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Survey:
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Poll:
Israel, US greatest threats to Middle East
Jim
Lobe, The Electronic Intifada, 15 April 2008
WASHINGTON, 14 April (IPS) - Despite renewed US efforts to
achieve an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement this year,
popular views of the United States in the Arab world have
actually worsened since 2006, according to a major new survey of
public opinion in six Arab states.
Nearly two-thirds, or 64 percent, of more than 4,000 respondents
in Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates (UAE) said they held a "very unfavorable" attitude
of the United States, up from 57 percent in late 2006, while 19
percent more said their views were "somewhat unfavorable" --
roughly comparable to the results of 17 months ago.
At the same time, support for Iran and its nuclear program
appears to have risen over the same period, according to the new
survey, the sixth in a series designed by University of Maryland
Prof. Shibley Telhami and carried out by Zogby International
since 2002.
The poll found that two-thirds of the Arab public (67 percent)
believes Tehran has the right to pursue its nuclear program and
that international pressure to freeze it should cease. That
compares to 61 percent who took the same position in 2006.
Remarkably, nearly three out of four Saudi respondents said that
if Iran acquired nuclear weapons, it would have "positive"
influence on the region, while 51 percent of UAE respondents
agreed. Pluralities in Morocco and Egypt took the same position,
while pluralities of roughly one-third in Lebanon and Jordan
said Tehran's acquisition of a nuclear weapon it would make no
difference.
The new survey also found that fears regarding both US and
Israeli designs in the region have also increased over the past
17 months, despite the length of time that has passed since the
summer 2006 Israeli war on Lebanon which inflamed anti-Israeli
and anti-western opinion throughout the region.
Asked to name two countries that, in their view, posed the
"biggest threat" to them, a whopping 95 percent and 88 percent
of respondents named Israel and the US, respectively. That
compared to 85 percent and 72 percent, respectively, in late
2006.
By comparison, the sense of threat posed by Iran appears to have
diminished over the same period. While 11 percent of Arab
respondents named Iran as one of the two greatest threats in
late 2006, only seven percent did so in the most recent survey.
The survey, which was conducted in all six countries last month,
is certain to be greeted with considerable dismay here in the US
capital where policy-makers had been cheered by some recent
polling. One 23-nation survey released by BBC earlier this month
suggested that Washington's image around the globe had bottomed
out last year and that the greater emphasis the George W. Bush
administration has placed on diplomacy, rather than war and
military threats, during its second term, as well as reduced
violence in Iraq, had begun to pay off, at least in public
diplomacy terms.
But Telhami's "Annual Arab Public Opinion Poll" is highly
regarded among Arabist scholars and public opinion specialists
here who note that its consistency of methodology and questions
over an unusually long period of time has given it considerable
credibility. Telhami, an expert on Arab media, holds the Anwar
Sadat Chair for Peace and Development at the University of
Maryland and serves as a senior fellow at the Saban Centre for
Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution, a major think
tank here.
The survey found that while views on some issues varied among
the six countries, cynicism about US motivations and policies
was fairly consistent. Eighty percent said their views of the US
are formed more by US "policies" than by US "values" -- up from
70 percent who took that position in 2006.
Nearly two-thirds of respondents (65 percent) said they don't
believe that democracy is a real objective in the region, while
20 percent said it is an important objective but Washington is
going about it the wrong way.
A 36-percent plurality said they did not believe reports that
violence in Iraq has been significantly reduced over the past
year, while 31 percent said any reduction of violence that has
been achieved has little to do with the "surge" of US forces
there and that, in any event, it was only a matter of time
before violence increases. Only six percent of respondents said
they believed the surge was working and would enhance the
chances of a stable political settlement.
Asked what they believe would happen if the US quickly withdrew
its forces, 61 percent said Iraqis would find a way to bridge
their differences -- up from 44 percent in 2006. Only 15 percent
said civil war in Iraq would expand rapidly, down from 24
percent in 2006.
Respondents in Lebanon (88 percent), Jordan (87 percent), and
Saudi Arabia (66 percent) were particularly optimistic that
Iraqis would reach a peaceful settlement if the US withdrew its
forces quickly.
Overall, four out of five respondents said they believe that
Iraqis are worse off as a result of the US invasion. Only two
percent said they believed that Iraqis were better off.
The survey found a sharp rise in the percentage of respondents,
particularly in Egypt and Saudi Arabia, who identified the
Palestinian cause as among their three most important public
issues. Eight-six percent of all respondents named Palestine in
that context, up from 77 percent in 2006 and 69 percent in 2005.
At the same time, however, a growing majority was found to be
increasingly pessimistic about prospects for a two-state
solution based on Israel's 1967 borders. Fifty-five percent
overall said they believe the collapse of prospects for such a
solution will likely lead to a state of "intense conflict for
years to come." Views on the conflict were especially
pessimistic in Lebanon and Jordan.
Asked which US presidential candidate would have the best chance
to advance peace in the Middle East, Democratic Sen. Barack
Obama gained the most backing with 18 percent, followed by Sen.
Hillary Clinton (13 percent), and John McCain (four percent).
But 20 percent of respondents said they weren't following the US
elections, and a plurality of 32 percent said the policy will be
the same regardless of who is elected.
Asked to identify which foreign leader they admired the most,
respondents generally volunteered those most outspokenly defiant
of Israel and the US. The most popular was Hizballah leader
Hassan Nasrallah, who was named by 26 percent of respondents, up
from 14 percent 17 months ago. Second-ranked was Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad at 16 percent, up from just two
percent in 2006.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came up third with 10
percent of respondents, up from four percent in 2006, while
al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden was cited by six percent of
respondents, up from four percent. Al-Qaida also appeared to
receive a somewhat more sympathetic response among respondents
than in late 2006.
Asked what aspect of the group, if any, they sympathize with the
most, one-third of respondents told interviewers then that they
"do not sympathize at all with this organization." Only 21
percent took that position in the latest poll.
All rights reserved, IPS - Inter Press Service (2008). Total
or partial publication, retransmission or sale forbidden.
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