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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: epicure who wrote (5615)12/19/2002 1:49:32 AM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Not such a super
power after all

A new US poll shows that the world
is falling out of love with America


Peter Preston
Monday December 9, 2002
The Guardian

Even the ambition is gargantuan. Only an
American pollster like Pew would
contemplate asking 38,000 people in 44
countries (speaking 63 languages and
dialects) what they think of America. Only
a superpower would try to take the world's
temperature thus. The trouble is - when
you hold their thermometer up to the light
- the reading that comes back says this
power isn't so super after all.


Take just a few out of thousands of
figures. Nineteen countries with data
available for comparison showed antipathy
to the US on the rise, and goodwill
draining away.
Favourable ratings in
western Europe, pretty consistently, were
down five or six percentage points over the
last three years. That turned to 22 points
in Turkey and 13 points in Pakistan. Just
6% of the Egyptian public has a
favourable view of the United States.

Is the spread of American ideas good or
bad?
Here in Britain, 50% say bad. But
this soars to 67% in Germany, 68% in
Russia, 71% in France - and rampant
hostility the moment you get near the
Middle East. Try Turkey at 78%, Pakistan
at 81% and Egypt at 84%.

Does the US "consider others: not
much/not at all?"
Fifty-two per cent in
Britain sign up on this line. But that's 73%
in Canada, 73% in South Korea, 74% in
Japan, 76% in France.

Do you reckon American policy towards
Saddam is driven by getting its hands on
Baghdad's oil?
Forty-four per cent of Brits
agree; 54% of Germans; 75% of French.

Would you let the US use your bases to
attack Iraq?
Eighty-three per cent of Turks
say no.

But maybe the most chilling question of
the lot was reserved for Muslim
respondents only. Did they approve of
suicide bombing in defence of Islam?

Seventy-three per cent in Lebanon said
yes. Well, they would, wouldn't they? But
what about the 43% in Jordan, the 44% in
Bangladesh, the 47% in Nigeria, the 33%
in Pakistan? And in Indonesia (including
Bali)? Twenty-seven per cent said yes.
Those are hundreds upon hundreds of
millions of people with a totally different
take on what constitutes terror. This is
alienation on the grandest scale.

Now, of course, polls are only polls, a
sampling through the autumn which can
change with the seasons. And, of course,
44 countries don't represent the whole
world. Some places - like Saudi - aren't
hot on publics with any opinion. Some
places - like Uzbekistan - appear to have
gone overboard for smiling Americans
bearing suitcases full of dollars.
And, as
with any survey of this complexity, there
are counterflows. We quite like American
movies, music and such. We benignly
prefer a world where America is the "only
superpower" - and 53% of Russians say
this "makes the world a safer place".

Yet it would be crazy to airbrush these
findings away. They don't show a surge of
sympathy and support over the months
since 9/11. Precisely the reverse.
They
don't show trust and identification with
American aims or American leadership.
Rather the opposite. And the perception
gap yawns ever wider. Only 20% of
Americans think the US doesn't consider
other countries much or at all. Eighty per
cent of Americans believe it's good to see
US ideas and customs spreading round
the globe.

Here - very solemnly, indeed glumly - is
the rub. A moment of profound disillusion,
waiting to happen. A moment when
phrases about the "world's only
superpower" turn dusty on the lips.

We tend to talk of American hegemony as
though it were established by force of
arms. Tanks, planes, marines - and the
cash to drive them on. That is the obvious
fount of power. It is also the language of
the politicians who sit in Washington.
They take their physical dominance
seriously; they have means of enforcing
their policies and their ideologies - with or
without outside assistance.

This isn't - before the steaming emails
from points west begin flooding in - a
matter of criticism. George Bush and Dick
Cheney didn't hide their beliefs from the
electorate in 2000, or even last month.
Their reaction to the destruction of the
World Trade Centre has, in reality, proved
pretty measured. They absolutely clearly
have most - though not all - of the
American public with them, for the time
being at least. Dear Alistair Cooke, writing
his increasingly blood-curdling letters from
Manhattan, hears the sound of the patriot
drum.

But there's a terrible limit to all this. The
only superpower may, for a while, seek to
ignore the rest of the world while it makes
its plans and gives its orders. It may
deride the distant wimps, wets and
fanatics who decline to join the dance. It
may enfold itself in a cocoon of grieving
and determination. That is
understandable.

It is also, though, totally at long-term odds
with that bit of the American psyche
which needs to be liked and respected,
which needs the dream of a shining city
on the hill to which peoples around the
world aspire. An open society. A society
that travels, cares, enjoys the fruits of
globalisation - and has no long-term
means of shucking away unwelcome
messages.

Open societies could grow closed in the
teeth of the cold war. They could demand
obeisance with menaces. But the picture
that Pew - an American institution - paints
for America comes without menaces
attached. It is one of hearts and minds
being lost, of allies flaking away, of
nations like Japan, Korea and Italy
beginning to cross to the other side of the
street. Can a "superpower" deal with such
distrust and dislike? No: not if it needs to
be loved.


· What the World Thinks in 2002 can be
found on the Pew Research Center
website, www.people-press.org

guardian.co.uk p.preston@guardian.co.uk