Posted on 03/01/2006 7:31:09 AM PST by milestogo
India: Pro-America, Pro-Bush
Bucking the Global Trend, U.S. Popularity Soared among Indians in '05
Released: 02.28.06
Looking for some good news amid the often dismal findings about America's image abroad? Try India. Anti-Americanism has surged in much of the world since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, but India has bucked the trend. Among Indians, America's image has actually improved in recent years.
Across a range of measures, Indian public opinion is consistently pro-American. The 2005 Pew Global Attitudes survey found that about seven-in-ten Indians (71%) have a favorable view of the United States. Of the 17 countries polled in the survey, only Americans themselves hold a more favorable view of their country. And while U.S. favorability ratings have plunged in many countries, Indians are significantly more positive about the United States now than they were in the summer of 2002, when 54% gave the U.S. favorable marks.
In the world's largest democracy, moreover, President Bush, who is unpopular in many countries around the globe, is also widely admired. Just over half (54%) of Indians say they have a lot or some confidence that Bush will generally do the right thing in world affairs, a significantly higher percentage than in any other country except his own. Indeed, of the 16 countries surveyed on this question in 2005, India was the only one, aside from the United States, in which a majority expressed at least some confidence in the American president.
By contrast, the president is viewed much more negatively in Pakistan, the next stop on Bush's South Asian trip. Just 10% of Pakistanis express a great deal or some confidence in Bush to do the right thing regarding world affairs. Morocco (9%), Turkey (8%), and Jordan (1%) were the only countries surveyed to voice less confidence in Bush than do the people of Pakistan.
Indians also have a strongly positive impression of the American people - 71% have a favorable opinion of Americans, up from 58% in 2002. Moreover, Indians tend to associate Americans with positive character traits, and generally do not associate Americans with negative characteristics. Eight-in-ten (81%) Indians consider Americans hardworking, and 86% - the highest percentage of any country surveyed, including the U.S. itself - say Americans are inventive. Fewer (58%) regard Americans as honest, but even among U.S. respondents, Americans receive mediocre marks for truthfulness (63%). Meanwhile, Indians are among the least likely to associate Americans with negative traits such as greed, violence, rudeness, and immorality.
And America remains a land of opportunity for many Indians. Asked where they would recommend that a young person move in order to lead a good life, a 38% plurality of Indians choose the United States. This finding may seem a weak endorsement, given America's longstanding image as a hopeful new world for immigrants; however, in no other country does even a plurality recommend the U.S. to the hypothetical young person searching for a better life. In other countries, Australia, Canada, Great Britain, and Germany are all more popular choices. After India, Poland has the second largest share of respondents recommending the United States - and only one-in-five Poles (19%) suggests America as a destination.
In many countries, anti-Americanism is driven by disagreement with U.S. foreign policy. Perceptions of U.S. unilateralism, opposition to the war in Iraq, and reservations about the war on terrorism have fueled anti-American sentiments most dramatically in the Muslim world, although unpopular policies have hurt America's image in other regions as well. Indians, however, largely approve of the way the U.S. conducts itself in the international arena. For example, Indians are less likely than others to believe the U.S. acts unilaterally on the world stage - 63% of Indians say the U.S. takes into account the interests of other countries when making foreign policy decisions.
Having suffered terrorist attacks in their own recent history, including a December 2001 assault on the Indian Parliament, Indians tend to support the war on terrorism. Just over half (52%) favor U.S.-led efforts to fight terrorism, a level of support similar to many European countries, and significantly higher than in predominantly Muslim countries. As in many other countries, however, support for the campaign against terrorism has slipped among Indians since 2002, when, just months after the September 11, 2001 attacks, 65% backed U.S. policies.
On Iraq, India is the only country other than the U.S. in which a plurality (45%) believes the removal of Saddam from power has made the world a safer place, and Indians are even less likely than Americans to say the Iraq war made the world more dangerous. Indians, however, do not regret their country's decision not to use force in Iraq - 75% say their government did the right thing in abstaining from the U.S.-led coalition.
Despite their pro-American attitudes, Indians would like to see another power become as militarily strong as the United States. Indeed, Indians are among the most likely to favor another country or group of countries rising to the level of global superpower.
Still, there is less support among Indians for China becoming as militarily powerful as the United States. Indians are split over this issue, with 45% saying that if China became America's military equal this would be a good thing and 45% saying this would be a bad development. Here, India occupies something of a middle ground between European countries, which generally oppose the potential military rise of China, and majority Muslim countries such as Pakistan, Jordan, Indonesia, and Turkey, which generally welcome the idea of a strong China that could rival U.S. military strength.
Indians, however, are more supportive of Chinese economic power - 53% believe China's growing economy is a good thing for India. Income is related to views about Chinese military and economic power, as wealthier Indians are more worried about China becoming a military rival to the U.S. and more concerned about China as an economic threat to India.
In India, the survey was conducted May 1-29, 2005 among a probability sample of 2,042 respondents. The survey was conducted only in urban areas and is not representative of the entire country. Interviews were conducted in-person, in the appropriate local language (Hindi, Gujarati, Tamil, Bengali, Telugu, Marathi), with adults ages 18 and older. The margin of sampling error for the results is plus or minus 2%. For full topline results for each country surveyed, see the Pew Global Attitudes report U.S. Image Up Slightly, But Still Negative: American Character Gets Mixed Reviews, released June 23, 2005.
Gee, ya think?
This wouldn't have anything to do with the fact we've outsourced thousands of jobs there which subsequently raised their standard of living, would it?
43% of the French have a favorable opinion of the US?!
Wow, we must be doing something right if the number is that high!
ping
The Indians have a more favorable view of the USA than Americans.
Conversely, the FOX Radio news began their top of the hour news with "President Bush pays a surprise visit to Afghanistan.
Once again, the MSM "color the news."
HAHHAHAHAH..that's higher than the POS CBS poll had for Bush Favorability. Just another reminder how bogus polls are.
Thanks for the ping....this thread is very appropriate considering the president's visit to India today.
Bump for US-India friendship....I see new horizons in the partnership between the world's greatest democracy and the world's largest one.
There's a remarkable turnaround in a lot of places from a poll I recall from a few years back.
It isnt easy being President. Mr. Bush cant take a dump without someone running a poll on whether or not he really had to go and what the people think of the consistency.
How accurate are these polls though? I bet many Indians don't even know who Bush is.
100,000 protestors (muslims and hindus) against the US and Bush today. Doesn't that speak volumes about Indian support?
Not terribly surprising. The two countries share a lot of common concerns. Terrorism. Nuclear proliferation. The rise of China.
India's in a bad neighborhood. They have no delusions, like the Europeans, that military action should never be used to defend national interests.
Add to that the fact that Indian immigrants in this country have been hugely succesful, so they probably talk up the US when they are visiting family in India.
India is a natural ally for the US.
India is a nation of a billion people, destined to become the world's largest nation in a matter of decades, with an economic growth rate of 8 percent and a central position, geographically and strategically, in Asia.
Furthermore, India is a natural U.S. ally in the War on Terror and a natural balance to the ambitions of China, Russia, and the Islamic World (note no mention of increasingly irrelevant Europe).
And in addition, India needs the U.S. even more than the U.S. needs India!
It was mostly Muslims. The "Hindus" peppered into the mix were the Leftists, who organised the protests.
I was glad to see this poll as well because the ONLY coverage I saw or heard (wasn't able to watch FNC yesterday) was how incredibly unpopular President Bush (and the US) was in India. That struck me as odd and somewhat unlikely.
Get back to us after looking up the population of India and taking a course in arithmetic.
We're all in a bad neighborhood. And, you're right about the delusions. Deluded Europe, blinded by denial, hubris, and a commitment to socialism, is decadent. India is ascendant.
Excellent points, Po, and well said.
We're all in a bad neighborhood. And, you're right about the delusions. Deluded Europe, blinded by denial, hubris, and a commitment to socialism, is decadent. India is ascendant.
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