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CBS/ July 29, 2009, 1:02 PM

Repairing The U.S. Image In Muslim World

Richard Wike is Associate Director of the Pew Global Attitudes Project.

America's image is on the rebound throughout much of the world, driven in large part by positive reactions to the new U.S. president. Barack Obama's ratings in Western Europe are about as high as an American president can hope to receive - more than nine-in-ten in France and Germany express confidence in his leadership - and ratings for the United States itself are up dramatically. Sizeable increases have also taken place in Latin America, Africa, and much of Asia.

However, as a new Pew Global Attitudes Project survey of 24 countries and the Palestinian territories reveals, the Muslim world remains largely immune to Obamamania. In predominantly Muslim nations, widespread concerns about American policy and American power linger, and while Obama is certainly viewed more favorably than his predecessor, his popularity has translated into only modest improvements in America's overall image, and in some cases, no change at all.

Looking at the 25 publics in the study, there are only five in which fewer than 30% of those surveyed express a favorable view of the U.S. - all of which are overwhelmingly Muslim: Egypt, Jordan, Pakistan, the Palestinian territories and Turkey. In Egypt and Jordan there has been a slight rise in favorable views since 2008, but Pakistanis, Palestinians, and Turks are no more likely to give the U.S. a positive review now than they were in the final years of the Bush Administration.

While America's image plummeted throughout much of the world during the Bush years, anti-Americanism always ran deeper in Muslim nations, where fear of America's power and distrust of its intentions became entrenched. The Iraq war intensified anti-Americanism in the Middle East and spread it to nations such as Turkey and Indonesia, where attitudes toward the U.S. were relatively positive at the beginning of the decade. Many Muslims saw hidden motives in Bush's war on terror, such as protecting Israel, controlling Middle Eastern oil, and targeting unfriendly Muslim governments.

And even though a new team is now in the White House, much of the distrust persists. For example, the 2009 poll finds that in predominantly Muslim nations, there is generally little support for U.S.-led anti-terrorism efforts. Large numbers continue to consider the U.S. an enemy, including big majorities in Pakistan (64%) and the Palestinian territories (77%). And majorities in six of the seven Muslim nations surveyed say they are worried that the U.S. may become a military threat to their country some day.

Compared with other countries in the survey, expectations for the Obama presidency are more muted in Muslim nations. In most nations polled, people tend to believe Obama will take a multilateral approach to foreign policy and that he will be fair in his dealings with the Israelis and Palestinians, but neither view is common among Muslims. In the Palestinian territories, Jordan, Egypt, and Lebanon, more than six-in-ten doubt Obama will be fair in the Middle East.

Nonetheless, despite all this pessimism, there are hopeful signs. First, the "Muslim world" is far from monolithic, and America's image has improved in several Muslim communities. Today, 61% of Nigerian Muslims express a favorable view of the U.S., up from 39% last year. In Indonesia, the world's largest majority Muslim country, ratings for the U.S. are way up, in large part due to Obama's personal connection to the country (he lived in Jakarta for several years as a child). Last year, 37% of Indonesians had a positive view of the U.S., while 63% do so now.

A remarkable 90% of Lebanese Sunni Muslims hold a favorable view of the U.S., up from last year's already high 62%. Lebanese Sunnis are now more pro-American than the country's Christians, 66% of whom express a positive view. In sharp contrast, only 2% of Lebanese Shia assign the U.S. favorable marks.

A second reason for hope is that even when America's ratings were near their nadir, many Muslims continued to embrace certain elements of U.S. "soft power." The 2007 Pew Global survey showed that American science and technology were almost universally popular in both Muslim and non-Muslim countries. The same poll found that America's approach to business was relatively popular in the Muslim Middle East - at least four-in-ten Egyptians, Jordanians, and Palestinians said they liked American style business practices.

And finally, this year's survey suggests that, even though Obama has not brought about a sea change in Muslim attitudes toward the U.S., he may be laying the groundwork for improvement. Even in Turkey - the nation with the lowest favorability rating for the U.S. in the last three Pew surveys - there are signs of change. For instance, although 54% of Turks say they are worried about a potential U.S. military threat, this is down 22 percentage points from last year. And while four-in-ten Turks still label the U.S. an enemy, this is down from 70% just a year ago.

The survey was mostly conducted before Obama's June 4 Cairo speech, so it is difficult to assess whether it had much of an effect. However, in the Palestinian territories several hundred interviews were conducted both before and after the Cairo address, and an analysis of the data suggests that the speech had a small, but still notable, impact on Palestinian views. Most interestingly, the share of Palestinians saying Obama will consider their country's interests when making foreign policy rose from 27% before the speech to 39% after the speech. Not exactly a dramatic turnaround, but such small, incremental shifts may be the best the new administration can hope for, given the deep-seated animosity still pervasive in many Muslim nations.

By Richard Wike:
Special to CBSNews.com
Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
19 Comments Add a Comment
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noloyalisti says:
It were American politicians that are manipulated by big American corporations who did the 911 attacks. Then they used that to blame Muslims and bomb the 4 countries we are trying to control for oil. The right wing fascists messed up on Building 7 and now we have the visual and documented truth about 911.
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payasyougo says:
"Repairing The U.S. Image In Muslim World"
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A president that apologizes all over the world won't apologize for his racist remark regarding Cambridge.
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noloyalisti replies:
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That's a typical right wing flip, calling a black person a racist. No the racists are Lou Dobbs, Rush Lintbaugh and others on Faux News.
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jmeaobrien says:
You I am so sick of Political Correctness its such a Crock. We should never seek permission for doing anything that protects our nation-- Ever Ever Ever. Please have us never forget that it WAS a group of Muslims which committed the 1993 WTC Bombings and it WAS Muslims who crashed Airliners into the WTC. Then Oh Well that is a 'Cross' they have to bare. It wasn't a group of Irishmen nor was it a group of Black Men-- If that be racial profiling then So Be It. It is What it Is. They the Muslims are the ones who need to be working on their Image in the World. There are a group of Radicals out there which the True Muslims should be going after to Clear their Image-- It it not the United States of America that should ever apologize for anything. Furthermore I am realy tiring of Listening to our Political Leaders Becoming Meally Mouthed-- We are Americans and we/our Country did not get to where it is by being apologetic for anything nor ask permission from the world to do what needs to be done in order to protect ourselves
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Resin-Smoker says:
I'm all for turning the sand to glass, if you get my meaning. We all need more parking dont we?
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proudmilvet says:
When the Muslim world starts treating the rest of the World with respect, then & only then will they be treated in turn with respect. Respect is a Two way Street!!
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noloyalisti says:
Thanks hermitdave for the post about 911. The Muslims from Saudi Arabia got a bad name when it was Bush Cheney and their crime family who let it happen to scare the American Christian white men to do their bidding.

Afghanistan and Iraq are all about the control of Middle East Oil. So Americans can start even more wars and drive their Hummers and Suburbans to the grocery store for a quart of milk.
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pw08-2009 replies:
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That's why you live here, isn't it? Seems like you prefer America too. If not, then get the f*** out. Funny how the middleeasterners complain about America but get their educations here and prefer to live here...LMAO
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Arugula2009 says:
False blame for 9/11?

I'm not concerned with OUR reputation with the MUSLIM world. They, however, should be concerned with THEIR reputation with the AMERICAN world.

When the leaders of their houses of worship stand up and loudly and clearly denounce the acts of 9/11 and all terrorist acts committed by Muslims as being against the will of Allah, then perhaps their reputation can begin to be rebuilt.

This administration's apologist attitude is becoming more and more bizarre.
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didserve says:
Have our elected officials first off quit taking their bribes!

That would be a good start!

Then treat all sides with equal respect!

Cut off all aid to the entire middle east!
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maistir says:
What does the writer of this piece suggest? That the U.S. turn the ME over to Hamas and Hezbollah? That the U.S. encourage Iran's nuclear program? That Afghanistan and Pakistan be advised to let the Taleban offer training camps to militant Islamists? Re-instate the Ba'athist dictatorship in Iraq? Those policies might appeal to some (or perhaps many) Muslims and make them feel better about U.S. power, but at what a terrible price! There isn't a single concrete idea in the piece about a plan for action that would be consistent with US interests.
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noloyalisti says:
Maybe we should stop bombing and killing civilians in 4 countries. Maybe we should recognize that the United States is the world's leader in state sponsored terror. Maybe we should stop our aggressive and murderous imperialism to steal other people's oil. Then we can have a meaningful conversation with other countries.
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Joe_NY_15 replies:
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Hey LibLoyalist, where's the stolen oil hiding.....LMAO (at you)
SouthwestisBest replies:
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Yeah, gimme somma dat cheap Middle Eastern oil that we stole so much of...hand it over!
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