America's image is still so tattered abroad after the Iraq war that 
China is viewed more favourably than the US in many countries, a 
global poll finds. Its image has not recovered in Western European 
countries, the US-based Pew Research Center found. 

In none of the 16 countries surveyed, the US included, does a 
majority of the public think the war leading to Saddam Hussein's 
removal made the world safer. 

But hostility towards the US has eased in some parts of the Muslim 
world. 

"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 and the 
Press, which carried out the survey. 

China is well considered in Europe and Asia, although there is 
considerable wariness about its growing economic and military power. 

Solid majorities in every European nation except Turkey would not 
like to see China rival the US as a military superpower, the survey 
said. 

'Hardworking' 

A majority of the public in 10 of the 15 countries surveyed holds 
unfavourable opinions of the US. 

President George W Bush's calls for greater democracy in the Middle 
East and US aid to tsunami victims in Asia have been welcomed in many 
countries. 

"We should keep plugging away on democracy," said former Senator John 
C Danforth, who co-chairs the Pew Global Attitudes Project with 
former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. 

"But we need to do a better job of communicating what we're trying to 
do." 

However, the survey finds that America continues to be viewed as 
largely indifferent to the interests of other countries in setting 
its foreign policies. 

The US image remains relatively poor in Muslim countries like Jordan 
and Pakistan, but has bounced back in Indonesia, the world's largest 
Muslim country. 

In most countries surveyed, Americans are seen as "inventive" 
and "hardworking", but they are also seen by many in both Western and 
predominately Muslim countries as "violent" and "greedy" - a 
judgement with which many Americans agree. 

The survey was conducted among nearly 17,000 people from 20 April to 
31 May with samples of about 1,000 in most countries, with more 
interviews in India and China and slightly fewer than 1,000 in the 
European countries. 

The margin of sampling error ranged from two percentage points to 
four percentage points, depending on the sample size. 

 http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4124164.stm






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