An overwhelming majority of citizens in 13
countries across West Asia and North Africa
say they do not trust US claims about
“encouraging the development of democracy” or
about “improving the economic lot of people,”
according to a poll released on 7 April by US
analytics and advisory company Gallup.
Respondents in Iran, Tunisia, Palestine, and
Afghanistan were the most distrustful about
Washington’s ‘democratic’ intentions. Only in
Kuwait and Morocco did the negative perception
of Washington drop below 50 percent of
respondents.
Washington’s commitment to self-determination
also faces great skepticism among adults in
the nations surveyed, as 35 to 80 percent of
respondents agree that the US does not allow
people in their region to fashion their own
political future.
The same suspicion extends to US claims about
wanting to help improve the region’s economic
standing, with a crushing majority in Iran,
Turkiye, Tunisia, Iraq, Palestine,
Afghanistan, Yemen, and Pakistan saying
Washington has no interest in allowing their
nations to develop.
“Kuwaitis and Jordanians were the most likely
to see the U.S. as serious, but just over a
third agree this is the case,” the Gallup
report says.
“Twenty years after the U.S. launch of Operation Iraqi
Freedom, despite stated US desires,
relatively few Iraqis or people living in 12
other Muslim-majority countries view the US as
committed to supporting democracy in their
region or empowering them to chart their own
political futures,” the report concludes.
The poll results come at a time when
Washington is seeing its influence rapidly
diminish across West Asia following decades of
pursuing a foreign policy centered mainly on
armed occupation and economic warfare.
In February, the European Council on Foreign
Relations (ECFR) released a poll that revealed
a growing chasm
between western nations and the population of
the Global South concerning the ongoing
Russia-Ukraine war.
“All in all, for 61 percent of people in
Russia, 61 percent in China, 51 percent in
Turkiye, and 48 percent in India, the future
world order will be defined either by
multipolarity or Chinese (or other
non-western) dominance,” the ECFR report
states.
Similarly, last year the 14th Annual ASDA’A
BCW Arab Youth Survey showed that young Arabs favor their
nations’ ties with Russia, Turkiye, and China
over the US.
Since the start of the war in Ukraine, a
growing number of Global South nations have moved away from
Washington’s sphere of influence, refusing to
impose sanctions on Russia and even dumping
the US dollar in bilateral trade with China.
This is compounded by the ever-shrinking
presence of the greenback in foreign reserves
worldwide and the failure of western sanctions
against nations deemed adversarial.
“Because they do not adhere to the policies
of the US and other western powers, over 24
countries have been the target of unilateral
or partial trade sanctions. These limitations,
nevertheless, have turned out to be
detrimental to the economies of the Group of
Seven (G7) nations and have begun to impact
the US dollar’s hegemony in world trade,” The
Cradle columnist F.M. Shakil explained
earlier this year.