On 8/11/06, Srini Ramakrishnan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
In every case, Americans who actually know any Muslims are more sympathethic.

That's what happens when people believe completely in the mainstream media,
especially the American media which considers itself to be 'agenda-setting'
rather than just being an informer/messenger. Combine that with
'fear of the unknown'. It seems many people in the survey have not interacted
with Muslims. This poll is perfetcly explanable though scary.

What is even more scarier for me though is that half of US still belives that
Iraq has WMD.

--
Half of U.S. still believes Iraq had WMD

Do you believe in Iraqi "WMD"? Did
Saddam Hussein's government have weapons of mass destruction in 2003?

Half of America apparently still thinks so, a new poll finds, and experts
see a raft of reasons why: a drumbeat of voices from talk radio to die-hard
bloggers to the Oval Office, a surprise headline here or there, a rallying
around a partisan flag, and a growing need for people, in their own minds,
to justify the war in Iraq.

People tend to become "independent of reality" in these circumstances,
says opinion analyst Steven Kull.

The reality in this case is that after a 16-month, $900-million-plus
investigation, the U.S. weapons hunters known as the Iraq Survey Group
declared that Iraq had dismantled its chemical, biological and nuclear
arms programs in 1991 under U.N. oversight. That finding in 2004
reaffirmed the work of U.N. inspectors who in 2002-03 found no trace
of banned arsenals in Iraq.

Despite this, a Harris Poll released July 21 found that a full 50 percent
of U.S. respondents — up from 36 percent last year — said they believe
Iraq did have the forbidden arms when U.S. troops invaded in March 2003,
an attack whose stated purpose was elimination of supposed WMD.
Other polls also have found an enduring American faith in the WMD story.

"I'm flabbergasted," said Michael Massing, a media critic whose writings
dissected the largely unquestioning U.S. news reporting on the Bush
administration's shaky WMD claims in 2002-03.

"This finding just has to cause despair among those of us who hope for
an informed public able to draw reasonable conclusions based on
evidence," Massing said.

Timing may explain some of the poll result. Two weeks before the
survey, two Republican lawmakers, Pennsylvania's Sen. Rick
Santorum (news, bio, voting record) and Michigan's Rep. Peter
Hoekstra (news, bio, voting record), released an intelligence report
in Washington saying 500 chemical munitions had been collected
in Iraq since the 2003 invasion.

"I think the Harris Poll was measuring people's surprise at hearing
this after being told for so long there were no WMD in the country,"
said Hoekstra spokesman Jamal Ware.

But the Pentagon and outside experts stressed that these
abandoned shells, many found in ones and twos, were 15 years old
or more, their chemical contents were degraded, and they were
unusable as artillery ordnance. Since the 1990s, such "orphan"
munitions, from among 160,000 made by Iraq and destroyed,
have turned up on old battlefields and elsewhere in Iraq, ex-inspectors
say. In other words, this was no surprise.

"These are not stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction," said
Scott Ritter, the ex-Marine who was a U.N. inspector in the 1990s.
"They weren't deliberately withheld from inspectors by the Iraqis."

Conservative commentator Deroy Murdock, who trumpeted
Hoekstra's announcement in his syndicated column, complained
in an interview that the press "didn't give the story the play it
deserved." But in some quarters it was headlined.

"Our top story tonight, the nation abuzz today ..." was how
Fox News led its report on the old, stray shells. Talk-radio hosts
and their callers seized on it. Feedback to blogs grew intense.
"Americans are waking up from a distorted reality," read one posting.

Other claims about supposed WMD had preceded this, especially
speculation since 2003 that Iraq had secretly shipped WMD abroad.
A former Iraqi general's book — at best uncorroborated hearsay —
claimed "56 flights" by jetliners had borne such material to
Syria.

But Kull, Massing and others see an influence on opinion that's
more sustained than the odd headline.

"I think the Santorum-Hoekstra thing is the latest 'factoid,' but the
basic dynamic is the insistent repetition by the Bush administration
of the original argument," said John Prados, author of the 2004 book
"Hoodwinked: The Documents That Reveal How Bush Sold Us a War."

Administration statements still describe Saddam's Iraq as a threat.
Despite the official findings, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
has allowed only that "perhaps" WMD weren't in Iraq. And Bush
himself, since 2003, has repeatedly insisted on one plainly false
point: that Saddam rebuffed the U.N. inspectors in 2002, that
"he wouldn't let them in," as he said in 2003, and "he chose to
deny inspectors," as he said this March.

The facts are that Iraq — after a four-year hiatus in cooperating
with inspections — acceded to the U.N. Security Council's demand
and allowed scores of experts to conduct more than 700 inspections
of potential weapons sites from Nov. 27, 2002, to March 16, 2003.
The inspectors said they could wrap up their work within months.
Instead, the U.S. invasion aborted that work.

As recently as May 27, Bush told West Point graduates,
"When the United Nations Security Council gave him one final
chance to disclose and disarm, or face serious consequences,
he refused to take that final opportunity."

"Which isn't true," observed Kathleen Hall Jamieson, a scholar of
presidential rhetoric at the University of Pennsylvania. But "it
doesn't surprise me when presidents reconstruct reality to make
their policies defensible." This president may even have convinced
himself it's true, she said.

Americans have heard it. A poll by Kull's WorldPublicOpinion.org
found that seven in 10 Americans perceive the administration as
still saying Iraq had a WMD program. Combine that rhetoric with
simplistic headlines about WMD "finds," and people "assume the
issue is still in play," Kull said.

"For some it almost becomes independent of reality and becomes
very partisan." The WMD believers are heavily Republican, polls show.

Beyond partisanship, however, people may also feel a need to
believe in WMD, the analysts say.

"As perception grows of worsening conditions in Iraq, it may be
that Americans are just hoping for more of a solid basis for being
in Iraq to begin with," said the Harris Poll's David Krane.

Charles Duelfer, the lead U.S. inspector who announced the
negative WMD findings two years ago, has watched uncertainly as
TV sound bites, bloggers and politicians try to chip away at "the
best factual account," his group's densely detailed, 1,000-page
final report.

"It is easy to see what is accepted as truth rapidly morph from
one representation to another," he said in an e-mail. "It would be
a shame if one effect of the power of the Internet was to undermine
any commonly agreed set of facts."

The creative "morphing" goes on.

As Israeli troops and Hezbollah guerrillas battled in Lebanon on
July 21, a Fox News segment suggested, with no evidence,
yet another destination for the supposed doomsday arms.

"ARE SADDAM HUSSEIN'S WMDS NOW IN HEZBOLLAH'S
HANDS?" asked the headline, lingering for long minutes on
TV screens in a million American homes.

-- Vinayak

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