
Breadcrumb
Twitter Post
|
"It's no surprise that Arab attitudes toward the US are overwhelmingly negative. What I find interesting is that it's been getting worse. According to Arab Opinion Index data, in 2014 49 percent of Arabs viewed US policy negatively. That went up to 65 percent in 2015, 77 percent in 2016, and 79 percent in this year… The United States cannot afford to ignore the views of the over 400 million people [in the Arab world]. Arab public opinion doesn't only matter for the United States in the narrow sense of US national security or counterterrorism perspective."
Arabs are opposed to US foreign policy across a range of areas. Only six percent support US policy toward Palestine and only eight percent support US policy toward Israel. Nine percent of respondents supported US policy toward Iraq, Yemen, and Libya. Perhaps it comes as no surprise, then, that an overwhelming 84 percent of respondents see the United States either "certainly" or "to an extent" as a threat, rather than an ally.
Read more: US opinion on Palestine is finally starting to shift
That figure, however, is only high enough to rank the US second on the list of perceived threats. The top spot belongs to Israel, which 91 percent of respondents see as a threat. Although an alliance has emerged between Israel and Saudi Arabia and there's plenty of evidence that MbS is working with the Israelis and Trump to hard-sell a lopsided US peace plan to a sceptical Palestinian leadership, 87 percent of respondents said they would oppose their country diplomatically recognising Israel.
Although it's become increasingly clear that the Palestinian cause no longer resonates with Arab leaders, it is clearly still compelling to the Arab people - 77 percent of respondents say that "the Palestinian cause concerns all Arabs and not the Palestinian people alone".
Twitter Post
|
Ironically, the country with the lowest proportion of respondents agreeing with that statement (64 percent) was Palestine itself, whose people may feel that regional leaders like MbS have abandoned them. Three quarters of those who said they would oppose their country diplomatically recognising Israel "cited Israel's colonial and expansionist policies as well as its racism toward the Palestinians" as the reason. Half of those who said they would support such diplomatic recognition would only do so contingent on the creation of a Palestinian state.
Kharroub warned that the Trump administration's Israel-Palestine peace deal may be in for a chilly reception whenever it's finally unveiled:
"Over the last weeks, we've seen the Trump administration's Middle East peace team shop around the 'Deal of the Century' to Arab leaders, and there has been a lot of speculation whether Arab leaders are going to pressure the Palestinians and whether they will go along with the administration's plan as it's been leaked to the press. What is remarkable about this deal is the profound lack of understanding of what the Palestinian people want. But not only that, it largely underestimates how the Arab people feel about Palestine.
"Here again, with the issue of Palestine, we see that the Palestinians are being completely ignored. The Trump administration would benefit from understanding the real concerns of the Palestinian people, which are not economic as Trump's peace team might think. When we look at the Arab public, since polling started in the Arab world the data has been telling us the same thing, and we see it here in the Arab Opinion Index today. The question of Palestine is and remains a central issue for the Arab people. It's an issue of justice, or the lack thereof, in the US approach to the region. That's why it remains an important factor driving developments in the region, from recruitment by violent extremist groups to regional instability to Arab attitudes toward the United States, and even US national security."
Derek Davison is a Washington-based researcher and writer on international affairs and American politics. He has Masters degrees in Middle East Studies from the University of Chicago.
This article was originally published by our friends at Lobelog.
Opinions expressed in this article remain those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of The New Arab, its editorial board or staff.