Posted on 02/20/2007 5:53:10 PM PST by Flavius
The War on Terror has radicalised Muslims around the world to unprecedented levels of anti-American feeling, according to the largest survey of Muslims ever to be conducted.
Seven per cent believe that the events of 9/11 were completely justified. In Saudi Arabia, 79 per cent had an unfavourable view of the US.
Gallups Centre for Muslim Studies in New York carried out surveys of 10,000 Muslims in ten predominantly Muslim countries. One finding was that the wealthier and better-educated the Muslim was, the more likely he was to be radicalised.
The surveys were carried out in 2005 and 2006. Along with an earlier Gallup survey in nine other countries in 2001, they represent the views of more than 90 per cent of the worlds Muslims. A further 1,500 Muslims in London, Paris and Berlin are involved in a separate poll to be published in April.
The findings come in a climate of growing mistrust between Islam and the West. Another recent survey in the US found that 39 per cent of Americans felt some prejudice towards Muslims.
The Gallup findings indicate that, in terms of spiritual values and the emphasis on the family and the future, Americans have more in common with Muslims than they do with their Western counterparts in Europe.
A large number of Muslims supported the Western ideal of democratic government. Fifty per cent of radicals supported democracy, compared with 35 per cent of moderates.
Religion was found to have little to do with radicalisation or antipathy towards Western culture. Muslims were condemnatory of promiscuity and a sense of moral decay. What they admired most was liberty, its democratic system, technology and freedom of speech.
While there was widespread support for Sharia, or Islamic law, only a minority wanted religious leaders to be making laws. Most women in the predominantly Muslim countries believed that Sharia should be the source of a nations laws, but they strongly believed in equal rights for women.
This finding indicates the complexity of the struggle ahead for Western understanding. Few Western commentators can see how women could embrace the veil, Sharia and equal rights at the same time.
Researchers set out to examine the truth behind the stock response in the West to the question of when it will know it is winning the war on terror. Foreign policy experts tend to believe that victory will come when the Islamic world rejects radicalism. Every politician has a theory: radicals are religious fundamentalists; they are poor; they are full of hopeless-ness and hate. But those theories are wrong, the researchers reported.
We find that Muslim radicals have more in common with their moderate brethren than is often assumed. If the West wants to reach the extremists, and empower the moderate majority, it must first recognise who its up against.
Gallup says that because terrorists often hijack Islamic precepts for their own ends, pundits and politicians in the West sometimes portray Islam as a religion of terrorism.
They often charge that religious fervour triggers radical and violent views, said John Esposito, a religion professor, and Dalia Mogahed, Gallups Muslim studies director, in one analysis. But the data say otherwise. There is no significant difference in religiosity between moderates and radicals. In fact, radicals are no more likely to attend religious services regularly than are moderates.
They continue: Its no secret that many in the Muslim world suffer from crippling poverty and lack of education. But are radicals any poorer than their fellow Muslims? We found the opposite: there is indeed a key difference between radicals and moderates when it comes to income and education, but it is the radicals who earn more and stay in school longer.
In fact, the surveys found that the radicals were more satisfied with their finances and quality of life than moderates.
Genieve Abdo, a senior Gallup analyst and author of Mecca and Main Street: Muslim Life in America After 9/11, said that the findings of a high level of religious belief among both moderate and radical Muslims had huge implications for Western governments.
She said: We have to assume that these Islamic parties and movements that are coming to power are popular and have a large constituency. People are not just voting for a party, they are voting for a religion, a way of life.
She said that the Gallup findings countered the argument that, for example, a vote for Hamas was a vote against the former Palestinian government of Arafat rather than a vote for the extreme religious position of the new government.
Looking west
Percentage with unfavourable view of US in 2005 (all increased since 9/11 except where indicated:
79%
Saudi Arabia
65%
Jordan
49%
Morocco
52%
Iran (down from 63 in 2001)
65%
Pakistan (down from 69 in 2001)
Some cowardly peoples blame the ones who are trying to deliver them. Moses had to put up with similarly unfavorable reviews when he appeared before the Pharoah demanding freedom for the Hebrews.
If I called them what they really are, I would get banned from this forum.
One tidbit worth calling attention to:
"One finding was that the wealthier and better-educated the Muslim was, the more likely he was to be radicalised."
Bin Ladin was an engineer and a multimillionaire. Of course, "well educated" for a Muslim means something different from the rest of the world. But many of the rich and privileged were educated in the US, Britain, or Europe, where regretably they were probably radicalized by the Communist twits who predominate in academia all over the West.
Never forget, Pol Pot learned all about Communism at the University of Paris.
A recent survey found that 100 percent of the radical Muslims killed in the war on terror would not be planning further attacks against the U.S.
Yes, they weren't anything like that before...
(Are these people that stupid, or are they implying I am?)
Haven't these people ever heard of an asymptote? Hell, anti-American feeling has been soaring for so long around the world that I suppose a hundred million million percent of the people in the world hate us by now.
Well most Americans probably have an "unfavourable view" of Saudis also. So what?
Seven per cent believe that the events of 9/11 were completely justified.
"Disfavorable" applies to Hostess Twinkies. They're revolting, but I'm not going to blow myself up over them. Neither are 99.999% of muslims coming after us.
The article is nonsense. Ask our new Iraqi allies.
I can't remember when anti American feelings haven't soared. No news here.
Don't stop there. Don't nuke, but take out both mosques on the Temple Mount. Then see how everything will change in the world for the better. Islam will be like a ship without a rudder and easy to control.
This means one thing. We must be winning in Iraq and Afghanistan. Mooslims scream the loudest via the media when heavy pressure is applied against them. Happens like clockwork.
Gag me with a frickin' spoon....
It also undercuts the notion that the root of anti-Americanism is "economic injustice".
I've used Islamokazi for years.
"A recent survey found that 100 percent of the radical Muslims killed in the war on terror would not be planning further attacks against the U.S."
Ha! Now THAT's a survey.
|
Just when the love of muuhhamhead (Pigs be inseminating her) was shining so brightly as they chanted Death to Israel, Death to America.
they already are willing to die to kill us...they've killed 3000 of us while we were living our lives, without a declaration of war or hostilities...P>these polls are so useless....
Yeah, because America stood up and attacked the head of the snake after 911, that's why they hate us. We didn't bend over and assume the dhimmi position like spain,germany and france.
BTW mohammed(mpigsbuh), 911, 311, beslan, the Christian schoolgirls in Thailand and Indonesia, Israel, Kasmir, they have radicalized us.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.