Poll: Nearly 6 in 10 Pakistanis view US as enemy

By Associated Press
Thursday, July 29, 2010 14:28 EST
Print
 
 

Despite billions in aid from Washington and a shared threat from extremists, Pakistanis have an overwhelmingly negative view of the United States, according to results of a Pew Research Center poll released Thursday.

The survey also found that Pakistanis have grown less fearful of extremists seizing control of their country, perhaps reflecting gains that government troops have made against militants since early 2009.

Most Pakistanis want improved relations with the United States, according to the poll. But most view the U.S. with suspicion, support for American involvement in the fight against extremists has declined, and nearly two-thirds want U.S. troops out of neighboring Afghanistan.

Nearly six in 10 Pakistanis polled described the U.S. as an enemy and only one in 10 called it a partner.

Public attitudes in Pakistan figure importantly in the Obama administration’s strategy for strengthening the U.S. partnership with Pakistan to help defeat al-Qaida and stabilize Afghanistan. Another U.S. worry is the prospect of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons falling into the hands of militants.

The Obama administration persuaded Congress this year to approve $7.5 billion in aid to Pakistan over five years. Since the 9/11 attacks the U.S. had provided Pakistan with billions linked to counterterrorist work. On a visit to Pakistan last week, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton announced a raft of new aid projects worth $500 million.

Mistrust of the U.S. among Pakistanis appears due in part to Washington’s decision to turn away from the South Asian nation after enlisting its support to defeat the Soviets in Afghanistan in the 1980s.

The U.S. is not directly involved in ground combat operations in Pakistan, but some dozens of U.S. troops are helping train Pakistani forces. The U.S. also has an unacknowledged program of launching airstrikes from drone aircraft at Taliban and al-Qaida figures inside Pakistan.

The strikes by CIA drones are widely unpopular in Pakistan. The Pew poll found that of those who had heard about drone attacks, 93 percent said they are a bad thing, 90 percent said they kill too many innocents, and 49 percent said they are being done without the Pakistani government’s approval.

Without mentioning drone strikes, Vice President Joe Biden on Thursday rejected suggestions that al-Qaida is becoming entrenched in Pakistan and said the U.S. is making inroads against extremists.

“I assure you, we are doing significant damage to al-Qaida in Pakistan as well as in Afghanistan, so we’re making progress,” Biden said in an interview that was taped Wednesday at Fort Drum., N.Y., and broadcast Thursday on NBC’s “Today” show. “But the truth of the matter is that there’s more to go.”

Despite receiving billions in U.S. aid since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, many Pakistanis believe the U.S. gives them little or none, according to the poll. About a quarter of those questioned said the U.S. provides a lot of financial aid. Nearly a quarter said it provides a little aid, 10 percent said the U.S. gives hardly any, and 16 percent believe the U.S. gives Pakistan no aid.

The poll also found that only eight percent of Pakistanis express confidence that President Barack Obama will do the right thing in world affairs — his lowest rating among 22 nations that Pew polled in April. Seventeen percent expressed a favorable view of the U.S., and 64 percent said it is important for relations with the United States to improve.

The Pew poll consisted of face-to-face interviews in April with 2,000 adults in areas of Pakistan that represent about 84 percent of the nation’s adult population. The Federally Administered Tribal Areas — the region along the Afghan border where al-Qaida is believed to have found haven and where the Pakistani government has little control — was not included in the survey.

In its May 2009 survey of Pakistanis, Pew found that 69 percent were very or somewhat worried about extremist groups taking control of their country. That was one month after the Pakistani army began a large-scale offensive against extremists in the Swat Valley, some 100 miles from Islamabad.

This year’s poll found that 51 percent expressed concern about a takeover by extremists.

Pakistanis also said they feel less threatened by the Taliban and much less by al-Qaida. The proportion who considered al-Qaida a serious threat fell from 61 percent last year to 38 percent this year. The equivalent numbers with regard to the Taliban fell from 73 percent to 54 percent.

The shift in opinion could be seen as a positive trend if it reflects actual setbacks for the extremists in battles with government forces.

But it also could cut the other way. If Pakistanis see less of a threat from militants, that could undercut U.S. efforts to persuade their government to expand its offensive against insurgents and to take on the groups of greatest concern to the U.S., including al-Qaida.

The poll also found that while the Taliban and al-Qaida are unpopular in Pakistan, negative views toward them have become a little less prevalent over the past year, while positive views have increased.

Eighteen percent said they view al-Qaida with favor, compared to nine percent a year ago and 25 percent in 2008. Fifty-three percent had an unfavorable view of the group, compared to 61 percent a year ago and 34 percent in 2008.

Not surprisingly, Pakistanis said the biggest threat to their country is longtime rival India. Fifty-three percent rated India as the biggest threat, 23 percent named the Taliban and three percent cited al-Qaida. The rest cited all three, or none or said they didn’t know.

Source: AP News

Mochila insert follows…

Associated Press
Associated Press
Share this story >>
Print
 
 
 
By commenting, you agree to our terms of service
and to abide by our commenting policy.
 
  • http://profiles.yahoo.com/u/YVBA25ZZJYN5C44WGILY6P4X34 Raven

    Well duh! You think it has anything to do with us bombing the crap out of them? How would we feel if a foreign power was killing our innocent civilians? The war on terror is a joke people. We are at war with a word. Never ending war isn't going to work. The plan is shot to hell. The US is going to go bankrupt. Just like the Roman Empire, our Empire is going to go broke. We can't feed, house, educate, and give medical treatment to all of OUR OWN citizens. How are we going to keep funding over 700 US military bases, 2 open wars, and all our black ops? We keep up with this war mongering, and in a couple years, the world will be cheering the terrorists on. Because we'll just be another in a long line of repressive empires that has overstretched.

  • Democratic_Socialist

    Take a fucking hint, O'bummer! WE AIN'T WANTED! But, I realize that you have to keep the MIC sated and greed bags full so…keep on a-killin'~!

  • wiselatina

    Hey, maybe if we give them more than that measly $7.2 billion dollars we giving them today, they'd like us more?

  • texanarch

    Notice how this poll dovetails so nicely with the Wikileaks release. Look at the timing. They say that the poll was conducted in April. The poll adds to the vilification of Pakistan. If this information was to cause the US to pull out of Afghanistan and Pakistan, then I would be pleased.
    However, I think this information will be used to expand the war into the whole of Pakistan.

  • Paul_McClure

    It's good that the Pakistanis see us for who we are. If only American citizens would open their eyes and control our out of control government. It wouldn't kill us to convict a few 'patriotic' Americans for the chaos we have caused around the world. I understand just following orders didn't carry much weight in Nuremberg and it shouldn't carry weight today.

  • johnnybbad

    More propaganda to justify war with Pakistan. Thanks for helping, Rawstory :|

  • hounddogg

    did you read the story?…where does it “Justify” a war with Pakistan?…seems to me it's more justification to get the hell out of there and Afghanistan..

  • Big_Alpha1

    “Poll: Nearly 6 in 10 Pakistanis view US as enemy”

    Well how can that be when the Repukes keep telling everyone that the US reputation around the world is not soiled and everybody loves us!!!!

  • Balthazars Rebellion

    Alternate headline …Poll: Nearly 6 in 10 Pakistanis had their asses blown off by US Predator drone aircraft.

  • dennycrane

    I just can not imagine why. But remember, don't shoot me, I'm just the piano player.

  • http://profiles.yahoo.com/u/GCPX7DXZGK2H2CPNYRR5IS5A64 Turnip Mcgee

    Poll: Nearly 6 in 10 Pakistanis view US as enemy

    So this means that 40% of the country is legally retarded?

  • TheDevilCanDance

    Some exaggeration here, but I guess you are being sarcastic…..:). Still you make a valid point. Besides the Predator attacks, Pakistani are also victims of random terrorist attacks from individuals blaming the government to be too close and engaged with the US.

  • TheDevilCanDance

    Wow, this is brilliant, you may have a point.

  • Balthazars Rebellion

    Exaggeration, yes. Sarcastic, most definitely. The point being, as you easily figured out…. :), those 6 out of 10 have solid reasons for believing the US presence in Pakistan is of a hostile nature.

  • http://www.facebook.com/rambotheshark Robin Cooper

    Our “solution” will be just to send more drones.

  • Kurt_O

    So true — and this empire can't die soon enough.

  • RICHARD_RALPH_ROEHL

    Big deal! At least 6 in 10 Amerikans also view the U.$. as the enemy! The whole world sees the violent, war-mongering beast that Amerika has become!

  • http://twitter.com/shivabeach Shiva

    I myself am tired of hearing we are doing the job on AQ. How many years did we hear that before in Iraq? Had we never bribed the Sunnis to stop fighting up we would still be in full scale war there. And now we are doing the same in Afghanistan

    Get us out

  • thewizard1566

    Well I wonder why the Pakistani's distrust us. Could it be because of our efforts to destabilize their region? Or could it be our efforts to work inside their borders without their consent? Or how about our history of fighting for a time and leaving before the job is finished?

    I have often said that Pakistan is as much of an ally as Cambodia was during Vietnam. However their concerns are justified as we have failed to deliver our end of the bargain in their region. We give up after our “goals” are achieved, not when victory is obtained.

  • dennycrane

    Man is the only kind of varmint sets his own trap, baits it, then steps in it.
    John Steinbeck

  • ya_right

    im shocked. shocked i tell you. thank you mr dick and mrs scrub

  • dennycrane

    Must get a lot of exercising by jumping to conclusions, pushing your agenda, and dodging truths.

  • quirkydi

    That means 6 out of 10 Pakistanis are more informed and have better instincts than a substantial number of Americans.

  • TheDevilCanDance

    Raw Story is putting something into your water?

  • Pickerl

    How dare those Pakistanis. They are so very ungreatful to the US. All of our drone strikes, day in and day out and not one single “thank you”. Don't they realize that EVERYONE wants a democracy? Maybe we need to educate them Texas style, oops, we ARE doing that by way of Chicago.

  • Syed92

    It is so amazing, the timing of the poll and its release are exactly as planned to invade Iran and Pakistan, not just drone attacks and bombing of Nuclear sites [WHICH IS WRONG AS LONG AS WE HAVE DECLARED WAR HEADS AND ZIONIST ENTITY AND US, WE HAVE UNDECLARED QUANTITIES OF NUCLEAR WAR HEADS.]

    do not foregt we are the only nation in the world who has used the nuclear war heads. however I am surprised that full 40% pakistanians are sooooo stupid!!!!

  • Syed92

    and full 40% are sooooo stupid

  • hawkny1

    This is highly questionable…. the literacy rate in Pakistan is not high enough to assure that these results accurately reflect Pakistani public opinion. The results might, in fact, be higher.

    I wonder what a similar questionaire would generate in results from every other country around the world? Is it conceivable that 50% of the world's population considers America a threat to their national security? Higher? Lower? What do you think?

  • sergesret

    You know, while the West has mucked things up in the Asian Subcontinent and Central Asia for a couple of centuries now, I've gotta say, I don't much trust the Pakistanis either. The whole situation in the region is one big s**t sandwich, which contains a slice of Pakistani baloney, right under the American cheese. Just one happy swamp of ISI and CIA spooks along with warlords, drug lords and opportunists. Damn, I feel really sorry for the people stuck in between. We really need to get out.

  • sandi2

    “Mistrust of the U.S. among Pakistanis appears due in part to Washington's decision to turn away from the South Asian nation after enlisting its support to defeat the Soviets in Afghanistan in the 1980s”.

    This is almost word for word what Hillary said in a speech last week. Who is writing these articles, the White House? Oh, that's right, the White House has controlled the AP for years now.

  • http://www.personalpattern.com/2010/08/04/weekly-round-up-august-3-2010/ Weekly Round Up August 3 – 2010 | Personal Patterns

    [...] Nearly 6 in 10 Pakistanis view US as enemy – War is peace in Afghanistan. Peace in war in Pakistan. [...]

  • http://buybathroomvanity.co.uk Chere Treutel

    Hey friend can i publish some paragraph of your article on my little blog of university.I have to publish a good articles out there and i really think your post Fits best into it.I will be grateful to give you an source link as well.I have two blogs one my own and the other which is my college blog.I will publish some part in the university blog.Hope you do not mind.