This is both sad and very stupid on our allies part.
courtesy of Newsmax
Thursday, June 23, 2005 9:11 p.m. EDT
Poll: Allies Prefer China to U.S.
WASHINGTON - The United States' image is so tattered overseas two years after the Iraq invasion that communist China is viewed more favorably than the U.S. in many long-time Western European allies, an international poll has found.
The poor image persists even though the Bush administration has been promoting freedom and democracy throughout the world in recent months -- which many viewed favorably - and has sent hundreds of millions of dollars in relief aid to Indian Ocean nations hit by the devastating December 26 tsunami.
"It's amazing when you see the European public rating the United States so poorly, especially in comparison with China," said Andrew Kohut, director of the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, which surveyed public opinion in 16 countries, including the United States.
In Britain, almost two-thirds of Britons, 65 percent, saw China favorably, compared with 55 percent who held a positive view of the United States.
In France, 58 percent had an upbeat view of China, compared with 43 percent who felt that way about the U.S. The results were nearly the same in Spain and the Netherlands.
The United States' favorability rating was lowest among three Muslim nations which are also U.S. allies - Turkey, Pakistan and Jordan - where only about one-fifth of those polled viewed the U.S. in a positive light.
Only India and Poland were more upbeat about the United States, while Canadians were just as likely to see China favorably as they were the U.S.
The poll found suspicion and wariness of the United States in many countries where people question the war in Iraq and are growing wary of the U.S.-led campaign against terrorism.
"The Iraq war has left an enduring impression on the minds of people around the world in ways that make them very suspicious of U.S. intentions and makes the effort to win hearts and minds far more difficult," said Shibley Telhami, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.
The overseas image of the United States slipped sharply after the Iraq invasion in 2003, the Pew polling found, and it has not rebounded in Western European countries like Britain, France, Germany and Spain.
However the U.S. image has bounced back in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim country which benefited from U.S. aid to tsunami victims, as well as in India and Russia.
Support for the U.S.-led war on terror has dipped in Western countries like Britain, France, Germany, Canada and Spain, while it remains low in the Muslim countries surveyed like Pakistan, Turkey and Jordan.
"The position of the United States as the one surviving superpower is to be assertive in responding in a world of terrorism. But in the rest of the world, there is a great wariness about that," said John Danforth, the former Republican senator from Missouri who also was U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. He is now a St. Louis attorney.
The poll found a positive reaction in European countries to President George W. Bush's campaign for more democracy in countries around the world. People in Muslim countries were wary of the U.S. campaign, but supportive of the idea of democracy in their own countries.
Danforth said the attitudes in the Mideast about democracy were a bright spot.
"We should keep plugging away on democracy," Danforth said. "But we need to do a better job of communicating what we're trying to do."
The survey found that a majority of people in most countries say the United States does not take the interests of other countries into account when making international policy decisions.
It also found most would like to see another country get as much military power as the United States, though few want China to play that role.
People in most countries were more inclined to say the war in Iraq has made the world a more dangerous place. Non-U.S. residents who had unfavorable views of the United States were most likely to cite Bush as the reason rather than a general problem with America.
The polls were taken in various countries from late April to the end of May with samples of about 1,000 in most countries, with more interviewees in India and China and slightly less than 1,000 in the European countries. The margin of sampling error ranged from 2 percentage points to 4 percentage points, depending on the sample size.
You know really what is wrong with cutting off all foreign aid at this point, we can't win in the world so we should at least be spending all our money INSIDE OUR BORDERS. Oh and a note to our "allies" the American people won't forget this, we can be kind or we can be very vengful, I won't either.
Saturday, June 25, 2005
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4 comments:
Spot on Paul! That's what baffles me about isolationists, it just isn't possible to be self-sufficient and only trade with yourself.
And as Paul said Ben, the US has done some pretty awful things, whetehr it be invading Nations for flimsy reasons or constant interference in the economies of developing Nations; or saying no to various UN resolutions at one time or another.
The concept that the US shoudl remove all it's aid is rather like the brattish child not getting its way.
When will the US realise that it needs the rest of the world.
Ben-Check out undergroundlogician.blogspot.com
I usually find this guy pretentious and overbearing, but his posts of the last few days have been very thought provoking.
Read the article on the Italian journalist and the comments.
Amazing how stupid our allies are. You need to re-post that article by that Canadian. Remember, the one that says how much America has helped the rest of the world and how ungrateful everyone else is of it?
Funny how so many of the tsunami victims thought America was the only one giving them aid. Wonder why.
ZS, that's flat out creepy dude, I was thinking the same thing too recently. That will be an upcoming post. Back then there wasn't much traffic on my site, now I have more people viewing it.
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