Seen this. Intresting how this gives the lie to the Democrats Talking Points on Iraq.
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MjczZTQxNmViNWRmYTE1NjU2ZDdkYjE1NTVlNTRlN2E=
The Iraqi View
Polling on the ground.
American viewers of network news, and Arabic viewers of al-Jazeera TV, generally regard Operation Iraqi Freedom as a failure for various reasons: Iraqis are too sectarian to form a nation; they reject democracy as an imposition; or the average Iraqi lives a life of fear due to the deterioration of security since Saddams fall.
The International Republican Institutes Survey of Iraqi Public Opinion, released July 19, 2006, provides a useful reality check to these assumptions. The survey records that Iraqis overwhelmingly reject sectarianism and national division; and that they widely support the government they have elected. Moreover, most Iraqis feel safe in their own neighborhoods.
The poll is the latest addition to a series that the Institute has sponsored for the past three years. The surveys were conducted June 14 through June 24 this yeara time of high sectarian violence, particularly in the Baghdad area. The pollsters conducted 2849 interviews in Arabic and Kurdish, balanced for geography, ethnicity, sex, and age.
The February 22 bombing of the al-Askari shrine marked a turning point for the insurgency in Iraq. Al-Qaeda in Iraq, led at the time by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, implemented a long-discussed plan to target Shiite civilian and religious targets. The object was not to kill all Shiitesan obvious impossibilitybut to generate a cycle of revenge killings by Shiite militias and police that would alienate and radicalize the Sunni populations in the most integrated parts of the country, particularly Baghdad.
In effect, Zarqawi chose to feed the anti-democracy insurgency in Iraq by narrowing its base. This paid immediate tactical dividends in both the Western and pan-Arab press, which covered the daily slaughters. But it was strategically counterproductive to al-Qaeda. The movement alienated ever-growing segments of the Iraqi population, and even of the insurgency, driving them toward the new government rather than away from it.
The current survey reflects these developments.
The Sunni sectarianism Zarqawi hoped to feed is alive and well. But the opposition to sectarianism is stronger than ever. Ninety-four percent of Iraqis support a unity government, representing all religious and ethnic communities, as opposed to 2 percent who do not support it. Asked to judge whether Iraqis should be segregated by religion, or by ethnicity, 78 percent of Iraqis oppose those prospects; only 13 percent support them. In multi-ethnic Baghdad, where most of the sectarian revenge killings occur, 76 percent of the public opposed ethnic separation; 10 percent supported it.
Other questions touch obliquely on issues of national unity. The division of oil revenues between the governates (states) and the central authority remains a core issue of Iraqi politics. It stands as a proxy for the question of whether Iraq will remain a nation. (The major oil deposits are in the Kurdish north and the Shiite south.)
The IRI polled Iraqis of all regions on their preferred treatment of oil revenues: whether the central authority in Baghdad should collect and control it; whether the states of origin should collect and control it; or whether a percentage allocation should operate as a middle ground. In this survey, as in previous ones, central control of Iraqi oil revenues was overwhelmingly preferred (67 percent), compared to state control (14 percent) and federated (state/federal) allocation (7 percent). This preference for a national solution was strongly supported in the oil-rich provinces of the south (63 percent). Only in the Kurdish governates did a state-centered solution win a plurality (38 percent)and even there 34 percent of respondents preferred either a national or a federated solution.
What do Iraqis think of democracy? Outside Iraqs borders the Arab world considers Iraqi democracy a shama publicity ploy by the Americans to disguise a cruel occupation. In a 2005 John ZogbyShibley Telhami poll, Arab respondents said the war was bringing less democracy rather than more (58 percent to 9 percent).
But Iraqis disagree. Even in the Sunni provinces, the new Iraqi government musters 23 percent support. And overall, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki commands approval numbers that any Western head of state would envy. Nationwide confidence in the al-Maliki government stands at 58 percent approve to 20 percent disapprove. Kurdsroughly 20 percent of the populationsupport the new government 60 percent to 11 percent. Residents of the southern provinceslargely Shiiteapprove 83 percent to 3 percent.
Al-Maliki himself commands a 55 percent approval rating, compared to 20 percent who disapprove.
The IRI asked respondents to list their three highest priorities for al-Malikis government. Withdrawal of coalition forces failed to make the list. Eighty-four percent of Iraqis list security as either their top, second, or third concern; 71 percent list infrastructure; and 54 percent list economic development/job creation. Withdrawal of the coalition was the top priority of only 13 percent of Iraqis, and among the top three of 33 percent.
More general measures confirm acceptance of the post-Saddam regime. A plurality of Iraqis now believe that Iraq is headed in the right direction, and that things will improve over the next 6 months, and in the next year. A strong majority (60 percent to 15 percent) expect things to improve over the next 5 years.
Security remains the principal concern. But the IRI survey clarifies what this means. Despite the daily lurid headlines, most Iraqis do not live in fear.
Asked about overall security in the nation, 23 percent of Iraqis consider it to be good or fair, compared to 75 percent who rate it poor. But asked about security in their own neighborhoods, the numbers change drastically. Sixty percent of Iraqis consider security good or fair where they live, compared to 38 percent who consider it poor.
The IRIs regional breakdowns clarify this further. Residents of Baghdad feel insecure (60 percent to 38 percent), but 82 percent of residents of the Kurdish provinces feel secure in their neighborhoods. Residents of the Sunni provinces feel insecure, (73 percent to 27 percent), but only 9 percent of the residents of the Mid-Euphrates and southern governates rate their security poor.
Improved security is central to the prospects of Iraqi democracy. But the worst violence is sectional, concentrated heavily in Baghdad and the Sunni triangle; and even within those areas, it is not ubiquitous. Many Iraqis live in dangerbut the average Iraqi does not. And the places where danger is least are precisely those where it was greatest under Saddamthe Kurdish north and Shiite south, where most of the population lives.
The IRI survey shows a transformation in progress, by a people who share a common national identity and a widespread commitment to multi-party democracy. It is a shame that so little of our reporting on Iraq reflects what the Iraqis themselves are saying.
Richard Nadler is president of Americas Majority, and co-editor of the milblog Daily Dispatch available at amermaj.com.
That is a great article. Thanks for posting it. I've saved it for detailed study, but a quick read gives me a very good feeling.
I also was not aware of that site. I'll search them out.
Again, thanks.
Book mark
That needs its own thread.