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Poll Shows Armenians Oppose U.S. Foreign Policy

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  • Poll Shows Armenians Oppose U.S. Foreign Policy

    POLL SHOWS ARMENIANS OPPOSE U.S. FOREIGN POLICY
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    April 18 2007

    Most Armenians share a worldwide disapproval of the interventionist
    foreign policy pursued by the United States, according to a
    multinational opinion poll reported on Wednesday.

    The poll was conducted from June 2006 to March 2006 in Armenia
    and 17 other countries -- including the U.S., China, and Russia --
    that represent roughly 56 percent of the world's population. Its
    findings were released by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs,
    a U.S. think-tank that helped organize the study aimed at gauging
    global public opinion on the issue.

    Respondents in those countries were asked how much they trust the
    U.S. "to act responsibly in the world." Fifty-eight percent of those
    polled in Armenia answered "not at all" or "not very much." The same
    answers were given by a majority of respondents in China, Russia,
    France and six other nations covered by the survey.

    Pollsters also found that nearly two-thirds of Armenians believe
    the U.S. is more aggressive in acting as a global policeman than
    it should be. Large majorities elsewhere, including America itself,
    share this view, they said.

    Christopher Whitney, executive director for studies at the Chicago
    Council on Global Affairs, was quoted by the AFP news agency as saying
    that the survey's results testify to broad international frustration
    with U.S. foreign policy and the war in Iraq in particular. But he
    said people around the world realize at the same time that the U.S. has
    a key role to play in promoting and enforcing international security.

    Armenians, for one thing, do not appear to be unhappy with their
    government's growing defense and security ties with Washington. Sixty
    percent of them described U.S.-Armenian relations as "good" in a
    U.S.-funded opinion poll conducted last November.

    However, only 17 percent listed the U.S. among Armenia's most important
    partners, with almost twice as many respondents mentioning neighboring
    Iran, America's regional arch-foe. The list was topped by Russia
    and France.
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