April 12, 2002

by Reuters

Poll: Americans Support Cutting Aid to Israel

WASHINGTON - Most Americans believe the United States should halt or reduce

economic and military aid to Israel if Prime Minister Ariel Sharon does not

immediately withdraw troops from Palestinian areas, according to a Time

Magazine/CNN poll released on Friday.

The poll of 1,003 adults also found most Americans back Secretary of State

Colin Powell's Mideast peace mission, although they expect few results and

consider Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat a "terrorist" and an enemy of the

U.S.

The public opinion sampling was conducted on Wednesday and Thursday, before

Powell arrived in Israel on Friday, when a suicide bomber killed six people

outside a Jerusalem market.

Sharon has rejected repeated direct calls by President Bush to withdraw

troops from Palestinian areas, prompting some critics to raise the

possibility of sanctions.

But the administration has made clear it has no plans to threaten key ally

Israel with a cut in its $3 billion in annual aid. Even if it did, a

strongly pro-Israel U.S. Congress likely would oppose the move.

The Time/CNN poll found that 60 percent of Americans favored the aid cut

off if an Israeli troop withdrawal does not take place immediately.

An even larger number -- 75 percent -- think Powell's Mideast trip is a

good idea but only 21 percent of the respondents believe major progress

toward peace will result.

As for Arafat, 59 percent of Americans consider him an enemy of the United

States, 62 percent think he's a terrorist and 90 percent believe he cannot

be trusted, according to the poll.

Sharon's standing is better. One quarter of the respondents consider him an

enemy of the United States, 20 percent say he is a terrorist and 65 percent

do not trust him.

The poll found that 65 percent of Americans think Bush is doing a good job

handling foreign policy, a significant decline from the 80 percent

favorable rating he had in December 2001, three months after the Sept. 11

attacks.

Fear of terrorism has declined. Last September, 45 percent of the poll

respondents identified terrorism as the main problem facing the United

States. That number declined to 25 percent in December and 21 percent this

week.

The poll was conducted by Harris Interactive and has a margin of error of

plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

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