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http://www.arabnews.com/Article.asp?ID=20965


Arab News
SAUDI ARABIA'S FIRST ENGLISH LANGUAGE DAILY

What Arabs think about other countries in the world
By James Zogby, Special to Arab News
Published on 11 December 2002

Americans are frequently asked by public opinion pollsters to give their evaluations 
of other
countries in the world. Most often, respondents are asked whether they have a 
favorable or
unfavorable attitude toward these other nations. Until now, no such systematic effort 
has
ever before been made to determine how Arab public opinion feels about other countries 
in
the world. The recently released book "What Arabs Think, a landmark view of Arab public
opinion", commissioned by the Arab Thought Foundation, undertakes such an 
investigation.

Utilizing the same methodology and approach used in surveying US public opinion, Arab
respondents from eight countries were asked to describe their attitudes, both 
favorable and
unfavorable, toward thirteen other countries from different parts of the world. The
countries evaluated were: Russia, China, United States of America, France, India, 
Israel,
Pakistan, Iran, Japan, Turkey, Germany, and the United Kingdom. The results of this 
survey
are fascinating.

Some observations about the

countries under evaluation

Of all the countries covered in the poll, only France received a consistent net 
positive rating
from respondents in all eight Arab countries. France’s best favorable to unfavorable 
ratio
comes from Morocco and Lebanon, where nine in 10 were positive, while its poorest
showing is still a net positive score of 50 percent in Saudi Arabia.

Canada, Japan and Iran received positive favorability ratings from respondents in six 
of the
eight countries surveyed, while China and Germany were viewed positively in five of the
eight Arab countries.

It might be surprising to some to note that Iran received very high favorable ratings 
in
Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and also recorded high positive ratings in Lebanon and Egypt.

At the other end of the continuum, Israel received the lowest favorability score of 
any of the
thirteen countries covered in our study, only breaking out of single digit 
favorability ratings
among its own Arab citizens.

Still, this community gave Israel only a 16 percent favorability rating. In no other 
country did
the state score higher than eight percent.

Also receiving net negative scores from respondents in all eight countries were the US 
and
the United Kingdom. The favorability ratio given to the US was significantly lower 
than that
given to the UK, and was especially low in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab 
Emirates,
and among Arabs in Israel. (It is interesting, for comparison purposes, to contrast 
the very
negative attitudes of the Arab respondents to these two English-speaking countries with
more positive Arab attitudes toward Canada).

Turkey also did quite poorly, receiving only slightly net positive ratings in two of 
the eight
countries surveyed.

Observations about the Arab respondents

Overall, Jordanians seemed to be the most favorably inclined toward the countries 
covered
in the survey. They granted positive favorability ratings to nine of the thirteen 
countries
under evaluation, although none received exceptionally high positive percentages.

While Lebanese rated eight countries favorably, the favorability scores they offered 
to those
countries were among the highest of all of those given by Arab respondents.

The Lebanese gave six countries greater than a 60 percent favorability rating, with 
five of
the six receiving a greater than two to one favorability ratio.

Other Arab countries expressing far more positive than negative feelings toward the
thirteen countries covered in the study were Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

Clearly, the responses point to an Arab concern with the US and Israel. It is not, as 
some
might hasten to construe, an anti-Western sentiment at work, since France and Canada,
both Western countries, were among the countries receiving the highest favorability 
ratings.
Germany also received strong positive scores from most Arab respondents.

As we found in an earlier study conducted by Zogby International in April of 2002, Arab
unfavorable attitudes toward the US were a function of US policy in the Arab world.

In that study, which we called Impressions of America, we found that although Arabs who
were polled in five Arab countries (Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Kuwait, Lebanon and UAE) had
strong favorable attitudes toward American science and technology, freedom and
democracy, education, movies and television, and also had largely favorable attitudes
toward the American people. However, they had extremely negative attitudes toward US
policy vis-à-vis the Arab world, Iraq, and most especially toward Palestine.

The book, "What Arabs Think", actually takes this examination of Arab attitudes toward 
the
US one step further by asking the 3,800 respondents from the eight Arab countries
surveyed an open-ended question: What can the United States do to improve its relations
with the Arab World? While responses varied from country to country, it was striking 
that in
all eight countries, between one-third to one-half of all respondents made specific
reference to US policy toward Israel. They asked that the US act to stop Israel’s 
illegal
behavior, sever ties with Israel, or simply develop a more balanced policy vis-à-vis 
the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Another one-third of all respondents spoke more 
generally about
the need for the US to be more respectful or fair in its relations with the Arabs.

It is useful to note that "What Arabs Think" also makes clear that Arabs, like people 
all over
the world, do not focus much on foreign policy or on relations with other countries. 
In fact,
when asked to rank the importance they place on a number of political issues, Arabs 
rank
foreign policy last.

But Palestine and the treatment of Palestinians are not seen as foreign policy issues.

They are intensely personal concerns for many Arabs, and, therefore, rank quite high in
importance.

How are Arab attitudes shaped toward other countries? Quite logically, it appears that
Arabs judge other countries according to how they perceive those countries treat them 
or
deal with issues that are important to them.

(For comments or information, contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] or http://www.aaiusa.org.)

— Arab News Features 11 December 2002





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