http://pewglobal.org/reports/display.php?ReportID=248

Islamic Extremism: Common Concern for Muslim and Western Publics
Support for Terror Wanes Among Muslim Publics
Released: 07.14.05
Summary of Findings

Concerns over Islamic extremism, extensive in the West even before 
this month's terrorist attacks in London, are shared to a 
considerable degree by the publics in several predominantly Muslim 
nations surveyed. Nearly three-quarters of Moroccans and roughly 
half of those in Pakistan, Turkey and Indonesia see Islamic 
extremism as a threat to their countries. At the same time, most 
Muslim publics are expressing less support for terrorism than in the 
past. Confidence in Osama bin Laden has declined markedly in some 
countries and fewer believe suicide bombings that target civilians 
are justified in the defense of Islam.

Nonetheless, the polling also finds that while Muslim and non-Muslim 
publics share some common concerns, they have very different 
attitudes regarding the impact of Islam on their countries. Muslim 
publics worry about Islamic extremism, but the balance of opinion in 
predominantly Muslim countries is that Islam is playing a greater 
role in politics – and most welcome that development. Turkey is a 
clear exception; the public there is divided about whether a greater 
role for Islam in the political life of that country is desirable.
In non-Muslim countries, fears of Islamic extremism are closely 
associated with worries about Muslim minorities. Western publics 
believe that Muslims in their countries want to remain distinct from 
society, rather than adopt their nation's customs and way of life. 
Moreover, there is a widespread perception in countries with 
significant Muslim minorities, including the U.S., that resident 
Muslims have a strong and growing sense of Islamic identity. For the 
most part, this development is viewed negatively, particularly in 
Western Europe. In France, Germany and the Netherlands, those who 
see a growing sense of Islamic identity among resident Muslims 
overwhelmingly say this is a bad thing. 

The latest survey by the Pew Global Attitudes Project, conducted 
among more than 17,000 people in 17 countries this spring, finds 
that while many Muslims believe that radical Islam poses a threat, 
there are differing opinions as to its causes. Sizable minorities in 
most predominantly Muslim countries point to poverty, joblessness 
and a lack of education, but pluralities in Jordan and Lebanon cite 
U.S. policies as the most important cause of Islamic extremism. 
The polling also finds that in most majority-Muslim countries 
surveyed, support for suicide bombings and other acts of violence in 
defense of Islam has declined significantly. In Turkey, Morocco and 
Indonesia, 15% or fewer now say such actions are justifiable. In 
Pakistan, only one-in-four now take that view (25%), a sharp drop 
from 41% in March 2004. In Lebanon, 39% now regard acts of terrorism 
as often or sometimes justified, again a sharp drop from the 73% who 
shared that view in 2002. A notable exception to this trend is 
Jordan, where a majority (57%) now says suicide bombings and other 
violent actions are justifiable in defense of Islam.

When it comes to suicide bombings in Iraq, however, Muslims in the 
surveyed countries are divided. Nearly half of Muslims in Lebanon 
and Jordan, and 56% in Morocco, say suicide bombings against 
Americans and other Westerners in Iraq are justifiable. However, 
substantial majorities in Turkey, Pakistan and Indonesia take the 
opposite view.
As in past Global Attitudes surveys, publics in predominantly Muslim 
countries believe that democracy can work in their countries. Large 
and growing majorities in Morocco (83%), Lebanon (83%), Jordan (80%) 
and Indonesia (77%) – as well as pluralities in Turkey (48%) and 
Pakistan (43%) – say democracy can work well and is not just for the 
West.

Yet there is some ambivalence about the role of Islam in government. 
Majorities or pluralities in each of the predominantly Muslim 
countries surveyed, except for Jordan, say Islam is playing a 
greater role in politics than a few years ago. But those who see 
Islam playing a large role in political life are also somewhat more 
likely to say that Islamic extremism poses a threat to their 
countries. 
Overall, the sense that Islamic extremism poses a major national 
threat is strongest in Morocco, the site of a devastating terrorist 
attack two years ago, where nearly three-quarters of the public 
(73%) hold that view. In Pakistan, 52% believe Islamic extremism 
presents a very or fairly great threat to the country, as do 47% in 
Turkey. In Lebanon, opinions are divided, with Christians much more 
likely to see Islamic extremism as a threat than Muslims. And just 
10% of Jordanians view Islamic extremism as at least a fairly great 
threat. 

Outside the Muslim world, the Pew survey finds that in countries 
such as India, Russia, Germany and the Netherlands, concerns about 
Islamic extremism – both within their own borders and around the 
world – are running high. Worries over Islamic extremism are nearly 
as high in France and Spain. Concerns about terrorism at home and 
around the world run parallel in only three countries, Russia, India 
and Spain. Before the London terrorist attacks, Americans and 
Britons expressed more concern about extremism around the world than 
they did at home.

There also is evidence that these concerns are associated with 
opposition to Turkey's entry into the European Union. Overall, 
nearly two-thirds of French (66%) and Germans (65%) oppose Turkey's 
EU bid, as do a majority of the Dutch (53%). Support for Turkey's 
admittance to the EU is most extensive in Spain (68%) and Great 
Britain (57%).
An analysis of the polling finds that opposition to Turkey's 
admission is also tied to growing concerns about national identity. 
Negative views about immigration – not only from the Middle East and 
Africa but from Eastern Europe as well – are even more strongly 
related to opposition to Turkey's admission to the EU than are 
concerns over Islamic extremism. 

Nonetheless, favorable views of Muslims outpace negative views in 
most countries of North America and Europe. Hostility toward Muslims 
is much lower in Great Britain, the United States and Canada than in 
other Western countries surveyed. And while worries about Islamic 
extremism are substantial in these three English speaking countries, 
the survey found somewhat less concern about rising Islamic identity 
among their resident Muslim populations. 
Islam in Politics
A complex set of attitudes about the place of Islam in politics 
emerges from the findings. Most people surveyed in predominantly 
Muslim countries identify themselves first as Muslims, rather than 
as citizens of their country. Moreover, except in Jordan, there is 
considerable acknowledgement that Islam is playing a significant 
role in the political life of these countries.

Worries about extremism are often greater among those who believe 
Islam has a significant voice in the political life of their 
country. This is particularly the case in Turkey and Morocco. The 
polling finds that those in Turkey who self-identify primarily with 
their nationality worry more about Islamic extremism than do those 
who think of themselves first as Muslim. 
However, Muslim publics who see Islam's influence in politics 
increasing say that this trend is good for their country, while 
those who see Islam's influence slipping overwhelmingly say it is 
bad. Turkey, whose EU candidacy is weakened by European worries 
about Islamic extremism, has the least clear cut opinions on this 
issue. An increasing role for Islam in politics in Turkey, a country 
that has been officially secular since 1923, is seen as a bad thing. 
Those in Turkey who see Islam's influence diminishing are divided 
over whether this is good (44%) or bad (47%). 
Views of Religious Groups
Majorities in Great Britain, France, Canada, the U.S. and Russia, as 
well as pluralities in Spain and Poland, say they have a somewhat or 
very favorable view of Muslims. In the West, only among the Dutch 
and Germans does a majority or plurality hold unfavorable views of 
Muslims (51% and 47%, respectively). 

For their part, people in predominantly Muslim countries have mixed 
views of Christians and strongly negative views of Jews. In Lebanon, 
which has a large Christian minority, 91% of the public thinks 
favorably of Christians. Smaller majorities in Jordan and Indonesia 
also have positive views of Christians. However, in Turkey (63%), 
Morocco (61%) and Pakistan (58%), solid majorities express negative 
opinions of Christians.
Anti-Jewish sentiment is endemic in the Muslim world. In Lebanon, 
all Muslims and 99% of Christians say they have a very unfavorable 
view of Jews. Similarly, 99% of Jordanians have a very unfavorable 
view of Jews. Large majorities of Moroccans, Indonesians, Pakistanis 
and six-in-ten Turks also view Jews unfavorably. 
In the Asian countries surveyed, views of religious groups are 
generally more moderate. India, with its substantial Muslim 
minority, is closely divided with respect to views about Muslims; 
46% hold a favorable view while 43% view them unfavorably. Opinions 
of Christians are considerably higher: 61% favorable compared with 
19% unfavorable. Most Indians (56%) offer no opinion on Jews; those 
that do split 28% favorable to 17% unfavorable.

In China, half view Muslims unfavorably while only 20% hold a 
favorable opinion. Views about Christians are scarcely better: 47% 
unfavorable compared with 26% favorable. Chinese views of Jews are 
essentially the same as their attitudes toward Christians: 49% 
negative vs. 28% positive.

In most of Europe as well as North America, majorities or 
pluralities judge some religions as more prone to violence than 
others, and those that do mostly have Islam in mind. Similarly, in 
India, among the 39% who see some religions as more violent than 
others, nearly three-in-four (73%) point to Islam, while 17% 
designate Hinduism. In predominantly Muslim countries, many agree 
that some religions are more prone to violence than others, but 
those who think this mostly have Judaism in mind. In Turkey, a 
plurality sees Christianity as the most violent. 

Ban Muslim Head Scarves?

On another controversial issue, the prohibition on wearing head 
scarves by Muslim women in public places including schools, 
attitudes are uniformly negative in the Muslim world but differ 
sharply among non-Muslim countries. 
Majorities in the U.S., Canada and Great Britain, as well as 
pluralities in Spain, Russia and Poland, view such prohibitions as a 
bad idea. However, in France, where a ban on wearing head scarves 
and other "conspicuous" religious symbols in secular schools went 
into effect last year, a large majority (78%) favors such 
prohibitions. They are joined in this view by smaller majorities in 
Germany (54%), the Netherlands (51%) and by nearly two-thirds of the 
Indian public (66%). 

In Turkey, where a longstanding ban on head scarves in schools and 
public buildings has come under increasing attack from Muslim 
activists, 64% of the public calls such a ban a bad idea compared 
with 29% who view it as a good idea. Lebanon weighs in against head 
scarf bans by 59% opposed to 29% in favor, while even larger 
majorities in Jordan (97%), Indonesia (95%), Morocco (90%) and 
Pakistan (77%) call them a bad idea.

Views of bin Laden

While support for suicide bombings and other terrorist acts has 
fallen in most Muslim-majority nations surveyed, so too has 
confidence in Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. In Lebanon, just 2% 
report some or a lot of confidence in bin Laden, and in Turkey only 
7% do so. 

In Morocco, just 26% of the public now say they have a lot or some 
confidence in bin Laden, down sharply from 49% in May 2003. In 
Indonesia, the public is now about evenly split, with 35% saying 
they place at least some confidence in bin Laden and 37% saying they 
have little or none; that represents a major shift since 2003, when 
58% expressed confidence in bin Laden.
 
In Pakistan, however, a narrow majority (51%) places some measure of 
confidence in bin Laden, a slight increase from 45% in 2003. And in 
Jordan, support for the Al Qaeda leader has risen over the last two 
years from 55% to a current 60%, including 25% who say they have a 
lot of confidence in him. Unsurprisingly, support for bin Laden in 
non-Muslim countries is measured in the small single digits.
Declining support for terror in a number of the Muslim countries 
surveyed tracks with previously reported dramatic increases in 
favorable views of the United States in Indonesia and Morocco. 
Favorable opinions of the U.S. surged most among younger people in 
Morocco, but were equally evident among both the young and old in 
Indonesia. The polling also found that in most Muslim countries 
women were less likely to express an opinion of the U.S. than were 
men, but when they did, they held a somewhat more positive view. 
 
Roadmap to the Report
The first section of the report analyzes how people in Western 
countries view people of the Muslim faith and how people in 
predominantly Muslim countries view people of the Christian and 
Jewish faiths. It also looks at attitudes toward the banning of 
Muslim head scarves in some countries and differing views of the 
U.S. among demographic groups in Muslim countries. Section II 
focuses on concerns in non-Muslim countries about growing Islamic 
identity and extremism as well as opinions about Turkey's bid to 
join the European Union. Section III deals with Muslims' perceptions 
of themselves and the role of Islam in the political life of their 
home country, and concerns about Islamic extremism within their own 
borders. A final section explores views in predominantly Muslim 
countries of Islam's role in the larger world and support for acts 
of terrorism in support of Islam both generally and specifically 
against the U.S. and its allies in Iraq. At the end of each section, 
excerpts from interviews conducted by the International Herald 
Tribune are included to illustrate some of the themes covered by the 
survey.
A description of the Pew Global Attitudes Project and a list of the 
countries surveyed immediately follows. A summary of the methodology 
can be found at the end of the report, along with complete results 
for all countries surveyed





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