-Caveat Lector-

http://staff.stir.ac.uk/david.miller/publications/World-opinion.html

World opinion opposes
the attack on Afghanistan
http://staff.stir.ac.uk/david.miller/publications/World-opinion.html

By David Miller


According to Tony Blair and George Bush respectively,
'world opinion' and the 'collective will of the world'
supported the attack on Afghanistan. Yet analysis of
international opinion polls shows that with only three
exceptions majorities in all countries polled have
opposed the policy of the US and UK governments.
Furthermore there have been consistent majorities
against the current action in the UK and sizeable
numbers of the US population had reservations about
the bombing.

World opinion

The biggest poll of world opinion was carried out by
Gallup International in 37 countries in late September
(Gallup International 2001). It found that apart from
the US, Israel and India a majority of people in every
country surveyed preferred extradition and trial of
suspects to a US attack. Clear and sizeable majorities
were recorded in the UK (75%) and across Western
Europe from 67% in France to 87% in Switzerland.
Between 64% (Czech Republic) and 83 % (Lithuania)of
Eastern Europeans concurred as did varying majorities
in Korea, Pakistan, South Africa and Zimbabwe. An even
more emphatic answer obtained in Latin America where
between 80% (Panama) and 94% (Mexico) favoured
extradition. The poll also found that majorities in
the US and Israel (both 56%) did not favour attacks on
civilians. Yet such polls have been ignored by the
media and by many of the polling companies. After the
bombing started opposition seems to have grown in
Europe. As only the Mirror has reported, by early
November 65 per cent in Germany and 69 per cent in
Spain wanted the US attacks to end (Yates, 2001).
Meanwhile in Russia polls before and after the bombing
show majorities opposed to the attacks. One slogan
which reportedly commanded majority support doing the
rounds in Moscow at the end of September was 'World
War III - Without Russia' (Agency WPS 2001). After the
bombing started Interfax reported a Gallup
International poll showing a majority of Moscow
residents against the US military action (BBC
Worldwide Monitoring 2001)

Polling companies.

The questions asked by a number of polling companies
such as MORI, Gallup and ICM have been seriously
inadequate. They have failed to give respondents a
range of possible options in relation to the war. When
polling companies did ask about alternatives, support
for war falls away quite markedly. In the UK prior to
the bombing, all except one poll, which asked the
question, showed a majority against bombing if it
caused civilian casualties. After the bombing started
the polling companies stopped asking about concern for
civilians. From the start of the bombing to the fall
of Kabul on 13 November there were only four polls on
British opinion (by ICM (2001a, 2001b) and MORI
(2001a, 2001b)) compared with 7 between the 11
September and the start of the bombing on October 7.
None has asked adequate questions about alternatives
to bombing. ICM did ask one alternative questions
about whether bombing should stop to allow aid into
Afghanistan and 54% said it should (Guardian October
30). Where questions about aid or alternatives to
bombing are asked the results have been consistent:
Clear and sometimes massive majorities against the
bombing. In an ignored poll, the Scottish Sunday Mail
found that fully 69% of Scots favoured sanctions,
diplomacy or bringing Bin Laden to trial. Only 17%
favoured his execution and a minuscule 5% supported
bombing (21 October). The Herald in Glasgow also found
only 6% favoured the then current policy of bombing
alone (3 November). It is well known that Scottish
opinion tends to be to the left of UK opinion, but not
by more than a few points on average. Although the
Press Association picked up on the Herald poll it was
not reported in the British national press. Between
the start of the bombing and the fall of Kabul, (with
the exception of the single question in the Guardian
poll showing 54% in favour of a pause in bombing) not
a single polling company asked the British public any
questions about alternatives to war.

It is not altogether clear whether the lack of options
given to poll respondents is due to the media or the
polling companies. Certainly both UK and US polling
companies have been guilty of misrepresenting their
own data almost without exception overemphasising
support for the war. For example Mori claimed that
their polling in late October had 'extinguished any
lingering doubt' that support was 'fading' (Mortimore
2001). Of course this completely ignores all the poll
data which would give an alternative view and the fact
that the polling questions have been inadequate.
Furthermore, according to Bob Worcester of MORI, (in
an address to an LSE meeting on the media and the war
in November) the text of press reports on their polls
are cleared by MORI itself before they are published.
This is clearly a matter of good practice and should
be applauded. But the benefit is fairly marginal, if
MORI are content for the press to distort the level of
opposition by concentrating on the 'overwhelming'
support for the war and relegating opposition to the
war to the end of reports.

Media reporting

It comes as a surprise to many in the UK and US to
discover that opinion is so markedly opposed to or
ambivalent about the current action. One key reason is
that the polls have been systematically misreported in
the media. Both television and the press in the US and
UK have continued to insist that massive majorities
support the bombing. Senior BBC journalists have
expressed surprise and disbelief when shown the
evidence from the opinion polls. One told me that she
didn't believe that the polling companies were corrupt
and that she thought it unlikely that the Guardian
would minimise the opposition to the war. This was
days after the Guardian published a poll purporting to
show that 74% supported the bombing (Travis 2001, 12
October). What the BBC journalist hadn't noticed was
that the Guardian's polls had asked only very limited
questions and failed to give respondents the option of
saying they would prefer diplomatic solutions. In the
poll on 12 October one question was asked but only if
people thought enough had been done diplomatically.
Given that the government and the media had been of
the opinion that enough had been done and alternative
voices were marginalised, it is surprising that as
many as 37% said that enough had not been done.

Furthermore the Guardian's editorial position has
offered (qualified) support for the war and it did not
cover the demonstrations in London and Glasgow on 13
October. As a result of a 'flurry' of protests this
was raised by the readers' editor at the Guardian's
editorial meeting on 14 October and the editor agreed
that this had been a 'mistake'. But, the readers
editor revealed that it is the papers 'general policy'
not to cover marches (Mayes 2001), thus condemning
dissent to the margins of the news agenda and leaving
the field open for those with the resources to stage
'proper' news events.

Elsewhere in the media, almost every poll has been
interpreted to indicate popular support for the war.
Where that interpretation is extremely difficult
journalists have tried to squeeze the figures to fit.
One Scottish newspaper was so concerned at the low
numbers supporting bombing that they phoned me to ask
how best to interpret the findings. Another paper, the
Sunday Mail showed only 5% support for bombing and 69%
favouring conflict resolution. Nevertheless the
closest they got to this in their headline was that
Scots were 'split' on bombing (21 October 2001).

TV news reporters have routinely covered
demonstrations in Britain and the US as if they
represent only a small minority of opinion. The
underlying assumption is that demonstrators only
represent themselves rather than seeing them as an
expression of a larger constituency of dissent. Thus
BBC reporters claim that 'the opinion polls say that a
majority of UK public opinion backs the war' (BBC1
Panorama, 14 October 2001) or in reporting the
demonstrations in London that 'Despite the strength of
feelings here today those opposed to military action
are still very much in the minority' (BBC1 News 13
October 2001 21.50). These reports are at best na�ve,
at worst mendacious, and a clear violation of the
legal requirement of the BBC to be balanced.

In the US dissent has been markedly harder to find in
the news media (Solomon 2001). The pictures of dead
children featured in the rest of the world press been
hard to find (Lucas 2001) and the debate on the use of
cluster bombs and the 'daisy cutter' bombs (a weapon
of mass destruction) which were debated in the
mainstream UK media in late October were almost non
existent on the television news in the US. * CNN
continued to report under the heading 'America Strikes
back' which is of itself a woefully partial version of
what was happening. Polling companies in the US have
given their respondents little choice of policy
options. Where they have asked a variety of questions
answers opposing US policy have been downplayed in
media reports. The New York Times reported on 25
September that 92% of respondents agreed that the US
should take military action against whoever is
responsible for the attacks'. But the text of the
report belied the 'support for war' headline
indicating that fully 78% felt that the US should wait
until it was certain who is responsible', before
responding. As Edward Herman, leading critic of US
foreign Policy has written of the inadequacy of polls
which do not ask about extradition, civilian
casualties, or whether they would support action which
breaches international law (Herman 2001). One little
reported poll for Newsweek in early October showed
that '58 percent of respondents said the U.S.
government's support for Israel may have been the
cause' of the attacks, thus indicating that America
may have struck first rather that simply striking back
as CNN would have it.

Furthermore there is evidence that dissent in the US
is being underrepresented in responses to opinion
polls. In a Gallup poll 31% agreed that the attacks on
the US had made them 'less likely to say things that
might be unpopular?'
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/releases/pr011008c.asp).
And opposition to the war is pretty unpopular in media
coverage of the war. When Bill Maher, host of the
Politically Incorrect chat show criticised remarks by
Bush describing the WTC attackers as 'cowards', the
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said: 'There are
reminders to all Americans that they need to watch
what they do, and this is not a time for remarks like
that' (Usborne 2001). His show lost advertisers and
was dropped by some networks.

Conclusion

The most fundamental problem with the polls is that
they assume the public has perfect information. But,
notwithstanding some dissent in the press, the media
in the UK, and even more emphatically in the US, have
been distorting what is happening in Afghanistan
especially on civilian casualties and alternatives to
war. To ask about approval of what is happening
assumes that people actually know what is happening.
But given that a large proportion of the population
receives little but misinformation and propaganda
(especially on TV news which is most peoples main
source of information) then it is less surprising that
some should approve of what they are told is happening
- that the US and UK are doing their best to avoid
civilian casualties, that Blair exercises a moderating
influence on Bush. When they are asked their own
preferences about what should happen (rather than
approval questions about what is happening) then there
is much less support, even in the US. In other words
there is no world support for the attack on
Afghanistan and public opinion in the US and UK is at
best dubious and at worst flatly opposed to what is
happening. If Bush and Blair were really democrats,
they would never have started the bombing.

David Miller is a member of the Stirling Media
Research Institute.

http://staff.stir.ac.uk/davidmiller

*Author's observation. The author spent 10 days in the
US between 26th October and 4th November and compared
the news in the US with the debates taking place in
the media in the UK.

References

Agency WPS (2001) 'What the papers say. Part I',
October 1, 2001, Monday 'RUSSIANS WON'T SUPPORT PUTIN
IF HE INVOLVES RUSSIA IN RETALIATION' Zavtra,
September 27, 2001, p. 1

BBC Worldwide Monitoring (2001) October 9, 2001,
Tuesday,

'Public poll sees threat to Russia from US military
action' Interfax news agency, Moscow, in English 1137
gmt 9 Oct 01.

Gallup International (2001) 'Gallup International Poll
on terrorism in the US',
http://www.gallup-international.com/surveys.htm

ICM (2001a) ' ICM RESEARCH / GUARDIAN POLL OCTOBER
2001', published in the Guardian, 12 October.

http://www.icmresearch.co.uk/reviews/2001/guardian-afghan-poll-oct-2001.htm

ICM (2001b) ' ICM RESEARCH / THE GUARDIAN AFGHAN POLL
- OCTOBER 2001', published in the Guardian, 30
October.

http://www.icmresearch.co.uk/reviews/2001/guardian-afghan2-poll-oct-2001.htm

Herman, E. (2001) 'Nuggets from a nuthouse', Z
Magazine, November.

Lucas, S. (2001) 'How a free press censors itself',
New Statesman, 12 November, 14-15.

Mayes, I. (2001) 'Leading lights', The Guardian,
Saturday review, 20 October: 7.

MORI (2001a) 'First poll on the Afghanistan War:
Britons fully support Blair but fear retaliatory
Strikes' Poll for Tonight with Trevor McDonald, 11
October, 10.20pm, ITV.
http://www.mori.com/polls/granada.shtml

MORI (2001b) 'War of Afghanistan Poll' for the Mail on
Sunday, 4 November 2001

http://www.mori.com/polls/2001/ms011104.shtml

Mortimore, R. (2001) 'Commentary: Britain at war' 26
October, http://www.mori.com/digest/2001/c011026.shtml

Solomon, N. (2001 'TV news: a militarised zone', Znet,
9 October, http://www.zmag.org/solomonzone.htm

Usborne, D. (2001) 'Jokers and peaceniks face
patriotic wrath', Independent on Sunday, 30 September:
7.

Yates, N. (2001) 'War on Terror: the World questions
America', The Mirror, 9 November.



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