US, Iraqi Views of Occupation Converging
by
Jim Lobe
One
year after President George W Bush declared an end to "major
hostilities" in Iraq, public opinion there and in the United
States is beginning to converge, as people in both countries increasingly
agree that the US invasion and occupation might not have been such
a good idea after all.
That
is one conclusion of two major public opinion polls released Thursday,
one
by the New York Times and CBS News, which found that
a record 58 percent of US respondents now believe the invasion was
not worth the cost in lives and resources, and another
by CNN, USA Today, and Gallup that found 57 percent of
Iraqis believe U.S.-led coalition forces should leave their country
"in the next few months."
The
two polls, coming on a day on which at least 10 more US soldiers
lost their lives and sporadic skirmishing continued in the besieged
central Iraqi city of Fallujah, suggest that public opinion in both
countries was increasingly disillusioned with the policies pursued
in Iraq by the Bush administration.
Bush's
approval rating in the United States for his handling of Iraq, according
to the Times/CBS poll has fallen to 41 percent, down from
49 percent in March and 59 percent last December.
The
president's ratings are not doing so well in Iraq, either, according
to the CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll, which found that 55 percent
of the nearly 3,500 Iraqis polled in late March and early April
throughout the country had either somewhat (11 percent) or very
(44 percent) unfavorable views of Bush, as opposed to 24 percent
who described their assessments of him as either very or somewhat
favorable.
In
releasing the Iraq survey, Gallup stressed that it was taken before
the siege of Fallujah and Najaf so that it did "not reflect
Iraqi views of what has happened in the last three weeks."
Most U.S.-based analysts and Iraq-based reporters have noted that
public opinion in Iraq has turned more strongly against the US occupation
as a result of these events, in which at least 126 US soldiers and
1,200 Iraqis have reportedly been killed.
Of
the two polls, the Iraq survey is probably the most significant
if only because it is the first independent nationwide survey since
the US invasion. About 13 percent of those polled were in the Kurdish
region of northern Iraq, which, having enjoyed a de facto independence
from Baghdad since shortly after the first Gulf War (which ended
in 1991) is considered the most pro-U.S. part of the country.
The
poll indicated considerable ambivalence on the part of Iraqis. For
example, while a solid majority support an immediate military pullout
(defined as within "the next few months"), 53 percent
said they would feel "less safe" if coalition forces "left
Iraq today." Twenty-eight percent said they would feel "more
safe."
Similarly,
51 percent said they were either "much" (14 percent) or
"somewhat" (37 percent) better off than they were before
the invasion and 61 percent said former President Saddam Hussein's
ouster was worth the hardships they had suffered since the invasion.
Only 28 percent disagreed with the latter assessment.
At
the same time, 46 percent said they believed the invasion and occupation
had done more harm than good, compared to only 33 percent who said
they had done more good than harm. Sixteen percent said that it
was the same on balance.
And
while 76 percent said they were freer to express their political
views in public since the invasion, 74 percent said they had felt
afraid to go outside their home at night for safety reasons.
As
in the US poll, the trend lines in Iraqi public opinion were found
to be distinctly negative. Thus, 71 percent of the Iraqi respondents
said they considered coalition forces mostly as "occupiers"
rather than liberators (19 percent). That rose to an overwhelming
81 percent when respondents from the Kurdish areas were excluded
from the sample.
Asked
how they would have answered the same question at the time of the
invasion, the entire sample split evenly, with 43 percent on either
side. The change suggests that nearly one-third of Iraqis who had
welcomed the invasion now see it as an occupation..
Similarly,
asked whether conditions for "peace and stability" had
improved or worsened over the three months before the survey, 25
percent said they had improved, while 54 percent said they had become
worse. Nineteen percent said there was no change.
On
the performance of the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority
(CPA) and the occupation forces, Iraqis were also generally negative.
On
a one-to-five scale, 42 percent rated the CPA's performance as "very
bad" or "fairly bad," while only 25 percent gave
it positive marks. Nearly two-thirds said the CPA's actions have
turned out worse than expected, compared to only 22 percent who
said they turned out better.
One-third
of respondents gave the conduct of US forces in Iraq positive marks;
58 percent said they had behaved "fairly" or "very
badly." But among those who assessed the conduct negatively,
only seven percent said their judgment was based on "personal
experience" and 38 percent said it was based on what they had
personally seen.
Fifty-four
percent said their views were based on "what (they) have heard."
Indeed, 94 percent of respondents said neither they nor any of their
household members had had direct personal contact with US military
forces.
Iraqi
respondents also gave US forces consistently poor marks for reconstruction
activities, and two-thirds agreed with the statement that the soldiers
did "not try at all" to "keep ordinary Iraqis from
being killed/wounded during exchanges of gunfire" a
perception that may have increased as a result of the hundreds killed
in Fallujah earlier this month.
But
if Iraqis are increasingly disillusioned and angry at the United
States, the public here is also increasingly unhappy.
Only
one-third of US respondents now say that Iraq has been worth the
costs in US lives and money. On the issue of whether Washington
should withdraw as soon as possible or stay in Iraq for as long
as it takes to create a stable democracy, the public is now evenly
split at 46 percent on each side.
And
while 53 percent of the public saw Iraqis as "grateful"
for the invasion one year ago, only 38 percent see it that way now.
Forty-eight percent now view Iraqis as "resentful"
almost twice the percentage as a year ago.
At
the time of the invasion itself, 24 percent of the public described
it as a mistake, while 70 percent said it was not. Thirteen months
later, a plurality of 48 percent now believes it was a mistake,
according to the survey.
April
30, 2004
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2004 Inter Press Service
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