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Subject: [R-G] Global Poll: US policies played "significant role" in terror
attacks - AFP

http://sg.news.yahoo.com/011220/1/25mor.html

Agence France Presse                       December 20, 2001


Global Poll: US policies played "significant role" in terror attacks
 
Opinion-makers strongly support the US-led war on terrorism but oppose
spreading the action beyond Afghanistan and feel Washington's policies
contributed to the September 11 terrorist attacks, according to a survey in
24 countries. 

The poll of 275 opinion leaders, published in the Paris-based International
Herald Tribune Thursday, showed a majority of non-US respondents felt US
policies had played a significant role in fueling terrorists' anger against
the United States.

The poll findings suggest "that much of the world views the attacks as a
symptom of increasingly bitter polarization between haves and have-nots,"
the paper said.

"The danger for America is that its overwhelming power is feeding
resentment, in the same countries that also feel they are missing out on the
spoils of economic progress."

While around six out of ten non-Americans believed Washington was doing the
right thing in fighting terrorism, that support tumbled when the question of
possible US-led attacks on Iraq, Somalia or elsewhere was raised.

While 50 percent of the Americans polled said the military action should be
broadened to the regimes supporting terrorism, only 29 percent outside the
US agreed.

Asked if many or most people would consider US policies to be "a major
cause" of the September 11 attacks, 58 percent of the non-US respondents
said they did, compared to just 18 percent of Americans.

The poll, conducted by the paper and the Pew Research Center for the People
and the Press, highlighted a large gap between the way Americans believe
they are seen abroad and the way others say they see the United States.

Samuel Wells, associate director of the Woodrow Wilson International Center
for Scholars, was quoted as saying Americans were relatively unaware of how
many Muslims "were terribly upset at the carry-over from the Gulf War,"
including the continued US military presence in Saudi Arabia and the rest of
the Gulf.

Not one American respondent believed the US attacks on Afghanistan would be
widely considered as an overreaction, while over 40 percent of
non-Americans, and 63 percent in Islamic countries, did.

Andrew Kohut, director of the Pew center, noted as particularly striking the
finding that two-thirds or more of respondents in every region outside the
United States said it was "good that Americans now know what it's like to be
vulnerable".

A total of 52 percent of respondents said the world's wealthiest country
does far too little to help the least-advantaged, citing that as a major
cause for dislike of the United States.

The paper said the pollsters had interviewed between November 12 and
December 13, "275 influential people" in politics, media, business, culture
and government; 40 in the United States and 235 in 23 other countries.

(For the full IHT story, see


http://www.iht.com/cgi-bin/generic.cgi?template=articleprint.tmplh&ArticleId
=42521)



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