Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turks See The Presence Of US Troops In Iraq Greater Danger To World

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turks See The Presence Of US Troops In Iraq Greater Danger To World

    TURKS SEE THE PRESENCE OF US TROOPS IN IRAQ GREATER DANGER TO WORLD PEACE THAN IRAN

    ABHaber, Belgium
    EU-Turkey News network
    June 15 2006

    Turks see the presence of US troops in Iraq as a greater threat
    to Mideast stability than govt in Iran and its nuke ambitions,
    according to Pew Research Center's poll of European and Muslim
    countries Turkish support for war in Iraq dropped sharply from 33 pct
    in 2002 to 12 percent this year, while 61 pct oppose Iran's acquiring
    nuclear weapons. At 3 pct, Turkey now registers the lowest level of
    confidence in President Bush.

    As divisions between West and Muslim nations in opinions of Hamas
    victory are wider, 44 pct of Turks see Hamas victory as good for the
    Palestinian people while 23 pct think the opposite.

    Significant part of opinion poll shows that negative views of France
    have risen over past year, especially in Muslim-populated countries.

    In Turkey, 61 pct feel unfavorably toward France, up from 51 pct
    last year

    The majority of Turks see the presence of U.S. troops in Iraq as a
    greater threat to stability in the Mideast than the controversial
    government in Iran, according to a new poll of European and Muslim
    countries.

    The Pew Research Center's opinion poll released this week found that
    Turks are increasingly turning away from the U.S.-declared "war on
    terror." More than three-quarters of Turks (77 percent) oppose the
    U.S.-led war on terror, up from 56 percent in 2004, while 61 percent
    of the participants oppose Iran's acquiring nuclear weapons.

    Turkish support for the war in Iraq dropped sharply from 33 percent
    in 2002, the beginning of the war, to 12 percent as of 2006.

    People in Britain, France, Germany, Spain and Russia also rated
    America's continuing involvement in Iraq a worse problem than Iran
    and its nuclear ambitions. Views of U.S. troops in Iraq were even
    more negative in countries like Indonesia, Egypt, Jordan, and Pakistan.

    But the war in Iraq trumps the Iranian situation as a perceived
    danger to the world at a time when the image of the U.S. and its war
    on terrorism continues to drop internationally.

    Even in Britain, the U.S.' closest ally in Iraq, 41 percent of those
    surveyed said the U.S. military presence in Iraq was a danger to world
    peace and only 34 percent described the Iranian government as a danger.

    International opinion on the future of Iraq is generally gloomy.

    Majorities in most countries surveyed believe that efforts to establish
    a stable democratic government in Iraq will ultimately fail. Pessimism
    is strongest in Spain, Turkey, Germany, Jordan, and Egypt -- in all
    five countries, more than six in 10 respondents believe efforts to
    establish democracy will definitely or probably fail.

    Iraq is one of many issues that pushes a negative view of the U.S.,
    said Andrew Kohut, director of the Pew Research Center.

    "Last year we saw some good news in countries like Russia and India,"
    Kohut said. "That good news being wiped away is a measure of how
    difficult a problem this is for the U.S. "Western countries share
    some points of view," Kohut said, noting mutual concerns about
    Iran's development of a nuclear program and the victory of Hamas in
    Palestinian elections. "But Iraq continues to be divisive."

    Opinion of Bush has continued to decline in European countries, while
    Muslims-populated publics remain strongly opposed to the American
    president. At 3 percent, Turkey now registers the lowest level of
    confidence in President Bush.

    Western European nations and predominantly Muslim nations have sharply
    different views on Iran, which the U.S. claims is developing nuclear
    weapons.

    Concerning majority Muslim-populated countries' position towards Iran's
    acquiring nuclear weapons, solid majorities in Turkey (61 percent)
    and Indonesia (59 percent) oppose it, but people in Egypt and Jordan
    are divided, and most Pakistanis (52 percent) favor Iran acquiring
    nuclear weapons. In addition, more people in major industrialized
    nations than in Muslim-populated countries believe that Iran wants
    a nuclear program to develop weapons, not nuclear energy.

    West-Muslim divide on Hamas victory

    Divisions between the West and the Muslim world in opinions of the
    Hamas Party's victory in Palestine's January elections are even wider.

    Fully 71 percent of Germans and 69 percent of the French feel the
    Hamas triumph will be bad for the Palestinian people, among those
    who are aware of the issue. Somewhat fewer Americans (50 percent)
    express this view, although just 20 percent think the Hamas triumph
    will be a good thing for the Palestinians. Among major U.S. allies,
    only the British are divided on Hamas' election -- 34 percent say it
    will be bad, while 32 percent take a positive view.

    By contrast, large majorities in Pakistan (87 percent), Egypt (76
    percent), Jordan (68 percent), and Indonesia (61 percent) feel that
    the Hamas Party victory will be good for the Palestinian people,
    among those who had heard about the election. In addition, the
    Muslim-populated publics surveyed generally feel the Hamas triumph
    will increase chances of a fair settlement of the Middle East conflict,
    a view opposed by the West.

    Some 44 percent of Turks meanwhile think that Hamas' victory is good
    for the Palestinian people, while 23 percent think the opposite.

    Another significant part of the opinion poll shows that negative views
    of France have increased over the past year, especially in majority
    Muslim-populated countries. In Turkey, 61 percent feel unfavorably
    toward France, up from 51 percent last year.

    Riots of disenfranchised Muslim French youth have likely fueled this
    perception worldwide, whereas for Turks, French legislation proposing
    that rejection of the Armenian "genocide" be outlawed may also have
    played a role.
Working...
X