If this poll showing strong opposition to the so-called Bush Doctrine is an
accurate reflection of public opinion - and anecdotal evidence suggests it
is - it is of greater significance for American foreign policy than whether
Bush or Kerry is elected.

Provided, of course, that this antiwar opinion is not neutralized by further
attacks on US soil. Fear trumps misgivings every time. Israel is a good
example. Opinion polls there have consistently favoured unilateral
withdrawal from the occupied territories, but this peace sentiment has
coexisted with the election of governments of right and left which have
pursued war. They have been able to do so because the mass of Israelis have
been traumatized by terror bombings, and military action corresponds more to
their thirst for security and vengeance than rational appeals to logic and
self-interest.

Bush will likely be elected precisely because he taps into similar American
fears much more effectively than the pretender Kerry - even in the face of
opinion polls showing most Americans deeply disquieted by Iraq and the
administration’s declared intent to wage unilateral preventative wars. These
conflicting emotions - a deep desire to withdraw from the "mess", coupled
with a paralyzing fear of doing so - surface daily with news of the latest
car bombings and beheadings in Iraq. Terrorist tactics are helping to make
the occupation untenable in both Palestine and Iraq, but it’s also easy to
forget the opposite side of the coin: that terrorism subverts the
development of an effective antiwar movement in the homeland of the
occupying power. Hopeful polls should be read in that context.

Marv Gandall
-----------------------------
Poll: Americans tired of being the world's cop
By Jim Lobe
Asia Times
September 29, 2004

WASHINGTON - Three years of the Bush administration's "war on terrorism"
appears to have reduced the appetite of the US public and its leaders for
unilateral military engagements, according to a major survey released on
Tuesday by the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations (CCFR).

Indeed, the survey, the latest in a quadrennial series going back to 1974,
found that key national-security principles enunciated by President George W
Bush since the September 11, 2001, attacks on New York and the Pentagon are
opposed by strong majorities of both the general public and the elite.

While supporting the idea that Washington should take an active role in
world affairs, more than three of every four members of the public reject
the notion that the United States "has the responsibility to play the role
of world policeman" and four of every five say Washington is currently
playing that role "more than it should be".

In addition, overwhelming majorities of both the public and the elite said
that the most important lesson of September 11 is that the nation needs to
"work more closely with other countries to fight terrorism" as opposed to
"act more on its own".

Similar majorities of both the public and leaders rejected Bush's notion of
preemptive war. Only 17% of the public and 10% of leaders said that war was
justifiable if the "other country is acquiring weapons of mass destruction
[WMD] that could be used against them at some point in the future".
Fifty-three percent of the public and 61% of leaders said that war would be
justified only if there is "strong evidence" the country is in "imminent
danger" of attack. For about 25% of both the public and the leaders, war
would be justified only if the other country attacks first.

The CCFR survey, which because of its rich detail and consistency over the
past 30 years is generally taken more seriously than others that are
conducted more sporadically, queried nearly 1,200 randomly selected members
of the public during the second week of July.

A second survey of 450 "leaders with foreign-policy power, specialization,
and expertise" - including US lawmakers or their senior staff, university
faculty, journalists, senior administration officials, religious leaders,
business and labor executives, and heads of major foreign-policy
organizations or interest groups - posed the same questions to determine
where there may be gaps between the views of the elite and the public at
large.

The last CCFR survey was taken in 2002, and normally the next one would not
be held until 2006. But the council decided to commission one for 2004, in
part due to "the significant role foreign-policy issues are playing in
American political life and the 2004 presidential election", according to
Marshall Bouton, CCFR's president.

The council also collaborated with similar efforts by partner organizations
in Mexico and South Korea, the conclusions of which will be released in the
coming days.

While terrorism and other security threats still loom large in the public's
mind, according to this year's survey, "there is a lowered sense of threat
overall compared to 2002", when foreign-policy concerns, particularly
terrorism, topped the list of foreign-policy issues that most concerned the
public.

"Protecting American jobs" was the most frequently cited goal of foreign
policy in the 2004 poll (78% called it a "very important" goal), followed by
preventing the spread of nuclear weapons (73%), and combating international
terrorism (71%).

For the elite respondents, on the other hand, nuclear non-proliferation and
terrorism topped the list, while protecting US jobs ranked eighth out of 14
options.

As for "critical threats", three out of four public respondents chose
international terrorism, but that was down 10 points from two years ago. Two
of three chose WMD, but that was also down by about 17 points from 2002, and
virtually all other threats cited in the survey declined substantially.

Thus "Islamic fundamentalism", which was considered a "critical threat" by
61% of the public in 2002, was cited by only 38% this year, while the
"development of China as a world power", cited by 51% in 2002, claimed only
33% in 2004.

While for the public foreign-policy issues virtually across the board were
seen as less important than in 2002, that was not true for the
foreign-policy elite, which rated "combating world hunger", securing energy
supplies, improving the global environment and, most striking, improving the
standard of living of less developed nations, significantly higher than two
years ago.

In addition, 40% of the elite now consider "strengthening the United
Nations" as a "very important goal" of US foreign policy, up 12% from 2002.
Conversely, the percentage of leaders who cited "maintaining superior power
worldwide" as a very important goal, fell from 52% in 2002 to only 37% in
2004, the first time it has received less than majority support since the
question was first asked in 1994.

A more chastened approach to foreign policy also showed up in declining
support on the part of both the public and the elite for maintaining
military bases abroad, particularly in hot spots such as the Middle East and
states linked to terrorist activities.

More than two-thirds of both the public and the leaders agreed the United
States should withdraw from Iraq if a clear majority of Iraqi people want it
to do so. As to whether Washington should remove its military presence from
the Middle East if a majority of people there desire it, 59% of the public
said yes, but only 35% of the elite agreed.

A majority of the public said Washington should not press Arab states to
become more democratic; two-thirds said they opposed a Marshall-type plan of
economic aid and development for the region.

Large majorities of the public and the elite favor regaining traditional
constraints on the use of force by individual states, including the United
States, and oppose new ideas for making them looser, as is often proposed by
the Bush administration. At the same time, they favor giving wide-ranging
powers to states acting collectively through the United Nations.

Thus majorities of both the public and leaders oppose states taking
unilateral action to prevent other states from acquiring WMD, but support
such action if the UN Security Council approves. In the specific case of
North Korea, for example, two-thirds of respondents said it should be
necessary for Washington to get the council's approval before taking
military action.

A majority of the public opposes the United States or any other nation
having veto power on the Security Council.

The survey also found strong support for US participation in a wide range of
international treaties and agreements, some of which have been rejected or
renounced by the Bush administration.

Thus 87% of the public and 85% of the elite said they would favor the terms
of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; 80% of both groups said they
favored the land-mine ban; 76% of the public and 70% of the elite said they
support US participation in the International Criminal Court; and 71% of
both groups said they back US participation in the Kyoto Protocol to reduce
global warming.

Two-thirds of the public and three-quarters of the elite agreed that, in
dealing with international problems, Washington should be more willing to
make decisions within the UN, even if this means that its views will not
prevail.

Asked what specific steps should be taken for strengthening the world body,
three-quarters of the public and two-thirds of the leaders said the UN
should have a standing peacekeeping force.

A majority of 57% of the public and a plurality of 48% of the elite said the
United States should make a general commitment to abide by World Court
decisions rather than decide on a case-by-case basis.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Front_Page/FI29Aa01.html

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