cry as she talks about her family, then stops herself. “I don’t have any right to cry,” she says. “I’m not the one who’s bombed.”
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There are differences between Russian Americans and Ukrainian Americans on some issues, including whether an expanding NATO represents a threat to Russian security, an argument that Putin made to defend the invasion. Those who identify with their Ukrainian heritage say by nearly 3-1 (63%-22%) that NATO does not pose a threat. Those who identify with their Russian heritage are more closely divided: 38% say it does; 48% say it doesn’t.
“This is a serious problem from the perspective of Russians because obviously you don’t want your capital, not to mention some of your other major population centers, in close missile range to NATO,” says Artem Joukov, 31, a doctoral candidate at the University of Texas at Dallas who emigrated from Russia as a child.
He doesn’t see stakes for the United States that warrant imposing sanctions and deploying additional troops to Eastern Europe. “It is possible in foreign policy to not take a position,” he says.
Victor Shevchuk, 53, an engineer from Richardson, Texas, who is Ukrainian American, says that as a sovereign nation, Ukraine should be able to make its own decisions on whether to join NATO.
“It’s a very complex and tricky situation, being especially that Russia has nuclear power and that Vladimir Putin seems to be a bit unhinged,” he says. “I’d like to see us help Ukraine as much as possible without triggering WWIII.”
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In the face of Ukrainian resistance, Putin has moved to “more and more extreme measures,” he says.
The invasion of Ukraine has soured the views of many Russian Americans toward Putin. Nearly two-thirds (63%) say their view of him is worse than before the attacks in February. Among the respondents who have talked with family members in the region in recent weeks, 7 in 10 say those relatives had a generally unfavorable view of Putin.
Ninety percent of the Ukrainian Americans and 70% of the Russian Americans say Putin should be charged with war crimes.
Is the US doing enough?
Many of those surveyed want the United States to do more.
Half of Russian Americans say the United States is not doing enough in the conflict; 7 of 10 Ukrainian Americans agree. Just 13% of Russian Americans and 2% of Ukrainian Americans say the United States is doing too much.
President Joe Biden gets mediocre approval ratings for his handling of the conflict: 40% approve-43% disapprove among those of Russian descent; 35% approve-49% disapprove among those of Ukrainian descent.
“We need a leader, not a tip-toer,” says Tara Shvetzov, who lives in Beeville in South Texas. Her father immigrated from Russia. A veteran of the U.S. Army who served in the Iraq War, she says the botched U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan last year may have opened the door for the invasion of Ukraine. “It gives the bullies that opportunity to say ‘They show weakness, and we take advantage of that weakness,’” she says.
Most of those surveyed, 67% of the Russian Americans and 57% of the Ukrainian Americans, predict the crisis in Ukraine is the start of a new Cold War between the United States and Russia. Or worse: Two-thirds of each group are “very” or “somewhat” worried that direct military confrontation between the two nations could be sparked.
Yevgeniya Valchuk, 39, who moved to the USA 15 years ago and lives in San Francisco, calls the Russian invasion inevitable.
“Everybody in Ukraine knew it would happen,” she says, “based on the history that Ukraine has and how the Russians behave and how the Russian president behaved within the last 30 years.” She notes Putin’s aggressive actions in Syria and elsewhere.
“He took everything what he wanted, and right now the only one that is standing is Ukraine,” she says.
Those on the battlefield standing against him include her younger brother and sister.
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