Eric Zuesse
Strategic Culture Foundation (Opinion)
7 August 2017
Source: https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2017/08/07/polls-us-greatest-threat-to-peace-world-today.html
This article contains links to PDF files. If you wish to view the PDF files mentioned in this article, you can download Sumatra PDF at the following address: http://sumatrapdfreader.org/.
Strategic Culture Foundation (Opinion)
7 August 2017
It
has happened again: yet another international poll finds that the US is
viewed by peoples around the world to be the biggest threat to world
peace.
But,
to start, let’s summarize the first-ever poll that had been done on
this, back in 2013, which was the only prior poll on this entire issue,
and it was the best-performed such poll: «An
end-of-the-year WIN/Gallup International survey found that people in 65
countries believe the United States is the greatest threat to world
peace», as the N.Y. Post reported on 5 January 2014.
On 30 December 2013, the BBC had reported of that poll: «This
year, first [meaning here, ‘for’] the first time, Win/Gallup agreed to
include three questions submitted by listeners to [BBC’s] Radio 4's
Today programme». And, one of those three listener-asked questions
was phrased there by the BBC, as having been «Which country is the
biggest threat to peace?» The way that WIN/Gallup International itself
had actually asked this open-ended question, to 67,806 respondents from
65 countries, was: «Which country do you think is the greatest threat to peace in the world today?» #1,
24% of respondents, worldwide, volunteered that the US was «the
greatest threat». #2 (the second-most-frequently volunteered ‘greatest
threat’) was Pakistan, volunteered by 8%. #3 was China, with 6%. #s 4-7
were a four-way tie, at 5% each, for: Afghanistan, Iran, Israel, and
North Korea. #s 8-10 were a three-way tie, at 4% each, for: India, Iraq,
and Japan. #11 was Syria, with 3%. #12 was Russia, with 2%. #s 13-20
were a seven-way tie, at 1% each, for: Australia, Germany, Palestine,
Saudi Arabia, Somalia, South Korea, and UK.
The way that W/G itself had phrased this matter, in their highly uninformative press release for their year-end survey (which
included but barely mentioned this finding, in it — as though this
particular finding in their annual year-end poll, hardly even deserved
to be mentioned), was: «The US was the overwhelming choice (24% of
respondents) for the country that represents the greatest threat to
peace in the world today. This was followed by Pakistan (8%), China
(6%), North Korea, Israel and Iran (5%). Respondents in Russia (54%),
China (49%) and Bosnia (49%) were the most fearful of the US as a
threat». That’s all there was of it — W/G never devoted a press-release
to the stunning subject of this particular finding, and they even buried
this finding when mentioning it in their year-end press-release.
I
had hoped that they would repeat this excellent global survey question
every year (so that a trendline could be shown, in the global answers
over time), but the question was unfortunately never repeated.
However, now, on August 1st
of 2017, Pew Research Center has issued results of their polling of 30
nations in which they had surveyed, first in 2013, and then again in
2017, posing a less-clear but similar question (vague perhaps because
they were fearing a similar type of finding — embarrassing to their own
country, the US), in which respondents had been asked «Do you think that
the United States’ power and influence is a major threat, a minor
threat, or not a threat to (survey country)?» and which also asked this
same question but regarding «China,» and then again but regarding
«Russia,» as a possible threat instead of «United States». (This wasn’t
an open-ended question; only those three nations were named as possible
responses.)
On page 3 of their 32-page pdf is
shown that the «major threat» category was selected by 35% of
respondents worldwide for «US power and influence», 31% worldwide
selected that for «Russia’s power and influence,» and also 31% worldwide
said it for «China’s power and influence». However, on pages 23 and 24
of the pdf is shown the 30 countries that had been surveyed in this
poll, in both 2013 and 2017, and most of these 30 nations were US
allies; only Venezuela clearly was not. None of the 30 countries was an
ally of either Russia or China (the other two countries offered as
possibly being «a major threat»). And, yet, nonetheless, more
respondents among the 30 sampled countries saw the US as «a major
threat», than saw either Russia or China that way.
Furthermore,
the trend, in those 30 countries, throughout that four-year period, was
generally in the direction of an increase in fear of the US — increase
in fear of the country that had been overwhelmingly cited in 2013 by
people in 65 countries in WIN/Gallup’s poll, as constituting, in 2013,
«the greatest threat to peace in the world today».
Consequently: though WIN/Gallup never repeated its question, the evidence in this newly released poll, from Pew, clearly suggests that
the percentage of people in the 65 nations that WIN/Gallup had polled
in 2013 who saw the US as being «the greatest threat to peace in the
world today» would be even higher today than it was in 2013, when 24% of respondents worldwide volunteered the US as being the world’s most frightening country.
Perhaps
people around the world are noticing that, at least since 2001, the US
is wrecking one country after another: Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria,
and Ukraine. Which is next? Maybe Iran? Maybe Russia? Maybe Venezuela? Who knows?
And this country has just increased its ‘defense’ spending, which already is three times China’s, and nine times higher than Russia’s.
Do the owners of America’s military-industrial complex own the US
government, and own the US ‘news’media, to permit this rabid military to
control the government’s budget, in a ‘democracy’?
Source: https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2017/08/07/polls-us-greatest-threat-to-peace-world-today.html
This article contains links to PDF files. If you wish to view the PDF files mentioned in this article, you can download Sumatra PDF at the following address: http://sumatrapdfreader.org/.
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